Johns Hopkins Georgetown Game Notes
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Opening DrawÂ
Johns Hopkins is back at Homewood Field for the third game of a five-game homestand on Wednesday to take on a hot Georgetown squad. The Blue Jays are coming off a tough overtime loss to the 11th-ranked Penn Quakers, while the Hoyas have won three straight to start the year.Â
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Last Time OutÂ
Penn converted a free position shot 2:01 into overtime to beat host Johns Hopkins, 11-10, on Saturday afternoon. The Blue Jays twice held a two-goal lead in the second half before falling behind by one late. Redshirt senior
Ellie McNulty forced overtime with her fourth goal of the afternoon with 55.4 seconds remaining in regulation. McNulty led all scorers with four goals while senior
Miranda Ibello notched three points (1g, 2a) and sophomore
Shelby Harrison had a team-best five draws. Â
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Season OpenersÂ
Hopkins is 19-7 (.730) in season openers under head coach
Janine Tucker and 30-13-1 (.693) all-time. The Blue Jays have won 11 straight and 15 of the last 16 opening day games.Â
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In FebruaryÂ
Hopkins is 33-15 (.687) under head coach
Janine Tucker in the month of February. Now in their 44th season, the Blue Jays did not play a game in the month of February until 2002. Hopkins, then in just its fourth season as a Division I program, lost to Vanderbilt, 7-4, on February 24.
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Hats OffÂ
Sophomore
Keegan Barger notched her first career hat trick in the season-opening win at Drexel. In fact, it was the first three goals of her career as she was a defensive midfielder last season. Barger made the transition to a true two-way middie in the offseason and the move paid off in the first game. Â
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Redshirt senior
Ellie McNulty and junior
Maggie Schneidereith lead the Blue Jays with two hat tricks each so far this season. In addition to Barger, sophomores
Shelby Harrison and
Aurora Cordingley have one hat trick apiece.Â
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Century ClubÂ
Redshirt senior
Ellie McNulty tallied a game-best five points in the win at Drexel, including the 100th of her career. The midfielder transferred from Princeton, where she totaled 95 points (72g, 23a) in 55 games for the Tigers. She now has 106 career points and joins senior
Miranda Ibello (127 points) and junior
Maggie Schneidereith (111) in the 100-point club.Â
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Oh Captain, My CaptainÂ
Seniors
Nicole DeMase and
Haley Crosson have been selected in a vote of their teammates as captains for the 2019 season.
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B1G LacrosseÂ
Johns Hopkins was picked to finish fourth in the 2019 Big Ten Women's Lacrosse Preseason Poll of the league's seven head coaches, it was announced January 28. Defending champion Maryland was the unanimous pick to win the 2019 title, followed by Northwestern, Penn State, and Hopkins. Michigan (5th), Ohio State (6th) and Rutgers (7th) round out the poll.Â
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B1G Players to WatchÂ
Junior
Mackenzie Heldberg and sophomores
Shelby Harrison and
Jeanne Kachris were named Big Ten Preseason Players to Watch.
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Harrison and Kachris return after earning All-Big Ten honors a year ago. Harrison led the Blue Jays and set a school freshmen record with 91 draw controls. Her 91 draws are also the second most in school single-season history and ranked second in the Big Ten. Kachris started all 19 games on a defense that ranked second in the Big Ten in scoring defense (10.53) and caused turnovers (8.68). She led the Blue Jays in caused turnovers (22) and ranked fourth in ground balls (32). Heldberg had a breakout sophomore campaign, scoring a team and career-best 41 goals. She also ranked third on the team in points (52) and ninth in the Big Ten in goals.Â
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Poll PositionÂ
Hopkins moved up one spot in this week's IWLCA Coaches Poll and is ranked 16th with 230 points. The Blue Jays are also ranked 11th in the Nike/Lax Magazine Poll and 14th in the Cascade/Inside Lacrosse Media Poll. Nine of the Blue Jays' 2019 opponents are ranked in the top-25 by the IWLCA, including four teams in the top 10 (Maryland, Northwestern, Stony Brook and Penn State).Â
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Climbing the RanksÂ
Several Blue Jays are making their move up the Johns Hopkins Division I record book. Here's a look at where they rank:
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Haley Crosson (Jr. • GK):
• Needs 3 saves to rank 7th and 32 to rank 6th (has 194)
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Nicole DeMase (Jr. • M):
• Needs 1 free position goal to rank 9th (has 21)
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Shelby Harrison (Fr. • M):
• Needs 18 draws to rank 7th (has 104)
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Miranda Ibello (Jr. • A):
• Needs 8 points to rank 14th (has 127)
• Needs 19 assists to rank 3rd (has 72)
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Maggie Schneidereith (So. • A):
• Needs 2 points to rank 19th and7 to rank 18th (has 111)
• Needs 1 assist to rank 11th and 2 to rank 10th (has 45)
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Lending a HandÂ
Senior
Miranda Ibello led the Blue Jays in both points (64) and assists (40) last season. Her point and assist totals were the most by a Blue Jay since
Taylor D'Amore put up 105 points and 53 assists in 2014. In addition, her 40 assists are the fifth most in school Division I history and sixth most all-time at JHU. Ibello ranks fourth in school DI history, and seventh overall, with 70 career assists. She leads the Blue Jays in assists this season (4) and needs 28 assists to become just the fifth player in the 44-year history of the program to total 100 helpers.
