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MARTY CORCORAN

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

Game Notes | Blue Jays Host Seawolves

OPENING DRAW
• Johns Hopkins is back at Homewood Field to take on 13th-ranked Stony Brook to wrap up a four-game homestand.
• Hopkins is coming off a dominating 23-7 win over Colgate on Saturday afternoon in the first-ever meeting between the two programs. The win pushed JHU's record to 5-1.
• Hopkins is 6-1 for the first time since 2019 and sixth time since moving to Division I in 1999.
• The Blue Jays started the season 4-0 for the first time since 2014.
• Hopkins is celebrating its 50th anniversary this weekend with a slate of events. The Blue Jays will celebrate the people, memories, and moments that built the program.
 
IN MARCH
• Johns Hopkins is 14-5 in the month of March under head coach Tim McCormack.
• Since moving to Division I in 1999, Hopkins is 128-56 (.695) in the month of March.
 
50 YEARS OF BLUE JAY LACROSSE
• 2026 marks the 50th anniversary of women's lacrosse at Johns Hopkins. JHU made its program debut on March 26, 1976 at Swarthmore.
• JHU earned the program's first win on April 13, 1977 - a 12-7 win over Hood.
• The Blue Jays made the transition to Division I in 1999 and went 10-4 that season. 
• Johns Hopkins is 503-326-4 (.606) in 50 seasons, including 285-189 (.600) as a Division I program.
• Hopkins became just the 12th program in NCAA history, across all divisions, to play 800 games on April 10, 2024.
• The Blue Jays have posted 39 winning seasons, including 21 straight from 1987 to 2007. Hopkins has also made 22 NCAA Tournament appearances, including 13 in the Division I Tournament. JHU has made the last seven NCAA Tournaments, and all 13 DI appearances have come since 2004.
• JHU has produced 137 all-conference selections and 90 All-Americans in 50 seasons. In addition, 21 players have been inducted into the University's Athletic Hall of Fame.
 
LAST TIME OUT
• Johns Hopkins scored six unanswered in the fourth quarter to beat visiting James Madison, 12-10, on a foggy Homewood Field.
• Trailing entering the fourth quarter? No problem, Johns Hopkins has seen this script before. For the seventh time under head coach Tim McCormack, the Blue Jays trailed entering the final stanza and rallied to win. In fact, in three of those seven games, Hopkins trailed by four or more.
• After four straight James Madison goals to end the third quarter, it was all Hopkins in the fourth. Taylor Hoss got things started with a highlight-reel behind-the-back score three minutes in. Just two and a half minutes later, Hoss found a cutting Lacey Downey for the quick stick in the slot. Ava Angello then scored twice in a 36-second span and just like that it was a tie game with 3:55 to play.
• While the Blue Jay offense was cashing in on their opportunities, it was the draw unit that was keeping the ball out of the sticks of the Dukes. Just 64 seconds after Angello tied the game, Downey blew home an eight-meter and Hopkins had its first lead in nearly 40 minutes. But the Blue Jays weren't done yet. Downey won the ensuing draw and after running more than a minute off the clock, JHU got its insurance goal. Angello, in the alley, drew four defenders and then found McKenzey Craig open on the doorstep. Craig pumped and then dropped her stick and beat Abigail Beattie low with 1:40 on the clock. Laurel Gonzalez won the draw, and the Blue Jays ran out the rest of the clock for the win.
• In the opening 10 minutes it didn't look like a fourth-quarter comeback would be necessary. Hopkins jumped out to an early 3-1 lead with goals from Downey, Angello and Zoey Smith. But a Chloe Beckley score with 2:04 on the clock sparked a 5-1 JMU run that spanned nearly 19 minutes. Olivia Matthews converted an eight-meter just 1:45 into the third to put the Dukes up 6-4. Craig then scored back-to-back goals just 16 seconds apart to knot the score at six with 6:41 to play in the quarter. James Madison came right back, scoring four goals in the final five and a half minutes to take that 10-6 lead going into the fourth. As the teams changed ends and the fourth quarter started, the fog over Homewood Field lifted and the tide turned for the Blue Jays.
• Craig finished with a career-high four goals and five points, while Angello poured in seven points on the three goals and four helpers. Hoss handed out three assists to go with her one goal and Downey added a hat trick. Gonzalez and Downey combined to win all six draws in the fourth quarter, and the duo totaled seven and three, respectively for the game. Ashley Langdon made a career-high nine saves, including three on free position shots.
 
