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Jordan Carr
MARTY CORCORAN

Women's Lacrosse Jill Guise - Assistant Director of Athletic Communications

Johns Hopkins-Rutgers Women's Lacrosse Game Notes

OPENING DRAW
• Johns Hopkins hits the road for the first time in three weeks as the Blue Jays return to Big Ten play at Rutgers on Saturday. 
• The Blue Jays are coming off a 21-13 win over ninth-ranked James Madison Saturday at Homewood Field. The win pushed JHU's record to 9-3 overall.
• It was Hopkins first win over a top-10 team since a 13-11 win over ninth-ranked Loyola on February 16, 2019.
 
THE HOME STRETCH
• Hopkins enters the home stretch as there are just four games left in the regular season. The Blue Jays will play two of the four games at Homewood Field.
• Hopkins is 270-134-2 (.667) all-time at Homewood Field, including 152-77 (.663) since moving to Division I in 1999.
 
I'M HONORED 
• Graduate student Jennifer Barry was named the Big Ten Midfielder of the Week on Tuesday. She is the first Blue Jay to be named B1G Midfielder of the Week since Bailey Cheetham on April 25, 2023.
• Barry tallied 13 draw controls in Saturday's 21-13 win over ninth-ranked James Madison. The 13 draws matched the Dukes' total as a team and is the second most in a game in JHU history.
 • Barry leads the Big Ten and ranks 12th in the nation with 86 draws. Her 86 draw controls are the fourth best total in school single-season history. They are also just 17 shy of tying Dene' DiMartino's record of 103, set in 2016. In addition, Barry ranks 13th in NCAA Division I history with 464 career draws.
 
IN MARCH
• Johns Hopkins is 171-72-2 (.702) all-time in the month of March, including 8-5 under head coach Tim McCormack.
• Since moving to Division I in 1999, the Blue Jays are 122-56 (.685) in the month of March.
 
IN APRIL
The Blue Jays are 230-163-2 (.585) all-time in the month of April, including 4-2 under head coach Tim McCormack.
• JHU is 78-65 (.545) in April since moving to Division I in 1999. Hopkins has won nine of its last 12 games in tpril.
 
POLL POSITION 
• Hopkins is ranked ninth in this week's IL Women/IWLCA Poll with 360 points. JHU is also ranked ninth in the USA Lacrosse Poll this week.
• The Blue Jays are ranked in the top-10 in the IWLCA Poll for three consecutive weeks for the first time since the end of the 2014 regular season. JHU was ranked ninth on April 21, eighth on April 28 and then moved up to seventh the following week. There have been 319 polls since the start of the 1999 season (when Hopkins moved to Division I). This is the 30th time in 319 polls that JHU has been ranked in the top-10.
• JHU has been ranked in each of the last 15 IL Women/IWLCA polls and 24 of the last 28 polls.
• Nine of the Blue Jays' 2024 opponents are ranked in the IL Women/IWLCA poll, including five of the top-10 (Northwestern, Maryland, Michigan, Penn, Loyola).
• Hopkins boasts the toughest schedule in the nation as the Blue Jays' 2024 opponents sport a combined win percentage of .706 (120-50).  
 
LAST TIME OUT
• Five Blue Jays notched at least five points as Johns Hopkins beat ninth-ranked James Madison, 21-13, Saturday afternoon in the Blue Jays' final non-conference game of the season.
• Tied at three after back-to-back JMU goals, Ava Angello scored to spark a six-goal run that spanned less than eight minutes. Four different Blue Jays scored during the run, which was bookended by Angello, and put Hopkins up 9-3 with 11:24 to play. The Dukes halted the run with a pair of goals, but the Jays answered with a four-goal spurt to push out to a 13-5 lead. James Madison closed the half with two goals in the final two minutes to make it a six-goal game at the break.
• Hopkins opened the third with another four-goal run and the lead was 10 with 2:19 on the clock. JMU answered with three straight to pull back within seven, but JHU answered with a pair of Angello scores and it was 19-10 early in the fourth. The game of runs continued with a three-goal spurt from the Dukes, which was answered by two from Maeve Barker as the Blue Jays took the 21-13 win.
• Angello led all scorers and tied her career-high with six goals. She also handed out two assists to finish with a career-best eight points. Campbell Case (4g, 1a) and Barker (4g, 2a) also tied their career-highs in points and goals. Bailey Cheetham dished a career-best five assists while Abbey Hurlbrink (2g, 3a) and Ashley Mackin (3g, 1a) also had multi-point games. Hurlbrink also notched the 100th point of her career.
Jordan Carr led the defense with four caused turnovers and five ground balls, to go with five draws and a goal. Jennifer Barry controlled a game-high 13 draws, the second highest total in school history. Madison Doucette finished with 12 saves, including 11 in the second half, for her seventh double-digit save game of the season.
• Hopkins' 16 assists and 37 total points are both program single-game records. In addition, the 21 goals are tied for the third most in school history and are the most the Blue Jays have scored against a ranked opponent.
 
