Big 2nd Quarter Drives Virginia Women's Lacrosse to 16-8 Win Over VCU

Kate Galica wins a draw control during the Virginia women's lacrosse game against VCU at Klockner Stadium.
Kate Galica wins a draw control during the Virginia women's lacrosse game against VCU at Klockner Stadium. / Virginia Athletics

A few freshmen have played key roles for the Virginia women's lacrosse team in year 1 under new head coach Sonia LaMonica. Madison Alaimo and Jenna Dinardo have given the Cavaliers a huge boost on the attack and Kate Galica has done the same in the midfield.

Galica provided one of the most impactful individual performances of the season on Wednesday, turning perhaps UVA's biggest weakness at the draw control into a key to success, giving the Cavaliers a sizable possession advantage as No. 11 Virginia (10-3, 3-3 ACC) got back on track with a dominant 16-8 victory over VCU (4-9, 3-2 A10) on Wednesday night at Klockner Stadium.

Virginia came into this game on a two-game losing skid and the common denominator in each of UVA's three losses this season has been a distinct disadvantage in the draw circle. In those three defeats, the Cavaliers lost the draw control battle by a combined 51-31 margin. It's been an issue in virtually every game this season, though, as UVA came into Wednesday's game winning less than 42% of the draws this year.

The freshman Kate Galica provided some hope on that front, as she won 11 draws against the Rams, more than the entire VCU team combined, and Virginia owned 21 of the 28 draw controls for the game. Even with a 6-2 edge in draws in the first quarter, things were tight early on with UVA leading by just one at 4-3 at the end of the opening period.

The Cavaliers opened things up and essentially put the Rams away for good in the second quarter, holding VCU off the scoreboard entirely and winning the period 9-0 to seize control. Katia Carnevale scored four of her five goals and dished out an assist in the second quarter. Mackenzie Hoeg also scored twice in the period as Virginia turned a one-goal game into a 13-3 blowout by halftime. VCU attempted only one shot in the second and that was gobbled up by Mel Josephson, who made five saves and allowed five goals in 45 minutes of action.

The Cavaliers took their foot off the gas in the second half, with the starters resting for most of the duration of the game. VCU outscored UVA 5-3 in the second half, but the lead was never in doubt as Virginia went on to win 16-8.

Katia Carnevale led the way offensively for the Cavaliers with five goals and two assists, her third game with at least five goals this season and matching her season-high of seven points. Mackenzie Hoeg was efficient with four goals on five shots and Kate Miller tallied three goals and two assists and also had six draw controls. Kiki Shaw had two goals and Morgan Schwab had two assists.

Of course, the player of the game was the aforementioned Kate Galica, whose 11 draw controls matched the sixth-highest single-game draw total in program history. Her 55 draw controls this season are the second-most by a UVA freshman with three games left in the regular season.

Up next, Virginia heads back into conference play and hits the road to take on Louisville on Saturday at 11:30am on the ACC Network.


Published
Matt Newton

MATT NEWTON

Managing Editor and Publisher, CavaliersNow Email: mattnewton@virginia.eduTwitter: @mattynewtssWebsite | LinkedIn | Instagram Matt Newton is the managing editor and publisher at CavaliersNow. He has been covering UVA athletics since 2019 and has been the managing editor at CavaliersNow since launching the site in August 2021. Matt covers all things UVA sports, including Virginia basketball and football news and recruiting, former Wahoos in the pros, and coverage of all 23 of the NCAA Division I sports teams at the University of Virginia. A native of Downingtown, Pennsylvania, Matt grew up a huge Philadelphia sports fan, but has also been a UVA sports fanatic his entire life thanks to his parents, who are alums of the University of Virginia. Matt followed in his parents' footsteps and attended UVA from 2017-2021, graduating with a degree in Media Studies and a minor in Economics in May of 2021.