Game Notes | Live Video (MyFoxNEPA.com)
WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. - In their first games since reaching career milestones, Lycoming College’s
Brooke Strausser and Marywood University’s Taylor McKeown will face off in a non-conference women’s lacrosse match on Thursday afternoon in the first game to in the Lycoming College women’s lacrosse team’s history to be broadcast live on TV, as WQMY MyNetwork TV will broadcast the game.
Strausser has led the Warriors all season long, posting 43 goals and adding three assists, helping her cross the 100-point mark with her second of four goals on Tuesday, April 17, in a 23-14 loss at King’s (Pa.). Strausser was one of four Warriors to post hat tricks in the game, along with sophomore Amber Graybill (four goals), freshman Casey McGuire (three goals) and sophomore Maureen Heagy (three goals).
McKeown scored five goals to record the 300th point of her collegiate career and lead Marywood (9-3 overall) to a 22-11 win over Immaculata on Tuesday. The senior attacker also moved into 11th place among all-time goal scorers in NCAA Division III history with 271, just one outside the top 10.
Warrior Notes
• Junior
Brooke Strausser has scored in all 13 games this year. She has posted nine hat tricks. She
needs just two goals to enter the top 10 in the school’s single-season record book, where Brenda
MacPhail sits with 45 in 2001.
• Lycoming leads the conference in groundballs per game with 22.54. Strausser leads the Warriors
and is third in the league at 3.08 groundballs per game.
• Sophomore
Amber Graybill is averaging 5.0 points per game in her last two outings, as she
posted five goals and an assist against Widener and four goals against King’s.
• Sophomore
Maureen Heagy notched the first hat trick of her career against King’s. She needs
two more points to reach 25 in her career.
• Freshman
Casey Maguire became the first Warrior rookie to reach 25 goals since Justine Titko
also scored 25 in 2007.
• Junior defender
Hope Pappas has already set new career highs with two goals, 32 groundballs
and 10 caused turnovers.