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At the DrawÂ
Sophomore
Shelby Harrison made an immediate impact for the Blue Jays in 2018 as she led the team and ranked second in the Big Ten with 91 draws on the season. That total is the most in school history by a freshman and the second most by any player in school single-season history. In fact, Harrison already ranks eight in JHU DI history, and 10th all-time at Hopkins, in career draws with 104. Against Penn, she became only the 11th player, in 44 years, to reach 100 career draws. She also holds the school single-game record with 11 draws, which she did twice last year.
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Sophomore
Keegan Barger was also a threat on the draw circle last year, as she ranked second on the team with 54. Her 54 draws are the fourth most by a freshman in school history and are tied for 12th in school Division I history.
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Harrison and Barger picked up right where they left off at the end of last season. Harrison had six draws while Barger had four in Hopkins' season opener at Drexel on Sunday. In addition, redshirt senior
Ellie McNulty tied Harrison with a game-high six draws versus the Dragons. McNulty ranked second at Princeton last year with 59 draws and she ranks fourth all-time with 115 career draws. The trio of Harrison, McNulty and Barger combined for 16 of the team's 18 draws at Drexel and have 32 of the team's 37 draws on the season.Â
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Welcome to HomewoodÂ
Head coach
Janine Tucker welcomes 11 freshmen and a transfer to the Blue Jays this season. Joining Hopkins are
Georgia Esmond,
Mia Farnella,
Carli Freeman,
Kylie Kempe,
Sam Leva,
Annika Meyer,
Claire Mills,
Kaitlyn Pham,
Nadiya Roy,
Rachel Scheinberg,
Caroline Somerville and
Ellie McNulty.Â
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Against the HoyasÂ
Hopkins and Georgetown meet for the 24th time in a series that began in 1977. The Hoyas lead the series, 12-11, and snapped a three-game losing streak in the series with a 15-14 win last February in Washington, DC. Â
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Scouting the HoyasÂ
Georgetown is riding a three-game win streak into Wednesday's contest, including a 16-5 win over Drexel last Saturday. Senior
Morgan Ryan led the way with four goals, while classmate
Taylor Gebhardt had three goals and a pair of assists for five points. Senior
Francesca Whitehurst had two assists and five draw controls. Â
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Gebhardt leads the Hoyas with 15 points and nine goals through three games, and is tied with Whitehurst for the team lead in assists (6). Morgan ranks second behind Gebhardt with eight goals while Whitehurst ranks second in points (10). Freshman
Jordyn Sabourin has a team-best 13 draws, including six in Saturday's win over Drexel. Whitehurst and junior
Natalia Lynch are tied for second with 10 draws each.Â
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Defensively, junior
Noelle Peragine has a team-best eight caused turnovers and ranks second with seven ground balls. Senior
Haelle Chomo has started all three games in the cage this season and boasts a 7.00 goals against average and a .523 save percentage. She earned Big East Defensive Player of the Week honors after making eight saves and surrendering just seven goals in the upset of then 11th-ranked Towson. Â
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We're Streaking!