CENTURY CLUB
• Senior Abbey Hurlbrink notched the 100th point of her career in the win over James Madison on Saturday. The milestone came with her assist on a Ava Angello's goal with 7:32 left in the second quarter. 
• Hurlbrink is the 46th player in program history, and 28th since the program moved to Division I in 1999, to reach the milestone. She now boasts with 102 points on 69 goals and 33 assists.
 
SIX-POINT OUTINGS
• Sophomore Ava Angello (6g, 2a) and graduate student Maeve Barker (4g, 2a) each turned in six-point performances in the win over James Madison. It is the first time that two Blue Jays had at least six points in a game since March 7, 2023 when Angello (6g) and Barker (3g, 3a) had six points each at Monmouth.
• Since JHU moved to Division I in 1999, there have been 16 games, out of 439, in which two Blue Jays have had six-point performances. In fact, in two of those games (Denver 2012, Furman 2019), Hopkins had three players with at least six points.
• It is Angello's second game this season with at least six points as she had three goals and three assists in the win at Siena on February 11. Four Blue Jays have combined for five six-point outings this season. In addition to Mackin and Angello (2 games), Ashley Mackin and Abbey Hurlbrink have also had a game with at least six points this season. 
 
FIVE GOAL, FIVE ASSIST GAMES
Ava Angello's six goals and Bailey Cheetham's five assists against James Madison was the first time since April 29, 2023, and the 13th time overall, that Hopkins had a player with five goals (or more) and a player with five assists in the same game.
Mary Key is the only player in program Division I history to have at least five goals and five assists in the same game. She accomplished the feat on March 24, 2007 versus Orgeon.
 
IL MIDSEASON ALL-AMERICANS
• Four Blue Jays were named to the Inside Lacrosse Midseason All-America team on Thursday.
• Junior Ashley Mackin was named to the Second Team while graduate students Jennifer Barry and Madison Doucette and senior Jordan Carr were named Honorable Mention.
• Mackin leads Hopkins with 30 goals and 41 points and ranks third with 11 assists. Barry has a team-high 73 draw controls and leads the Big Ten with 6.64 draws per game. Doucette has started all 11 games in the cage and ranks third in the B1G with 97 saves. Carr leads the conference with a career-high 23 caused turnovers and is fourth in ground balls (24).
 
HALL OF FAMER
• Johns Hopkins University will induct nine new members into its Athletic Hall of Fame in ceremonies scheduled for Friday, April 19, 2024. The nine-member class will be the 25th inducted since the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame was formed in 1994 and raises the total number of members to 203. 
• Among the nine inductees is Dawn Nee, a 1991 graduate of the University and a four-year member of the women's lacrosse team. Nee is the 20th women's lacrosse player to be inducted into the JHU Athletic Hall of Fame.
• In 1991, Nee became just the second defender in program history to earn First Team All-America honors. She also earned First Team All-Region and First Team All-Middle Atlantic Conference honors as a senior. Nee totaled nine goals, two assists, 39 ground balls and 23 draw controls over her final two seasons.
• Nee helped Johns Hopkins to a four-year record of 47-16 with four MAC West titles and two MAC Tournament Championships. She also helped the Blue Jays to three appearances in the NCAA Tournament with the program's first-ever trip to the NCAA Semifinals in 1988.
 
