Saturday, March 30 | at FDUÂ | Teaneck, N.J. | University Field | 1Â p.m.|Â
LIVE STATSÂ | No Live Video Available
OPENING DRAWÂ
Saturday's match between Saint Francis and FDU marks the second meeting in the all-time series after the two played for the first time last season in the Knights inaugural season. The Red Flash, who will play at FDU for the first time in program history, won the initial meeting last season in Loretto. A win and Saint Francis would open NEC play 3-1 for the first time in program history, while the team has started 2-2 three times (2010, 2021, 2023).
THE WORD ON THE KNIGHTS
The Knights come into the match 1-10 overall and 1-4 in NEC play after falling 18-8 to Le Moyne on the road on Wednesday. FDU's lone win this season was a 14-10 decision at home against Delaware State. Riley Eaton leads the team in points with 16 goals and nine assists for 25 points. Brielle McInaw paces the team in goals (17) and is third on the squad in points (18), while Jordan Santana is second on the Knights with 12 goals and a team-best 11 assists for 23 points. McInaw also fuels the team with 48 draw controls. Abigail McDonald leads the team with 20 ground balls, and Nora Codianni and Kendal Hippert power the squad with 10 caused turnovers. Skylar Goodman has 106 saves, a 15.87 goals against average, and a .384 save percentage in 642:34 minutes played.Â
LAST TIME WE METÂ
Saint Francis defeated FDU 22-6 on April 12, 2023.
Autumn McHenry paced the Red Flash with six goals and four assists for 10 points, while
Danielle Hernandez posted four tallies and three assists for seven points, and
Lizzie Fisher also had four markers and an assist. Riley Eaton powered the Knights with three goals on the afternoon.
Elyssa Enrique made six saves for the Red Flash, while Skylar Goodman and Jewel Horsmon each had seven stops for FDU.
LAST TIME OUT
Bella Fisher scored a game-high five goals, while
Elizabeth Mahmud had the decisive tally and the final draw control to help Saint Francis secure an 8-7 win against Wagner on Saturday. Fisher put the Red Flash up for good with 1:32 left in the third quarter on her fifth goal of the afternoon. Mahmud made the score 8-6 with 3:05 left in the match and then scooped up the draw control with 2:06 left to help almost run out the clock.
Taylor Coughlin made seven saves and allowed only three Seahawks markers in the final 47 minutes and 14 seconds to help Saint Francis rally for the win. It is the seventh time in NEC play the squad had allowed seven goals or fewer in a game and the 25th time in program history.
NEXT TIME OUTÂ
Saint Francis comes home for a two-game homestand against Le Moyne on Wednesday and CCSU on April 6. The match against the Blue Devils will also be senior day for the Red Flash.
IN THE NEC
SophomoreÂ
Bella Fisher ranks second in the Northeast Conference in shots per game (7.88), third goals per game (3.00), third points per game (4.13), sixth in assists per game (1.13), and fifth in draw controls per game (3.75). Graduate studentÂ
Lizzie Fisher sits fourth in goals per game (2.50) and eighth in points per game (2.88), while senior
Danielle Hernandez is sixth in assists per game (1.13). SophomoreÂ
Taylor Coughlin ranks sixth in saves per game (9.13), seventh in save percentage (.424) and eighth in goals against average (12.39). SophomoresÂ
Bella Burke is seventh in caused turnovers per game (1.38). Saint Francis ranks second in goals per game (10.88), assists per game (5.00), and points per game (15.88).
NEC HONORS
Sophomore
Bella Fisher was named the NEC Player of the Week, junior
Taylor Coughlin was named the NEC Defensive Player of the Week and freshman
Elizabeth Mahmud was the NEC Rookie of the Week for March 18-24.
Bella Fisher posted five goals including go-ahead goal to help Saint Francis defeat Wagner for only the third time in program history with an 8-7 win. Coughlin allowed a career-low seven goals and had seven saves in the win against the Seahawks. Mahmud registered a career-high two goals and two draw controls, including the team's eighth goal of the game and the ensuing draw control to help the Red Flash run out the clock.
Bella Fisher and Coughlin were also named NEC Prime Performers.