CARDIAC KIDS
• The come-back win over James Madison on Tuesday is the sixth time under head coach Tim McCormack, that Johns Hopkins trailed entering the fourth quarter and rallied to win. Four of the seven wins came in overtime.
• In three of the comebacks (Rutgers 2023, Stony Brook 2025, James Madison 2026), Hopkins shutout the opponent in the fourth quarter. And in each of those games, the Blue Jays outscored their opponent 6-0 in the fourth.
 
TEWAARATON AWARD
Reagan O'Brien and Ava Angello were named to the 2026 Tewaaraton Award Watch List it was announced on February 10. This is the second straight year the duo has been named to the Watch List.
• Angello and O'Brien are the sixth and seventh players in Johns Hopkins history, respectively, to be named to the Tewaaraton Watch List twice. O'Brien is the first defender to do so. This is also the second consecutive season that JHU has had multiple players named to the list. 
 
HALL OF FAMER
Taylor D'Amore '14 has been selected to the 26th class of inductees into the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame. The induction ceremonies are scheduled for Friday, April 17 and the class will also be honored at the Johns Hopkins-Maryland men's lacrosse game at Homewood Field on Saturday, April 18.
• D'Amore is the 21st women's lacrosse player to be inducted into the Hall of Fame. The 21 women's lacrosse selections are the most of any women's team and is tied for fourth most among all Johns Hopkins teams.
• D'Amore ranks second in school Division I history in career points (303) and assists (161) and sixth in goals (142). She had at least one point in 58 straight games, the second longest streak in the program's Division I history and had at least one assist in each of her last 28 games, a school Division I record. She led the team in points in each of the last three seasons and led the team in assists and draws in each of her four seasons. D'Amore led the nation in assists (2.65) and points (5.25) per game as a senior.
• A two-time team captain and a four-year starter, D'Amore was a two-time IWLCA All-American and a three-time All-American Lacrosse Conference selection.
 
GETTING DEFENSIVE
• Johns Hopkins has held opponents scoreless for 15 or more minutes, four times this season. Twice the Blue Jays have held their opponents scoreless for a quarter. 
• Under head coach Tim McCormack, Hopkins has held its opponent scoreless for 15 or more minutes, 32 times. 
• On Tuesday, Hopkins held James Madison scoreless in the fourth quarter as the Blue Jays rallied for a 12-10 win. It was the 11th time under McCormack that JHU shut out an opponent in a quarter. In fact, it was the fourth time that JHU has done it in the fourth quarter. 
 
HOME SWEET HOME(WOOD)
• After playing three of its first four games on the road, Hopkins will play eight of its final 12 regular season games within the friendly confines of Homewood Field. However, two of those final four road games, include trips to Northwestern and Oregon.
• During that four-game opening stretch, the Blue Jays traveled to three states (Virginia, North Carolina and Pennsylvania) and covered nearly 1,300 miles.
 
RECORD BREAKER - PART I
Reagan O'Brien broke the NCAA Division I single-season record for caused turnovers last season. She broke the 25-year-old record with her 83rd takeaway, in the Big Ten semifinals, and finished the season with 103.
• O'Brien also broke the Johns Hopkins career record for caused turnovers in the semifinals. She surpassed Lacey Leigh Hentz's record of 146, which had stood for 20 years. She now holds the Johns Hopkins game (12), season (103) and career records (190) for caused turnovers.
• O'Brien has tallied 24 caused turnovers through six games this season, bringing her career total to 190. She is now tied for fifth in NCAA history and needs 10 to become just the fourth player to reach 200 career caused turnovers. 
 
