Penn State Sports Magazine
Issue link: https://comanpub.uberflip.com/i/730644
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VARSITY VIEWS
T
his past May, the Penn State :eld
hockey team headed to the Nether-
lands for one of those o;-season in-
ternational trips that American college
sports teams occasionally embark upon.
The Dutch love their :eld hockey –
their national team brought home the sil-
ver medal at the Olympics last month –
but the Nittany Lions' trip was intended
not just to test players'
mettle against European
club competition or to
:ll up their Instagram
accounts with photos of
Amsterdam and The
Hague, but to enhance
their camaraderie. The
Lions visited :ve cities
in nine days, and at each
hotel they checked into,
the coaching sta; would change the
roommate assignments so that players
would get to know each other better.
By that measure, and quite a few others,
the trip was a big success.
"I think our trip to Holland was really a
great team-building experience," senior
forward Brooke Birosik said. "It really
brought us together o; the :eld, [and] I
think that's really showing on the :eld
this year."
It certainly is. Heading into their Big Ten
opener, the Lions were 6-0, their best start
since 2002, and had skyrocketed from 18th
in the preseason coaches' poll to fourth.
The reason for that enormous jump: vic-
tories over three ranked opponents. The
Lions defeated No. 20 Old Dominion, 6-2,
and No. 5 Virginia, 2-0, at the Penn State
Field Hockey Complex in the :rst weekend
of the regular season, then shut down No.
9 Albany, 3-1, in a neutral-site game in
Easton, Pa., on Sept. 4.
One of the keys to Penn State's success
has been a balanced o;ense that was av-
eraging 5.5 goals per game through six
games. The Nittany Lions were leading
the country in scoring with three play-
ers – Birosik, sophomore mid:elder Gini
Bramley and junior forward Shay Can-
non – ranked among the top 30 scorers in
the country.
The Lions have also been solid defen-
sively, with sophomore goalkeeper Jenny
Rizzo allowing only 1.09 goals per game to
rank eighth in the country. Rizzo has
"probably been the most improved player
on the :eld," coach Charlene Morett-
Curtiss said, citing the experience she
gained at the Junior Pan Am Games.
When Penn State played host to Lock
Haven on Sept. 11, Rizzo gave up only one
goal to a team that was averaging eight per
game, helping the Lions maintain their
perfect record with a 4-1 victory.
The early-season surge has been an im-
pressive return to form for a team that last
year stumbled to a 9-10 :nish. It was only
the second losing season in Morett-Cur-
tiss's 29 years as head coach of her alma
mater, and while Penn State :elded a
youthful team in 2015, the returning play-
ers were determined to prevent it from
happening again. One point of emphasis,
Morett-Curtiss said, was to ensure that
players kept their composure, particu-
larly in late-game situations.
"We lost :ve games [last year] in the last
:ve minutes just giving up goals," she
said. "That's something that we have def-
initely been talking about and working
on, just [to develop] that composure out
of the back:eld a little more. The one
thing that I try to express to the team a
little more is even with our trip to Hol-
land, it's really how we perform, how we
compete. I think we're much, much bet-
ter competitors for 70 minutes than we
showed last year. Last year was just such
an inexperienced team."
The European trip wasn't the only step
Penn State took to improve its outlook.
Last year players took part in a sports
science program that collected biomet-
ric information: heart rates, hydration
levels, sleep patterns and nutritional in-
take. A student in the kinesiology de-
partment monitored the program and
made a series of recommendations
aimed at optimizing the team's approach
to conditioning.
"We took to heart what he said,"
Morett-Curtiss said. "One thing we em-
phasized this summer was getting more
playing time on the :eld, as opposed to
conditioning and li=ing, and I think that
was a big di;erence with [players] coming
in. We were able to have a more e