ON THE OFFENSIVE
• Junior Ashley Mackin, senior Abbey Hurlbrink and sophomore Ava Angello reached double digit points just three games into the season. Last year, it took Mackin until the sixth game of the year to reach that mark and it took Hurlbrink until the 14th game. Angello meanwhile, needed just four games into her freshman campaign to reach the double-digit mark.
• Mackin leads JHU with 45 points and ranks sixth in the Big Ten with 4.09 points per game. Angello ranks second with 43 points and senior Campbell Case is third with 33 points. Hurlbrink is fourth with 32 points and graduate student Bailey Cheetham is fifth with 31. Nine Blue Jays have now reached double digits in points, with five of those eclipsing the 30-point mark.
• Mackin also leads the team with 33 goals and is fifth in the conference with 3.00 goals per game. Her 33 goals are already a career high, as she matched her 2023 total of 19 (13 games) just five games into the season. Mackin's 19 goals in the first five games are the most by a Blue Jay through the first five games since 2006. That year, Mary Key scored 21 goals in the first five games of the season.
• Angello ranks second on the team with 32 goals, Case is third (23) while graduate student Maeve Barker is fourth (16) and Hurlbrink is fifth (15). Six Blue Jays have reached double digits in goals through 12 games. In addition, 17 players have scored at least one goal and 10 of the 17 have at least five goals.
• As a team, Hopkins ranks second in the Big Ten, and 20th in the nation, in scoring offense with 14.58 goals per game.
 
BRING BACK THE O
• Hopkins brought back more than 96 percent of its goals (218 of 226) and more than 97 percent of its assists (118 of 121) in 2024. The Blue Jays returned their top-12 goal scorers and 14 of the 17 players that scored at least one goal last season.
• JHU boasted a balanced attack in 2023 as five players scored at least 30 points. The last time the Blue Jays had five players with 30 or more points was in 2019.
Ava Angello led the way with 53 points and 40 goals, while Maeve Barker (24g, 21a) and Campbell Case (24g, 19a) also eclipsed the 40-point mark.
Georgie Gorelick ranked second on the team with 26 goals and added six assists for 32 points. Bailey Cheetham was tied for second on the team in assists (19) and scored 17 goals to finish with 32 points.
 
LENDING A HAND
• Hopkins leads the Big Ten and ranks sixth in the nation with 8.92 assists per game. Last season, JHU ranked second in the conference and 19th in the nation with 6.72 assists per game. Right now, the 8.92 assists per game would be the best average in program history.
• In addition, the 107 assists are already the fourth best single-season total in school history. The Blue Jays totaled a school-record 16 assists in the win over the Dukes on Saturday. It is the fourth double-digit assist game of the season for JHU.
• Hopkins is assisting on 61.14 percent of its goals (175g, 107a) through 12 games this season, the highest assist-to-goal ratio in program history. The Blue Jays also lead the Big Ten and rank third in the nation in assisted goals.
• Fifteen Blue Jays have notched at least one assist this season, led by Bailey Cheetham (22), Abbey Hurlbrink (17), Ashley Mackin (12) and Ava Angello (11), Campbell Case (10) and Maeve Barker (10). Cheetham ranks third in the Big Ten with 2.20 assists per game, Hurlbrink ranks seventh (1.42) and Mackin is ninth (1.09).
• JHU notched 121 assists and assisted on 53.5 percent of its goals in 2023. The 121 assists are the second most in school Division I history, while the 6.72 assists per game and assist-to-goal ratio of 53.5 are the third best per game average.
• Barker led the team with 21 assists last season and is JHU's active career leader with 55 career assists. She is tied for 10th in school Division I history in career assists. Case and Cheetham were tied for second with 19 assists each in 2023.
• Angello (13), Hurlbrink (11) and Mackin (10) also reached double digits in assists last season.
• Cheetham has totaled 50 career assists, second most by a midfielder in school Division I history. Hurlbrink is fifth with 33 career assists by a midfielder. Her 17 assists this season are a career high, surpassing her total (11) from last year (18 games).
 