RECORD BREAKER - PART II
Laurel Gonzalez wasted no time in making her mark in the Johns Hopkins record book as a freshman in 2025. She set the single-game (18) and single-season (166) marks for draw controls and is already sixth in program history in career draws (198). Her 166 draw controls last season were the fourth most in Big Ten single-season history.
• Gonzalez ranked second in the Big Ten and 14th in the nation with 8.30 draws per game last season. She posted six of the top 10 single-game draw performances in JHU history and had double-digit draws seven times. Gonzalez is also tied for the JHU record for draws in a postseason game (11).
• Gonzalez leads the Blue Jays with 39 draws in seven games this season and ranks eighth in the Big Ten with 5.57 per game.
 
OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN 
• Graduate student Sally Zinsner and seniors Ava Angello, Hannah Johnson and Reagan O'Brien have been selected as captains for the 2026 season.
• Zinsner transferred to Homewood after a standout career at Holy Cross. She ranks fifth in program history in career points (182) and sixth in goals (133). She led the team in points as a junior (78) and senior (68) and is a two-time All-Patriot League selection (First Team in 2025, Second Team in 2024).
• Angello is the Blue Jays' active career leader in points (248), goals (184) and assists (64). A three-time Honorable Mention All-American and two-time All-Big Ten pick, she ranks fifth in school Division I history in points, third in goals and seventh in assists.
• Johnson is a two-time captain and has started 58 games on defense. She has totaled 84 ground balls and 65 caused turnovers in 65 career games and ranks 17th in school Division I history in caused turnovers.
• A consensus First Team All-American and the 2025 Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, O'Brien is the NCAA's active leader with 190 career caused turnovers. She holds the JHU single-game (12), season (103) and career records for takeaways. She has also totaled 147 ground balls to rank eighth in school Division I history.
 
TAKEAWAYS
• Hopkins tallied 20 caused turnovers in the season-opener at Liberty on February 7. Reagan O'Brien (six) and Lacey Downey (four) combined for half of those. In total, 10 Blue Jays notched at least one caused turnover versus the Flames. JHU has now totaled 104 caused turnovers through seven games and ranks second in the NCAA with 15.00 per game.
• O'Brien leads the Blue Jays with 24 caused turnovers, while Downey ranks second (23) and freshman Molly Hiney ranks third (13). O'Brien leads the nation with 4.00 per game and Downey ranks fourth (3.29). In addition, Hiney ranks third in the Big Ten with 1.86 per game. 
• O'Brien is the program leader with 190 career caused turnovers and Johnson is 16th with 65 takeaways in her career.
• Hopkins finished 2025 with 258 caused turnovers, the second highest single-season total in program history. The Blue Jays were just nine shy of tying the record (267), set in 2000.
• In the last two years under defensive coordinator Dorrien Van Dyke, the Blue Jays have turned in two of the six best caused turnover totals in program history. In 2024, JHU totaled 213 takeaways, which ranks sixth in school history, and ranked seventh in the nation with 10.65 per game.
 
POLL POSITION 
• Hopkins is ranked ninth in the IWLCA Coaches Poll, 12th in the KANE IL Media Poll and 14th in the USA Lacrosse Poll this week.
• Nine of the Blue Jays' 2026 opponents are ranked in the IWLCA Poll, eight are ranked in the KANE IL Media Poll and seven are ranked in the USA Lacrosse Poll.
• Hopkins' schedule is the fourth toughest in the nation and its opponents are a combined 52-23 (.693) on the season.
• JHU was ranked in the top 10 in all three polls in the preseason. It is the second straight year the Blue Jays are ranked in the top 10 in both the IWLCA and USA Lacrosse preseason polls. It is the first time JHU is ranked in the top 10 in the Inside Lacrosse preseason poll since 2007.
 
200-POINT CLUB
Ava Angello became just the eighth player in Johns Hopkins Division I history, and 13th all-time, to tally 200 career points (150 goals, 50 assists) in the 2025 Big Ten semifinals versus Northwestern. She reached the milestone in just 56 games, the seventh fastest all-time in school history to reach the mark.
• Angello is the first player to reach the 200-point mark since Maggie Schneidereith in 2020. Schneidereith finished her career in 2021 with 249 points (151 goals, 98 assists). Angello now boasts 241 points (181 goals, 60 assists) in 64 career games.
 