Â
Bella Fisher was named the NEC Co-Player of the Week, fellow sophomoreÂ
Bella Burke earned NEC Defensive Player of the Week, and freshmanÂ
Jacks Lesmeister nabbed her first NEC Rookie of the Week selection for February 26-March 3. Burke,Â
Bella Fisher, and graduate studentÂ
Lizzie Fisher were Prime Performers.Â
Bella Fisher registered five goals, one assist, seven draw controls, two ground balls, and a caused turnover in a 15-9 win against Robert Morris on February 28. Burke anchored the defense in the win against Robert Morris by helping to keep the Colonials under 10 goals in the game and adding four ground balls and two caused turnovers. Lesmeister posted four caused turnovers and two ground balls against the Colonials.Â
Burke,Â
Bella Fisher, andÂ
Lizzie Fisher were named NEC Prime Performers for March 11-17. Burke posted nine draw controls, five caused turnovers, and four ground balls in the week and helped to keep the No. 3 team in the NEC in goals and points coming into the game to just seven goals in a 17-7 win against Merrimack.Â
Bella Fisher tallied six goals, one assist, seven points, three ground balls, two caused turnovers, and nine draw controls.Â
Lizzie Fisher recorded eight goals and two assists for 10 points in the week, including a career-high six goals and one assist for seven points against Merrimack — the six goals rank as the 10th-most in single-game program history.Â
Brooke Lacey was named an NEC Prime Performer for the week of March 4-10. Lacey registered four goals, two assists for six points, four ground balls, and three caused turnovers.Â
Bella Fisher andÂ
Julia Givens were named NEC Prime Performers for the week of February 19-25. Fisher registered three goals and a career-high three assists for six points, and Givens tallied two goals, three ground balls, and three caused turnovers against Rider.Â
Danielle Hernandez and Givens were named NEC Prime Performers for the week of February 12-18. Hernandez had two goals and two assists, while Givens posted a hat trick against Oregon in the first-ever game against a Power 5 opponent.
Bella Fisher captured her team-leading fourth Prime Performer while Coughlin roped in her first career honor. Burke,
Lizzie Fisher, and Givens also have two Prime Performer nods, while Hernandez and Lacey each have one selection.
A DAVID PUDDY HIGH-FIVE
Graduate studentÂ
Lizzie Fisher, juniorÂ
Nancy Alden, and sophomoreÂ
Bella Fisher are the only players on the team to have a five-goal performance.Â
Bella Fisher leads the team with six contests with at least five goals, including a pair of six-goal performances last season against CCSU on April 15, 2023, and against St. Bonaventure four days later. The sophomore has two five-goal performances this season against Robert Morris on February 28 and against Wagner on March 23.Â
Lizzie Fisher joined the club with her five-goal performance against Robert Morris, and Alden stamped her membership with a career-high five goals against Kent State on March 13.Â
Lizzie Fisher joinedÂ
Bella Fisher in the six-goal club with her six tallies against Merrimack on March 16.
HATTIESÂ
SophomoreÂ
Bella Fisher leads the team with 11 hat tricks after registering four this season, including a pair of five-goal performances this season. Graduate studentÂ
Lizzie Fisher has four hat tricks in 2024, with a career-high six tallies against Merrimack to notch 10 hat tricks in her career. Senior captainÂ
Danielle Hernandez is right behind the duo with seven three-goal performances. SophomoreÂ
Nancy Alden notched her first career hat trick against Rider and had a career-high five goals against Kent State on March 13. Fellow sophomoreÂ
Julia Givens has two hat tricks this season and six career hatties. SophomoreÂ
Brooke Lacey notched her first three-goal performance of the season and second of her career against LIU on March 9.
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS
SophomoreÂ
Bella Burke leads the team with 15 ground balls and 12 caused turnovers and ranks third with 12 draw controls. The sophomore had a career-high six draw controls against Kent State on March 13. Last season, she registered 30 of her 40 ground balls, 22 of her 26 caused turnovers, and six of her seven draw controls in the final seven matches of her freshman year. In those seven games, the sophomore had at least three ground balls in all seven games and at least two caused turnovers in six of the seven games with a career-high six caused turnovers against Wagner on April 29, 2023. Burke has at least two ground balls in 16 of 23 games and two caused turnovers in 11 games in her career.Â
MILESTONE ALERTÂ
SeniorÂ
Danielle Hernandez has 108 career points and became the 12th player in team history to reach 100 points in her career and the fourth under head coachÂ
Tracy Coyne against St. Bonaventure on March 5. She moved into the top 10 for points with her four assists against Kent State on March 13 and can jump into ninth place with eight points. She also sits in sixth place for career assists with 44, needing nine more helpers to reach the Top-10 in that category. Hernandez, who dished out the fourth-most assists in a single game with five helpers against Stonehill on April 1, 2023, recorded four assists on Wednesday to sit in a 13-way tie for the 10th-most assists in a single game. The senior notched her second four-helper performance after having four dimes against Stetson on March 14, 2023. Hernandez becomes the fourth player in program history to have at least three matches with four assists in a game, joining former teammateÂ
Autumn McHenry, Sheri Fort, and Katie Schaaf. Fort and McHenry also had three games with that total, while Schaaf turned the trick seven times.