IN THE CREASE
Graduate student Madison Doucette is back in the crease after taking a gap year in 2023 and its like she never left. She has started all 12 games this season for the Blue Jays and ranks second in the Big Ten in saves (109) and is third in saves per game (9.08). She also ranks 10th in the nation in total saves.
• Doucette ranks 14th among active Division I goalies in career saves with 445. Just 12 games into her career in the Hopkins Blue & Black, she already ranks 13th in school Division I history in career saves.
• Doucette also leads Hopkins and ranks second in the conference in ground balls with 2.50 per game.
 
IN THE CIRCLE - PART I
Annie Marshall took the majority of the draw controls for the Blue Jays in 2023 and despite missing three games due to injury, she led the team with 87 draws and ranked third in the Big Ten, and 30th in the nation, with 5.80 draws per game. Marshall matched her 2022 season total (6) in JHU's 2023 opener against UAlbany.
• Marshall's 87 draws were the third most in school single-season history. She had three games with 10 draws last season and is one of only two players in program history with multiple double-digit draw games, joining Shelby Harrison.
Abbey Hurlbrink ranked second on the team with a career high 53 draws and ranks eighth in JHU history with 137 career draws. Ava Angello finished third on the team with 30 draw controls, which ranks 10th among freshman in program history.
 
IN THE CIRCLE - PART II
• Hopkins only got stronger in the center circle this summer with the addition of graduate student and draw specialist Jennifer Barry. She came to Baltimore from Boston University, where she earned All-Patriot League honors in each of her last three seasons. She earned IWLCA Northeast Region Second Team honors in 2022 and 2023 and was named a Third Team All-American by Inside Lacrosse in 2022. A three-year starter, Barry totaled 57 goals and 35 assists to go with 378 draws, 55 ground balls and 37 caused turnovers. She holds the BU record for draws in a game (18), season (156) and career (378). In 2023, she ranked second in the Patriot League and eighth in the nation with 7.72 draws per game and in 2022, she led the league and was fourth nationally with 9.18 draws per game.
• Barry jumped right in and made an immediate impact with eight draws in the win at UAlbany. Two other newcomers made their mark in the center circle opening weekend in freshman Kayley Kakac and graduate student Kacie Riggs. Kakac turned in a nine-draw performance in the win at Siena. At the time, her nine draws were two shy of the school record. Kakac's nine draws are also tied for third most in a game by a freshman in JHU history. Riggs controlled six draws versus the Saints in the second game.
• Barry leads all active players in the nation, and ranks 13th in NCAA Division I history, with 464 career draw controls. She also is averaging 7.61 draws per game for her career, the best per game average among all active players. Barry's per game average ranks seventh in NCAA Division I history.
• Barry leads the Blue Jays and the Big Ten in draws (86) and draws per game (7.17). Nationally, she ranks 15th in draws per game. In fact, her 86 draws already rank fourth in school single-season history and she needs just 17 draws to tie Dene DiMartino's record of 103 (2016). Abbey Hurlbrink ranks second on the team with 31 draws and Jordan Carr is third with a career-high 28 draws.
 
IN THE CIRCLE - PART III
•  As a team, Hopkins ranks second in the Big Ten and 24th in the nation in draws per game (15.58). The 15.58 draws per game is the best average in school history. Hopkins wins 55.5 percent of draw controls, which ranks fourth in the Big Ten. It is also tied for the third best draw control percentage in JHU single-season history. 
• Hopkins dominated the draw at Siena, outdrawing the Saints, 22-7. At the time, the 22 draws were tied for the second most in school history and were four shy of the school record. It was the third time in the last two seasons that the Blue Jays have had at least 22 draws in a game. Against Vanderbilt, the Blue Jays outdrew the Commodores, 20-8, including 7-2 in the second half. Last Saturday, Hopkins won the draw battle against James Madison, 23-13.
• Last season, Hopkins ranked third in the Big Ten with 14.61 draws per game. That is the second best per game average in school Division I history. The Blue Jays won 52.1 percent of their draws, which ranked fourth in the Big Ten. In addition, Hopkins' 263 draw controls in 2023 are the second most in school history.
 