CENTURY CLUB
Taylor Hoss needs just one point to become the 52nd player all-time in program history to score 100 career points. She would join Ava Angello as current Blue Jays in the Century Club.
• This would be the third straight season and 21st time overall that JHU has had two players on the same team with 100 career points. 
• Hopkins graduated a pair of 100-point scorers in Ashley Mackin (181) and Campbell Case (127) from last year's team.
 
GETTING OFFENSIVE - PART I
• Hopkins brought back three of its top four goal scorers and their top three in assists in Ava Angello, Taylor Hoss and Lacey Downey. In total, the Blue Jays return 54 percent of their goals (147 of 272), 62.5 percent of their assists (110 of 176) and 57.3 percent of their total points (257 of 448). Hopkins returns seven players that notched a point in 2025, including six that tallied at least 10 points.
• JHU boasted a balanced attack in 2025 as four players scored at least 28 goals and five had at least 40 points. It was the second straight year, and just the third time in program history, that Hopkins had five players with 40 or more points - Angello (90), Ashley Mackin (85), Hoss (61), Downey (58), Charlotte Smith (40).
• It was the first time since 1995 that Hopkins had two players - Angello and Mackin - with 80 or more points in a season. The last to do so were Jenn Ward (99) and Francine Brennan (97). In fact, it was just the third time in JHU history that two players reached the 80-point mark.
• In addition, it is the first time in school Division I history, and just the second time ever, that the Blue Jays have had two players with 60 or more goals. The last time it happened was in 1994, when Rebecca Savage scored 71 goals and Ward scored 60.
• Under head coach Tim McCormack and offensive coordinator Nicole Graziano, the Blue Jays are re-writing the Hopkins' record book. In the last two seasons, JHU has turned in the top two point, goal and assist totals in program history. The last two seasons' point and assist totals rank first and second all-time (since 1976) in program history. The last two seasons' goal totals are tied for second and fourth all-time.
 
GETTING OFFENSIVE - PART II
• Seven of the Blue Jay freshmen have notched at least one point through the first seven games this season, while four have tallied at least nine points. The seven have combined for 51 points on 35 goals and 16 assists. The freshmen account for 34.6 percent of the team's goals and 23.9 percent of the team's assists.
Paige Willard leads the JHU freshmen with 15 points (11g, 4a). She is fourth on the team in goals and points. McKenzey Craig is second among her classmates, and fifth overall, in goals (9) and points (12). Sienna Chirieleison ranks fourth on the team in assists (6) and is third among the freshmen with 11 points (5g, 6a).
 
GETTING OFFENSIVE - PART III
• For the third time in the last five games, Hopkins had two players with at least six points each. In the win over Colgate, Ava Angello had seven points (5g, 2a) while Taylor Hoss notched six (1g, 5a).
• At Penn, Angello (5g, 2a) and Lacey Downey (5g, 2a) had seven points each. And in the win at Duke, Hoss (2g, 4a) and Paige Willard (4g, 2a) had six points each.
• This is the fifth time under head coach Tim McCormack that two Blue Jays have had six or more points in the same game. Since the program moved to Division in 1999, it has happened 20 times.
• Angello has been involved in four of the last five games. In addition, it is the fourth time that two players had seven or more points in a game. It has happened twice in the last two seasons.
 
IT'S BEEN A WHILE - PART I
Ava Angello turned in her third straight season with 40+ goals in 2025. She scored 40 goals as a freshman in 2023 and followed that with 53 goals in 2024 and 65 in 2025. Angello is the first player to accomplish the feat since Dene DiMartino (2014-2016) and just the ninth in program history.
• Angello also became the first player with back-to-back 50-goal seasons since Mary Key, who scored 50 or more goals in each of her four seasons (2004-2007).
• Angello's 90 points last season are the most by a Blue Jay since Taylor D'Amore totaled 105 points in 2014. In addition, her 90 points are the fourth most in school Division I history and sixth all-time.
 