Five Blue Jays carry active goal, assist and/or point streaks into Wednesday's game versus Georgetown. Here's a look at those streaks:
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Aurora Cordingley (So. • A):
• Has at least one point in 7 straight games
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Shelby Harrison (So. • M):
• Has at least one point in 5 straight games
• Has at least one goal in 3 straight games
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Mackenzie Heldberg (Jr. • A):
• Has at least one point in 18 straight games
• Has at least one goal in 13 straight games
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Ellie McNulty (R-Sr. • M):
• Has at least one point in 3 straight games
• Has at least one goal in 3 straight games
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Maggie Schneidereith (So. • A):
• Has at least one point in 12 straight games
• Has at least one goal in 8 straight games
• Has at least one assist in 4 straight games
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At the Helm
Janine Tucker is now in her 26th season at Homewood. The winningest coach in program history, she sports a record of 283-154 (.647), including a 215-138 (.609) mark in Division I. Tucker took over the Blue Jay women's lacrosse program in August 1993 and coached five seasons in Division III before successfully guiding the program's transition to Division I in 1999. A 1989 graduate of Loyola (MD) and a member of the Greyhound Athletic Hall of Fame, Tucker has led the Blue Jays to double-digit win totals in 20 of her 24 years on the bench. She has also guided Hopkins to six NCAA Division I Tournament appearances, three ECAC Division I championship games, and four NCAA Division III Tournament appearances. Tucker became the 14th coach in NCAA history to reach 250 wins on February 12, 2016 and she currently ranks eighth in NCAA Division I history in wins. She coached her 400th career game at Loyola on February 22, 2017.
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A Save for Each Season
Junior goalie
Robyn Lipschultz made her first career appearance for the Blue Jays on March 3, 2018 versus Furman and made one save. With that save, she became the first goalie in 21 years to register a save in multiple sports in the same academic year. Lipschultz is also a member of the Johns Hopkins women's soccer team and made 14 saves in 10 games in the fall of 2017. The last to do so was
Kelly Hoffman, who turned the same trick for both the field hockey and women's lacrosse teams in 1996-97. Lipschultz is just the second to do so for both women's soccer and women's lacrosse, joining
Amanda Miller (1992-93). This past fall, Lipschultz started 17 games for head coach
Leo Weil's Blue Jays, making 55 saves and posting a 0.775 save percentage.
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For the Record
This marks the 44th season for Johns Hopkins, which sports an all-time record of 433-275-4 (.611) and a 215-138 (.609) record as a Division I program. The Blue Jays have posted 32 winning seasons, including 21 straight from 1987 to 2007. Hopkins has also made 16 NCAA Tournament appearances, including seven in the Division I Tournament (2004, 2005, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018). Last year was the 22nd double-digit win season under head coach
Janine Tucker and the 28th all-time.Â
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Home Sweet Home(wood)
Under head coach
Janine Tucker, the Blue Jays are 128-61 (.677) within the friendly confines of Homewood Field and the Jays are 35-14 (.714) at home since the start of the 2014 season. Hopkins will play 10 of its 17 regular season games, including five straight from February 16 to March 6, at Homewood this spring. Â
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Family Affair
Athletics at Johns Hopkins is a family affair as a pair of Blue Jays have followed in their fathers' footsteps at the Homewood campus while two more are following in their sisters' footsteps.
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Junior
Miranda Ibello is not only following in the cleats of her sister,
Paige '10, but also of her brother-in-law, Max Venker '10, who was a four-year standout on the JHU men's soccer team. Junior
Shannon Logan joined the Blue Jays and played alongside her older sister,
Holly, for two seasons. The Logans are the 11th pair of sisters to don the Hopkins Blue & Black and the first to do so at the same time since
Sam and
Megan Schrum played together in 2009.Â
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One of Four
Junior
Maggie Schneidereith will not be playing alongside her sister or sisters for that matter, in her collegiate career. Schneidereith, who hails from nearby Towson, is a quadruplet and all four sisters are playing Division I lacrosse. Midfielders Jamie and Lucy are playing at Drexel while goalie Georgia is playing for Albany.
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On Tap
Hopkins is back in action on Saturday, March 2 to host Furman in non-conference action. Opening draw is slated for 1:00 pm at Homewood Field.Â
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