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US Lacrosse College Notebook
March 21, 2003

Roanoke's Stone Survives Baptism by Fire
Roanoke College's Emily Stone did not have much time to prepare for her first game as head coach of the Maroon women's lacrosse team. Try two days, and the game was against Lynchburg no less, a team Roanoke hadn't beaten since 1999.

That's the situation Stone found herself in when she joined Roanoke Monday as the interim coach following Julie Mazer's resignation. Stone, a four-year player at Longwood in the mid-'90s, had just left her position with the National Security Agency when she learned of the opening at Roanoke. Mazer announced her resignation Feb. 18 to become the head field hockey coach at Lehigh, but stayed on to coach the Maroons through their March 15 game against Virginia Wesleyan.

Roanoke started 4-0, but then had to deal with the coaching change. The result? Just a dramatic, 14-13, come-from-behind over the Hornets. Steph Calabrese had five goals and three assists to pace the Maroons, who trailed 7-3 at the half.

“We came out on our heels, we had the jitters. But once we started to play our own game, we came out on top. It was a great rally and a critical win for the momentum of the season,” said Stone, who had limited high school coaching and officiating experience before joining Roanoke.

A coaching change can be a trying experience for a team, even more so if it occurs mid-season. Stone credits the leadership of her three seniors for helping the team through the transition. Goalie Lisa Humphries and defenders Katy Shaver and Nikki Whitmore “did a good job of setting the tone for accepting the change and moving forward with it,” said Stone. Assistant coach Stephanie Masucci also remained with the team through the coaching change.

Stone had worked in the counter-intelligence and criminal justice fields before leaving the NSA and deciding she wanted to return to full-time coaching. “Coach Mazer did an incredible job of building the team the last four years, really preparing them for anything. They've dealt with the change maturely and with great attitudes,” said Stone.

Roanoke faces a major test Saturday at fifth-ranked St. Mary's (6-0). RC will reevaluate its coaching situation over the summer, but if first impressions count for anything, Stone should have her foot in the door.

Around the Country
Patriot Women Head for Prime Time

The George Mason women's lacrosse team will get its first taste of prime time lacrosse Friday night when it hosts Colonial Athletic Association rival Hofstra. The game will mark the first ever women's lacrosse home night game for GMU. The university funded the installation of lights at George Mason Stadium last summer, and the Patriot men's and women's soccer teams made use of them in the fall. Faceoff for George Mason (2-2 overall, 0-1 CAA) and Hofstra (1-2 overall) is 7 p.m. under the lights. GMU head coach Amy Umbach needs two wins to reach 50 in her career.

The Unbeaten
There are six remaining unbeaten teams in men's Division I lacrosse following Dartmouth's 14-7 loss to UMBC on Wednesday and three of them reside in the ECAC. Georgetown (6-0, ranked fifth), Massachusetts (5-0, ranked sixth) and Rutgers (6-0, ranked 10th) represent the ECAC. The others are top-ranked Virginia (5-0), second-ranked Maryland (4-0) and 14th-ranked Yale (3-0). All six will put the unbeaten marks on the line this weekend, highlighted by Virginia's Saturday night game at fourth-ranked Johns Hopkins.

Sharp Dressed Man
VMI went 19 years without a conference, but it didn't take the Keydets men's lacrosse team long to feel right at home in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. VMI beat Canisius 13-9 on Saturday and then beat defending league-champion Manhattan 8-7 behind 20 saves from senior goalie Brian Ward. With a 2-0 league record, the Keydets find themselves just a half-game behind league-leading St. Joseph's (3-5, 3-0 MAAC) entering Saturday's game at Wagner. VMI head coach Doug Bartlett donned a tie on the sidelines for the first time in his career for the inaugural MAAC game against Canisius. Figuring he had found a good thing the tie was back for the Manhattan game. You can bet he'll be well dressed for his trip to Staten Island.

“Mare-uh-lin” Schools Remember the 'D'
Five Maryland Division III squads turned in impressive defensive performances Wednesday. Washington College shut out Ursinus, 19-0, in Centennial Conference play behind Jon Spivey's five goals. The game marked the Shoremen's first shutout of another team since 1997 when they beat Swarthmore 17-0. Five players scored two goals each as Goucher defeated Capital Athletic Conference rival York 12-1. The Gophers held an opponent to one goal for the second time in 12 years of men's lacrosse. Kevin Whalen scored nine points (5g-4a) to lead St. Mary's to an 18-2 win over Massachusetts-Dartmouth. Ten McDaniel players scored goals, many thanks to Rob Weaver's six assists, as the Green Terror beat Haverford 18-3. On the women's side, 13 Sea Gulls scored goals in Salisbury's 19-3 CAC win over Marymount. The five impressive efforts followed the Division I Terrapin women's defensive statement Tuesday. The University of Maryland allowed Dartmouth to find the goal just twice in a 9-2 win in Hanover, N.H.

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