IT'S BEEN A WHILE - PART II
Paige Willard notched six points (4g, 2a) in the win at Duke. She is the first freshman with six points since Ava Angello had six on six goals at Monmouth on March 7, 2023.
McKenzey Craig scored the overtime winner versus the Blue Devils. She is the first freshman to do so since Angello scored the overtime winner versus Towson on April 18, 2023. In fact, she is just the third freshman in program history to score an overtime game-winner. Joining Angello and Craig is Abbey Hurlbrink, who did so at 23rd-ranked Michigan on April 22, 2021.
 
EXTRA LACROSSE
• Hopkins' double overtime win at Duke was the 50th overtime game in program history and 16th that needed multiple overtimes. The Blue Jays are now 25-25 (.500) in overtime games, including 21-17 (.553) since moving to Division I in 1999.
• Hopkins has now won eight straight overtime games dating back to 2023 and is 8-1 in overtime games under head coach Tim McCormack.
 
LENDING A HAND
• Hopkins assisted on 12 of 17 goals in the season-opener at Liberty - more than 70 percent of its goals. In addition, nine players had at least one assist. On Tuesday versus James Madison, the Blue Jays handed out 10 assists, on 12 goals, for an 83.3 percent assist to goal ratio.
• Through seven games, the Blue Jays rank second in the Big Ten and fifth in the nation with 9.57 assists per game. JHU is assisting on 66.33 percent of its goals (101g, 67a) this season. The Blue Jays rank third in the nation in assist-to-goal ratio.
• The Blue Jays have handed out double-digit assists in four games this season and have now posted 19 double-digit assist games under head coach Tim McCormack. Hopkins had nine double-digit assist games in 2025 (out of 20 games) and set the single-game record with 17 assists in the win over Liberty in the NCAA Tournament.
• In 2025, Hopkins broke the school single season record for assists for the second straight year. JHU finished with 176 assists, 15 more than 2024 (161). The 2024 team broke the previous record by 31 - a record that had stood since 1994. Hopkins led the Big Ten and ranked seventh in the nation in assists in 2024 (8.05). Last year, the Blue Jays led the conference and ranked third in the nation (8.80).
• Hopkins assisted on 64.70 percent of its goals (272) last season, which led the nation. It was the second straight year that JHU led the nation in goal-to-assist ratio. The Blue Jays assisted on 62.40 percent of its goals (258g, 161a) in 2024.
 
ON A ROLL
Taylor Hoss ended last season on roll as she totaled 16 goals and 16 assists over the final eight games of the season. The 32 points were more than 52 percent of her season total of 61 points in 20 games. During that stretch, she notched 10 points (4g, 6a) in the Big Ten Tournament to earn All-Tournament Team honors.
• Hoss' 16 goals in the last eight games of the season came on just 19 shots on goal. She tallied three hat tricks during the stretch and had a pair of six-point games. She has picked up right where she left off and has 28 points (12g, 16a) in the first seven games of the season.
• During the same eight-game stretch, Ava Angello totaled 40 points on 26 goals and 14 assists. Her 26 goals came on 53 shots on goal (.491). Angello didn't miss a beat in the offseason as she has totaled 26 goals and 37 points in the first seven games. In fact, her eight goals in the season opener were one more than the entire Liberty team.
 
AGAINST THE SEAWOLVES
• Hopkins and Stony Brook meet for the 13th time in a series that began in 2010. The Seawolves lead the series, 7-5, but the Blue Jays have won the last two meetings.
• Associate head coach Dorrien Van Dyke is a 2017 graduate of Stony Brook, where she had a standout career for the Seawolves. She totaled 197 goals, 71 assists, 112 ground balls and 179 draw controls while leading Stony Brook to a 72-12 record and four America East titles. Van Dyke was a three-time IWLCA All-Region selection and was named a Third Team All-American by IWCLA as a senior.
 
