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Women's Lacrosse

Women’s lacrosse NCAA tournament 2016: Breaking down the field

Logan Reidsma | Senior Staff Photographer

Syracuse has been eliminated by Maryland in each of the past three seasons in either the Final Four or national championship game.

With the women’s lacrosse NCAA tournament bracket released on Sunday night, The Daily Orange’s women’s lacrosse beat writers broke down what to watch for heading into the tournament. Syracuse (17-5, 5-2 Atlantic Coast) earned a No. 4 seed and will face the winner of Boston College and Stony Brook on Sunday. Here’s how our beat writers broke down the field.

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Most exciting first-round matchupNorthwestern vs. Louisville

Both these teams finished the season ranked in the top 13. Northwestern actually started the season ranked within the top five, but suffered some tough early season losses, including an embarrassing 17-4 loss to Maryland at the end of March. But the Wildcats improved in the Big Ten tournament, making it to the title game and competing with Maryland, losing by only three. Meanwhile, Louisville followed a five-game winning streak with a four-game losing streak coming into the NCAA tournament. The Wildcats sport a top-20 offense in goals scored and the Cardinals have a top-20 defense. The difference in the game could be Kaylin Morissette, who ranks second in the country with 8.8 draw controls per game. — Tomer Langer

Sleeper pick: Towson (15-3, 5-1 Colonial Athletic)



The Tigers have the fifth best defense in the country, giving up just 6.6 goals per game. Earlier in the season they won games against then-No. 19 Loyola and then-No. 19 Johns Hopkins, allowing only five and four goals in each game. In a game against No. 16 Penn, the Tigers lost a 7-4 game. If Towson wins its first round matchup with Old Dominion (and if Penn beats Wagner) then the two teams could meet up again in the second round. The problem for Towson is scoring, but if the defense clamps down and and the offense gets just enough, the Tigers could make a run. — Tomer Langer

High seed most likely to lose early on: No. 6 seed Notre Dame (13-6, 4-3 Atlantic Coast)

The Fighting Irish is the only team in the tournament that has a bye and previous losses to both teams it could face. UND fell to Louisville, 10-9, in double-overtime in early March, but pounded teams by a total score of 76-27 over its next four games. At the time, Notre Dame was riding high and ranked No. 2, but then suffered a 12-11 setback at home to Syracuse. A tailspin ensued, UND lost four of its last seven games, including a 17-12 whooping at Northwestern, its other potential matchup. The Fighting Irish led for five minutes until the Wildcats ripped off nine of the next ten goals. UND should be on high alert for its next opponent, no matter which team it may be. — Sam Fortier

Louisville m Heidi Smith (32) pressures Notre Dame Kiera McMullan (1) during the quarterfinals of the ACC Women's Lacrosse Championship in Blacksburg, Va., Thursday, April 28, 2016. (Photo by Sara D. Davis, the ACC.com)

Courtesy of the ACC

Matchup you’d most like to see: No. 4 seed Syracuse vs. No. 1 seed Maryland in Final Four

Think about all that’s stake in this hypothetical national semifinal. It has two of the sport’s best players, coaches and programs. Can Syracuse, for the first time in four years, overcome Maryland’s dominance? Does Cathy Reese have another trick in the bag to beat Gary Gait? Will Taylor Cummings frustrate her foil, Kayla Treanor, one last time? Can Treanor breakthrough and rewrite her legacy? Will Syracuse’s senior class — ranked No. 1 when it arrived on campus — make good on promise? When two of lacrosse’s most historic programs matchup, especially ones with this much recent history against one another, it takes on an importance transcendent even if it’s just the semifinal. — Sam Fortier

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Logan Reidsma | Senior Staff Photographer

Tournament MVP: Taylor Cummings, Maryland

Barring a next-level tournament performance from Syracuse’s Treanor, two-time Tewaaraton Award winner Taylor Cummings should be widely considered the best player in the field. Maryland’s versatile, two-way midfielder hasn’t disappointed in her senior campaign, notching 124 draw controls, 67 points, 57 ground balls and 43 caused turnovers while ranking fourth in Division I with 6.5 draw controls per game. A front-runner to repeat with her third straight Tewaaraton Award, Cummings has been her best against the top teams in the tournament. With six goals, eight ground balls, 10 draw controls and six caused turnovers in wins over Syracuse, North Carolina and Florida — all which ranked in the top four at the time — Cummings has given the undefeated Terrapins a great chance at a third-straight title. — Liam Sullivan

Team to beat: No. 1 seed Maryland (19-0, 5-0 Big Ten)

Undefeated No. 1 Maryland  has taken home the last two titles and looks primed to once more. A tough out-of-conference schedule featuring a 14-9 win over then-No. 3 Syracuse, an 8-7 win over then-No.4 North Carolina and an impressive 14-4 victory against then-No. 2 Florida has prepared the Terrapins for tournament play. There are no guarantees, especially in the NCAA tournament, but Maryland is certainly the favorite and the closest to a sure thing the field of 26 has to offer. — Liam Sullivan





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