AGAINST THE SCARLET KNIGHTS
• Hopkins takes on Rutgers for the 11th time since the series began in 2015. The teams have met every year since then, with the exception of 2020. The Blue Jays lead the series, 7-3, with the teams splitting the two meetings last season. JHU won the regular season match-up, but Rutgers bounced back with a win in the Big Ten Tournament.
• JHU won the first five meetings, outscoring Rutgers 77-37. The last three games however, have been decided by just one goal each. Niether team has won two in a row in the series since the Blue Jays won the first five.
 
TAKEAWAYS
Jordan Carr made the transition from midfield to defense this season and hasn't missed a step. She totaled seven caused turnovers and two ground balls in the Blue Jays' two wins opening weekend. Through 12 games this season, she boasts 27 caused turnovers, 29 ground balls and 28 draws - all career highs. Carr leads the Big Ten and ranks 11th in the nation with 2.25 caused turnovers per game. Her 27 caused turnovers are tied for 16th in school single-season history and she is now tied for 20th in JHU history with 49 career caused turnovers.
Reagan O'Brien made her mark on the Blue Jay defense in her freshman campaign in 2023. She notched three caused turnovers and three ground balls in her collegiate debut versus UAlbany and led the team with 25 caused turnovers. She also finished fifth with 23 ground balls in 16 games. 
• Last season, O'Brien led Hopkins and ranked fifth in the Big Ten with 1.56 caused turnovers per game.  This season, she is second on the team with 18 caused turnovers and ranks sixth in the Big Ten with 1.50 per game.
• O'Brien tied the program single-game record for caused turnovers by a freshman when she had six takeways at Loyola. Her 25 caused turnovers were fifth most by a freshman in school history.
Paris Colgain is third in caused turnovers with 15 and Hannah Johnson is fourth with a career-high 12 caused turnovers.
• As a team, Hopkins ranks second in the Big Ten and 18th in the nation with 9.92 caused turnovers per game. Last season, JHU ranked third in the Big Ten and 23rd in the nation with 9.11 caused turnovers per game.
 
D GOALS
• Senior defender Jordan Carr scored a transition goal with 4:25 left in the second quarter at UAlbany in the season-opener. She scored her second goal of the season on March 6 in the win over Vanderbilt. Carr got her third of the season on Saturday against James Madison.
• This is the third straight year that a Blue Jay defender has scored a goal, as junior Quinlan O'Brien scored last year at Loyola and Jeanne Kachris scored against UMBC in 2022.
• Carr was a midfielder in her first three seasons before moving to defense this season. She scored 31 goals in her first three seasons with the Blue Jays.
• Carr is the 13th Hopkins' defender to score a goal since the program moved to Division I in 1999 (see chart at right). She is the seventh that has multiple goals in their career as a defender. Her three goals this season are tied for third most by a defender.
Lacey-Leigh Hentz is first among all JHU defenders with 12 career goals (2002-05). She was inducted into the JHU Hall of Fame in 2020.
 
IT'S BEEN A WHILE
Ava Angello led Hopkins with 40 goals last season becoming the first freshman to lead the Blue Jays in goals since 2009. She is just the third freshman to lead JHU in goals since the program moved to Division I in 1999.
• She ranked second in the Big Ten in points (53) by a freshman and was third in goals by a freshman.
• Angello scored three goals in her collegiate debut against UAlbany and was the first freshman to tally a hat trick in their debut since 2016. In fact, she was just the fifth freshman in school Division I history to score a hat trick in their collegiate debut.
• Angello tied the school single-game record for goals by a freshman when she scored six against Monmouth. She joined Meghan Burnett (2000) and Jamie Larrimore (1999) as the only Blue Jay freshmen with six goals in a game.
• In JHU history, Angello ranks third in points, fourth in goals and sixth in assists by a freshman. She also ranks 11th in draws (30) by a freshman.
 
FOR OPENERS
• Hopkins is now 34-14-1 (.698) all-time in season-openers and has won 19 of its last 21 season-openers. 
• The game at UAlbany was the first time the Blue Jays opened the season on the road since 2019. In fact, it was just the ninth time since the Jays moved to Division I in 1999 (26 seasons) that they opened the season away from Homewood.
 