SophomoreÂ
Bella Fisher is the second fastest player to reach 75 points in program history, achieving the feat in 23 games after Kate Simmons, who scored 75 points in 22 matches.
Bella Fisher is now 19 points away from joining Hernandez in the 100-point club to become the 13 player in team history to reach the milestone.
JuniorÂ
Chyler Espino, who became the fifth different player in program history with 10 draw controls in a game against St. Bonaventure last season, is 10th for career draw controls with 79 draws. She can move into eighth place with four draws (83) and seventh place with nine draws (88). Espino can also crack the top 10 in ground balls and caused turnovers this season. Currently sitting at 35 caused turnovers, she can move into 10th place with 10 caused miscues (45), while her 69 ground balls are 15 ground balls (84) from No. 10 on the career list for that category.
INSIDE LACROSSE FEATUREÂ
Graduate student
Erika Ellison was featured in an article for Inside Lacrosse chronicling her time as a student-athlete and a ROTC member. Click
HERE to read the story.
AYE, AYE, CAPTAINÂ
Graduate student
Lizzie Fisher, senior
Danielle Hernandez, and junior
Chyler Espino have been named captains for the 2024 campaign. The trio, junior Collen Roche and sophomore
Bella Fisher, will serve as Women's Lacrosse Leadership Council members.
RETURNING ALL-NEC PERFORMERSÂ
Sophomore
Bella Fisher was named the 2023 NEC Rookie of the Year, becoming the first Red Flash player to earn the recognition. She also earned All-NEC second-team recognition. Junior
Chyler Espino was named to the All-NEC first team while selected to the second team senior
Danielle Hernandez. Fisher and sophomore
Bella Burke earned NEC All-Rookie team distinction.Â
WELCOME TO THE LO'Â
Saint Francis women's lacrosse head coach
Tracy Coyne has added four freshmen and one junior to the 2024 roster. Junior
Victoria DiRenno comes to Loretto after playing two seasons at Niagara. Freshmen
Kylie Fischer,
Jacks Lesmeister,
Elizabeth Mahmud, and
Molly Riva joined the squad this season. Mahmud recorded her first career goal against Kent State on March 13, and her first career assist against Merrimack on March 16.
FROM THE GREAT WHITE NORTHÂ
Saint Francis has three players who hail from Canada: Juniors
Olivia Baldini (Hamilton, Ontario) and
Taylor Coughlin (Hespeler, Ontario) and sophomore
Mak Patten (Welland, Ontario). Head coach
Tracy Coyne also served as the Canadian National Team head coach from 1999-2005 and earned fourth-place standings in the 2001 and 2005 World Cups.Â
CHYLER'S WORLD TOURÂ
Since the 2023 season ended with Team Philippines, junior
Chyler Espino has played in two international tournaments. The junior played in the World Lacrosse Festival over the summer in California and then in the Super Sixes Tournament in December in Hong Kong. Espino was joined in the Super Sixes Tournament by former teammate
Elyssa Enrique. Espino is currently out with an injury.
PLAYER TO WATCHÂ
Sophomore
Bella Fisher was named a Second Year Player to Watch by US Lacrosse Magazine. She had a Red Flash freshman record for goals (42) and points (48). The 42 goals were the ninth most by any class in single-season program history. Fisher scored six goals twice last season (CCSU on April 15, 2023, and St. Bonaventure), which ranks 10th on the single-game chart in program history. The sophomore, who received the NEC Rookie of the Week honor four times to become just the fourth player in NEC history to turn that trick, scored at least six goals in a game six times in her freshman campaign.Â
ABOUT THE COACHÂ
Head coach
Tracy Coyne enters her fifth season at Saint Francis and her 35th campaign in her legendary career. She holds a 317-226 career record. She currently ranks seventh in wins by active Division I head coaches. At the same time, she is 11th in NCAA Division I history in wins, 13th at any level for active head coaches, and 19th overall for any level. Coyne became the program's winningest head coach in program history in a 17-11 win against St. Bonaventure on April 19. In 2023, under her tutelage, the Red Flash set a program record for overall wins (10), conference wins (5), and longest winning streak (6) and clinched the program's first-ever NEC Tournament appearance. She became one of 20 coaches to reach 300 wins with the 10-6 win at Akron on February 27, 2022. She has led 12 teams to the NCAA Tournament between the NCAA DI and DIII levels, with six conference championships and several NCAA Final Four appearances. Coyne joined the Roanoke College Hall of Fame in 2023.