IN THE CIRCLE
• Hopkins outdrew Liberty, 17-9, in the season opener with a combined 13 draws from Lacey Downey (7) and Laurel Gonzalez (6). On Saturday, JHU controlled a season-high 19 draws versus Colgate. It is the 33rd time (in 64 games) under head coach Tim McCormack that JHU had more draws than its opponent.
• Going into 2025, Hopkins was looking to replace 86 percent of its draw controls lost to graduation - and found the answer in Gonzalez. She went on to break the single season record and ranked second in the Big Ten with 166 draw controls in her freshman campaign.
• In her collegiate debut, Gonzalez outdrew Florida all on her own, controlling 12 draws to the Gators' seven. She finished the season with seven double-digit draw performances, including a school record 18 versus Oregon. She already ranks sixth in school history in career draws (205) and is 92 away from tying Shelby Harrison's career record (297).
• As a team, Hopkins finished with 285 draw controls in 2025, the second highest total in program history and eight shy of the record. The 2024 squad holds the record with 293. JHU ranked third in the Big Ten in draws in 2024 and fourth in 2025. JHU has turned in three of the top four single season draw totals in school history under McCormack. In addition, Hopkins has posted five of the top six single-game draw performances and has had 20 or more draws in a game eight times under McCormack.
 
IT'S A FAMILY AFFAIR
• Athletics at Johns Hopkins is a family affair and this year's team is no different.
• Freshmen Georgia and Mary Pavlou are the 14th pair of sisters to don the Hopkins Blue & Black.
• Senior Reagan O'Brien played alongside her older sister, Quinlan O'Brien '25, for three seasons.
• Senior goalie Morgan Giardina and sophomore midfielder Emmy Haugen are both following in the footsteps of their fathers, Scott Giardina and AJ Haugen. Giardina was a two-time All-American goalie and led the Blue Jays to the NCAA Semifinals as a senior in 1992. Haugen was a three-time First Team All-American midfielder and was inducted into the Johns Hopkins Athletic Hall of Fame in 2013.
 
ON THE TUBE
• Hopkins will play four nationally televised regular season games in 2026. JHU will face Ohio State (March 22) and Michigan (April 12) on ESPNU. In addition, Hopkins will face Northwestern (March 29) and Penn State (April 16) on the Big Ten Network.
• The Big Ten Semifinals and Championship games will be televised on the Big Ten Network.
 
ON TAP
• Johns Hopkins hits the road for the first time in three weeks as the Blue Jays open Big Ten play at Rutgers on Sunday, March 15. Opening draw at SHI Stadium is slated for 1:00 pm.
 
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Players Mentioned

Campbell Case

#21 Campbell Case

Att.
5' 8"
Graduate Student
Ashley Mackin

#27 Ashley Mackin

Att.
5' 7"
Senior
Quinlan O

#6 Quinlan O'Brien

Def.
5' 10"
Senior
Charlotte Smith

#34 Charlotte Smith

Att.
5' 5"
Senior
Ava Angello

#18 Ava Angello

Att.
6' 0"
Senior
Lacey Downey

#40 Lacey Downey

Mid.
5' 3"
Junior
Morgan Giardina

#14 Morgan Giardina

GK
5' 6"
Senior
Laurel Gonzalez

#11 Laurel Gonzalez

Mid.
5' 7"
Sophomore
Emmy Haugen

#12 Emmy Haugen

Mid.
5' 6"
Sophomore
Taylor Hoss

#1 Taylor Hoss

Att.
5' 5"
Junior

Players Mentioned

Campbell Case

#21 Campbell Case

5' 8"
Graduate Student
Att.
Ashley Mackin

#27 Ashley Mackin

5' 7"
Senior
Att.
Quinlan O

#6 Quinlan O'Brien

5' 10"
Senior
Def.
Charlotte Smith

#34 Charlotte Smith

5' 5"
Senior
Att.
Ava Angello

#18 Ava Angello

6' 0"
Senior
Att.
Lacey Downey

#40 Lacey Downey

5' 3"
Junior
Mid.
Morgan Giardina

#14 Morgan Giardina

5' 6"
Senior
GK
Laurel Gonzalez

#11 Laurel Gonzalez

5' 7"
Sophomore
Mid.
Emmy Haugen

#12 Emmy Haugen

5' 6"
Sophomore
Mid.
Taylor Hoss

#1 Taylor Hoss

5' 5"
Junior
Att.
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