AROUND THE BIG TEN
Johns Hopkins has been picked to finish third in the Big Ten in a preseason vote of the league's head coaches.
• Defending national champion Northwestern is the preseason favorite to win the Big Ten in 2024. Maryland was picked second in the poll, followed by Hopkins, Michigan, Penn State, Rutgers and Ohio State.
• All seven teams qualify for the Big Ten Tournament, with the top team in the final league standings earning a bye into the semifinals. The teams that finish second, third and fourth will host quarterfinal games on Saturday, April 27. Northwestern will host the semifinals (May 2) and finals (May 4).
 
PRESEASON HONORS
• The Blue Jays piled up the honors this preseason.
• Graduate student goalie Madison Doucette, senior midfielder Abbey Hurlbrink and sophomore attacker Ava Angello were named to the Big Ten Player to Watch list.
• Doucette and Angello, along with graduate student draw specialist Jennifer Barry were named to the Inside Lacrosse Preseason All-America Team.
• In addition, Doucette was named a USA Lacrosse Preseason All-American.
 
OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN 
• Graduate student midfielder Bailey Cheetham and senior midfielders Jordan Carr and Abbey Hurlbrink have been selected as captains for the 2024 season. Cheetham and Carr are both two-time captains. They are the 19th and 20th players in program history to serve as a captain twice.
• Cheetham returns after posting career highs in every statistical category last season. She finished with 17 goals, 19 assists, 24 ground balls, 14 caused turnovers and 19 draw controls. She ranked second on the team in assists and was fourth in points.
• Carr topped a breakout sophomore season with a career junior year in 2023. She started 16 games and posted career highs in goals (19), points (21) and draw controls (16). Carr also picked up 17 ground balls and casued nine turnovers.
• Hurlbrink started 15 games a year ago and finished with 14 goals and a career-high 11 assists. She also finished with career highs in ground balls (18) and draw controls (53) and had eight caused turnovers. Hurlbrink's 53 draws ranked second on the team.
 
ROSTER BREAKDOWN
• The Blue Jays' 2024 roster includes six graduate students, nine seniors, eight juniors, seven sophomores and 11 freshmen.
• The 41-woman roster features players from 12 states, the District of Columbia and one Canadian province (Ontario). The Blue Jays also represent all four United States time zones.
• By state, the Blue Jays hail from New York (10), Maryland (9), New Jersey (5), Massachusetts (4), California (2), Pennsylvania (2), Oregon (2), Connecticut (1), Virginia (1), Minnesota (1), Texas (1) and Colorado (1).  
 
WELCOME TO HOMEWOOD - PART I
• Head coach Tim McCormack welcomed three graduate student transfers - Jennifer Barry (Boston University), Madison Doucette (Northwestern) and Kacie Riggs (Cal) to Homewood this Fall.
• A 2022 IL All-American, Barry earned All-Patriot League honors three times and was a two-time IWLCA All-Northeast selection for the Terriers. She totaled 57 goals and 35 assists to go with 378 draws, 55 ground balls and 37 caused turnovers. Barry holds the BU record for draws in a game (18), seasons (156) and career (378). In 2023, she ranked second in the Patriot League and eighth in the nation with 7.72 draws per game. 
• Doucette went 32-8 as a starter for the Wildcats. She boasted an 11.83 goals against average and a .407 save percentage while leading NU to the 2021 and 2022 NCAA Final Four. She ranked second in the Big Ten in saves (166) and sixth in save percentage (.422) as a senior. Doucette led the league in goals against average (11.06) as a junior.
• Riggs was a two-year starter on defense for the Bears. She totaled 84 draw controls, 35 ground balls and 14 caused turnovers in her career with the Bears. Riggs ranked second on the team, and ninth in the Pac-12 in draws (45).
 
WELCOME TO HOMEWOOD - PART II
• The Blue Jays welcomed 11 freshmen to campus this Fall. The group represent five states as well as Washington, DC.
• Joining Hopkins are Jaelyn Bennett, Alexa Christensen, Piper Daskalos, Samantha DiCarlo, Jane Freeman, Taylor Hoss, Kaley Kakac, Nina Palella, Heidi Rosely and Sam Tate.
 
