Connecticut Post

Gritty, resilient Fairfield field hockey team eyeing first NCAA tournament win

- By Jim Fuller

Considerin­g the way things have gone for the Fairfield field hockey program, it could be considered somewhat surprising that Wednesday’s NCAA Tournament game will be starting at 1 p.m. and not at 11 a.m.

The number 11 has certainly been magical. The Stags earned the honor of hosting the game against American University by winning a programrec­ord 11 consecutiv­e games. Fairfield has played in 11 onegoal games and won every one of them, and the Northeast Conference champions have 11 players with at least three points this season, led by Danielle Profita and Luzi Persiehl.

That has set the stage for what the Fairfield players and coaches hope will be the program’s first NCAA Tournament win after dropping the openers in 2001 and 2017.

The NCAA Tournament appearance was fittingly enough secured with backtoback onegoal wins in the NEC tournament. However, the foundation was created during a challengin­g nonconfere­nce regular season schedule, highlighte­d by the Stags rallying from a twogoal deficit to top fellow NCAA Tournament team Boston College in overtime.

“It is really the kids, they have amazing amounts of grit,” Fairfield coach Jackie Kane said. “That expression that they refuse to lose. A great example of that was our Rider regular season game when we scored [with 41 seconds left in the second half ] to tie the game.”

It is a group that started five sophomores, two freshmen in the NEC tournament title game. Emily Halderson is the only senior on the roster, but she has another season of eligibilit­y. Yet, with all the youth, the Stags are 50 in overtime games in 2019.

“I think they all grew up together, they all learned how to win and what is so exciting is we have the same exact team back next year so they really rely on each other,” Kane said. “There is no hierarchy of we are the

seniors, you are the freshmen and you have to do that, they are a cohesive group that has a real buy in with the program and with each other.”

It’s also a group with a collective team GPA of 3.53 that has wins over teams from the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big Ten but it was back to back victories

over Columbia and Providence when Kane began to realize there was something special going on.

With an 182 record, a No. 24 national ranking and RPI of 26, the Stags get to play one more game at home after going 81 at University Field this season.

“It is terrific that we get to play on our field again,” Kane said. “It is great for our fans, our parents and the most important thing is that they are studentath­letes, right? This gives them the oppor

tunity to still go to school and play the game they love.”

A matchup with national powerhouse UConn awaits the winner on Friday, but the Stags aren’t thinking about that. The main goal will be slowing down an American University team led by 18goal scorer Noor Coenen who has scored the game winner in five of the Eagles’ 11 victories this season.

Halderson, one of four players to start all 20 games this season,

figures to see plenty of Coenen during the game as the Fairfield defense tries to limit the number of shots that junior goalie Zoe Rosen has to face. The defense has certainly done plenty of that this season as Rosen has stopped 50 of the 73 shots on goal this season.

With seven wins this season when the opposing team has scored first, don’t expect to see the Stags panic if Coenen adds to her gaudy scoring total in the early going.

“They just jump into another gear,” Kane said of her team’s reaction when falling behind. “I wish they’ve start in that gear but we like to keep the fans happy, excited and in their seats until the final play I guess. They have resolve, they are a real special group.”

 ?? Fairfield athletics / Contribute­d photo ?? Fairfield University freshman Madison Hoskins had two goals in the NEC tournament including the gamewinnin­g goal in overtime in title game.
Fairfield athletics / Contribute­d photo Fairfield University freshman Madison Hoskins had two goals in the NEC tournament including the gamewinnin­g goal in overtime in title game.

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