After Dominate Opener, Belmont High Girls Lacrosse Swept Aside By L-S In Sweet 16

Photo: Belmont High vs Lincoln-Sudbury Regional in the Sweet 16

The 14-seed Belmont High Girls Lacrosse team faced a challenging task on Tuesday, June 3: a Sweet 16 away match against the 3rd-ranked Lincoln-Sudbury Regional in the MIAA Division 1 state championship.

Belmont (14-7) had seen its fair share of top-level opposition this season, facing five top 10 playoff seeds during the regular season, losing to the top three by two goals or less, and a big late-season victory over Central Catholic. However, L-S (12-5) was a different competitor, with a physical defense and experience in attack.

And those cumulative advantages L-S possessed resulted in the Marauders’ 12-4 defeat in the quarter-final matchup.

Belmont High junior defender Fiona Rodriquez-Clark barking out the defense against L-S Regional

“Lincoln-Sudbury’s a great team from a great program,” said Belmont’s Head Coach Dan O’Brien. “They won the state championship two years ago and are at the next level that we’re aspiring to get to in terms of execution.”

If there was a hopeful playoff vibe for the Marauders, it was the first round 12-6 victory over 19th-ranked Braintree in the opening round at Harris Field on Friday, May 30. O’Brien had one word for the team to remember as they headed onto the pitch: “Dominate.” It took half of the first quarter to get rolling – Braintree tied the game at 2-2 at the 6:38 mark – as Belmont would go on a 6-0 run over the next 12 minutes with senior attack Charlotte Mayall (2 goals and an assist) planting the ball to give the Marauders the lead for keeps at 5:14.

Junior all-star mid Niamh Lesnik scored four goals to her team-high season total. At the same time, sophomore draw specialist midfielder Natalie Merrow controlled the center circle and showed her scoring prowess with Belmont’s eighth goal to give the Maruaders an 8-3 halftime lead.

Belmont High’s Neive Lesnik vs. L-S Regional High

Belmont Goalie Brooke Whalen registered 10 saves to backstop Belmont’s strong senior-rich defense, which includes co-captains Keira Healy and Anna Santos, Tyler Mayall and Bailey Cumbo, junior Fiona Rodriquez-Clark, and sophomore Lily Cook.

On Tuesday, at L-S’s turf field – situated beyond a vast meadow from the parking lot – the key word was less “dominate,” but rather “control” the Warriors. And for the first half, Belmont put the clamps on L-S offense. After a less-than-confident start as L-S senior attack Lexi Morrissey scored twice in the first three-plus minutes, the Marauders hunkered down and stalled out the Warriors’ pressure game.

“We kept it really close [in the first half],” said Belmont’s Charlotte Mayall. “We were very prepared coming into this game. We watched film and had a plan in place how we were gonna play D and what we’re gonna do an offense. And in the first half, we really showed how prepared we were.”

While Belmont’s defense was holding its own, Belmont’s offense struggled, not coming up with draw controls as L-S had a nose for ground balls. More than once, when Belmont was in control, its cautious setup for a shot resulted in unforced errors. When a shot was taken, L-S’s outstanding goalie Lydia Mossi was lights out with big saves. Belmont’s Whalen, who surrendered a single goal in the second quarter, made a point-blank save with 25 seconds in the half to keep the deficit manageable.

Belmont High’s Noura Goulding (7) celebrates goal by Charlotte Mayall (21) against Braintree.

While the Belmont’s first half defense was successful in a “bend but don’t break” en mode, the third quarter L-S figured out the back line with six goals, two from sophomore Nina Fragale (including her second with five seconds remaining in the quarter) and a hat trick by fellow sophomore Emerson Acquaviva. While Belmont found the back of the net with its first two tallies from Lesnick and Mayall, the Marauders couldn’t generate the momentum needed to make a late-game rally.

But in the view of Mayall, the game didn’t define the team’s

“I think we played amazingly today. I really don’t think the score ever defines our games. We played so much better than the scores showed. We played one of our best games today, but it wasn’t in our favor on the scoreboard. I’m definitely sad, but I’m happy with the memories that I made,” said Mayall.

“You never stop fighting. Really proud of you all,” O’Brien told the squad after the final horn sounded.

“I feel good about [giving up] 12 [goals] against this team,” said O’Brien. “And if you told me it would be 12, I would have told you the game would be something like 12-10. Their goalie played great, and we were just a half step late on some passes, which was the difference,” he said.

And this year’s team has built a foundation for future success,” said O’Brien.

“We’re gonna bring back the whole offense. We’re graduating three of the four starters on defense, but our goalie’s back, and we’ve got young girls who are hungry to play. We’ve got some incoming girls from a really strong youth program, so we’ll keep getting better, hopefully.”

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