IT'S A FAMILY AFFAIR
• Athletics at Johns Hopkins is a family affair and this year's team is no different.
• Sophomore midfielder Reagan O'Brien and junior defender Quinlan O'Brien are the 13th pair of sisters to don the Hopkins Blue & Black.
• Sophomore goalie Morgan Giardina is following in the footsteps of her father, Scott, who played lacrosse at Johns Hopkins and is a 1992 graduate of the University.
• In addition, senior Liza Regan played alongside her cousin, Caroline Somerville, for two seasons (2021, 2022) at Homewood.
 
2024 U20 WOMEN'S NATIONAL TEAM
• Head coach Tim McCormack joined Kelly Amonte Hiller's staff as an assistant coach of the 2024 US Women's U20 National Team it was announced last May.
• The US team will compete in the 2024 World Lacrosse Women's U20 Championship in Hong Kong, China this summer.
• The US women won five of the seven world championships conducted by World Lacrosse from 1995 to 2019. World Lacrosse adjusted the age groupings for this championship up to the U20 age level.
 
ON THE TUBE
• Hopkins is scheduled to play three nationally televised games this season. JHU will take on Maryland (April 10) and Michigan (April 14) on ESPNU. In addition, Hopkins' game at Penn State (April 18) will be shown on the Big Ten Network. 
 
FOR THE RECORD
• This marks the 49th season for Johns Hopkins, which sports an all-time record of 481-313-4 (.605) and a 263-176 (.599) record as a Division I program. The Blue Jays are in their 26th season of Division I after making the move in 1999.
• Hopkins will play the 800th game in program history on April 10 versus Maryland at Homewood Field.
• The Blue Jays have posted 36 winning seasons, including 21 straight from 1987 to 2007. Hopkins has also made 20 NCAA Tournament appearances, including 11 in the Division I Tournament (2004, 2005, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023).
 
IT'S ALL ACADEMIC
• Hopkins produced 26 Academic All-Big Ten selections in 2023. In addition, thirteen Blue Jays were named Big Ten Distinguished Scholars.
• JHU also placed 12 student-athletes on  the IWLCA Academic Honor Roll and the team earned IWLCA Academic Squad honors for the 10th straight season. Hopkins posted an impressive 3.618 GPA for the 2022-23 academic year.
 
ON TAP
• Hopkins returns to Homewood Field on Wednesday, April 10 to take on second-ranked Maryland.
• Opening draw for the Big Ten game is slated for 6:00 pm. 

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Players Mentioned

Ava Angello

#18 Ava Angello

Att.
6' 0"
Sophomore
Maeve Barker

#4 Maeve Barker

Att.
5' 5"
Graduate Student
Jordan Carr

#42 Jordan Carr

Def.
5' 7"
Senior
Campbell Case

#21 Campbell Case

Att.
5' 8"
Senior
Bailey Cheetham

#12 Bailey Cheetham

Mid.
5' 4"
Graduate Student
Paris Colgain

#20 Paris Colgain

Def.
5' 8"
Junior
Morgan Giardina

#14 Morgan Giardina

GK
5' 6"
Sophomore
Georgie Gorelick

#3 Georgie Gorelick

Mid.
5' 6"
Senior
Abbey Hurlbrink

#28 Abbey Hurlbrink

Mid.
5' 9"
Senior
Hannah Johnson

#23 Hannah Johnson

Mid.
5' 9"
Sophomore

Players Mentioned

Ava Angello

#18 Ava Angello

6' 0"
Sophomore
Att.
Maeve Barker

#4 Maeve Barker

5' 5"
Graduate Student
Att.
Jordan Carr

#42 Jordan Carr

5' 7"
Senior
Def.
Campbell Case

#21 Campbell Case

5' 8"
Senior
Att.
Bailey Cheetham

#12 Bailey Cheetham

5' 4"
Graduate Student
Mid.
Paris Colgain

#20 Paris Colgain

5' 8"
Junior
Def.
Morgan Giardina

#14 Morgan Giardina

5' 6"
Sophomore
GK
Georgie Gorelick

#3 Georgie Gorelick

5' 6"
Senior
Mid.
Abbey Hurlbrink

#28 Abbey Hurlbrink

5' 9"
Senior
Mid.
Hannah Johnson

#23 Hannah Johnson

5' 9"
Sophomore
Mid.