USA Field Hockey Names Women's
Junior World Cup Team
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Katie O'Donnell |
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - USA
Field Hockey has announced its
roster for the Women's Junior World
Cup, Sept. 14-25 in Santiago, Chile.
Selected during USA Field Hockey's
Elite Team Trials, July 21-24 at
Penn State Univ., the U.S. team of
under-21 athletes will enter the
16-team Junior World Cup as the No.
9 seed. The USA will begin play in
Pool A with top-seeded The
Netherlands, No. 8 England and No.
16 Zimbabwe.
Of the 18 athletes selected to the
Junior World Cup team, 15 competed
on the U.S. team that placed second
at the Junior Pan American
Championships in March in San Juan,
Puerto Rico. The team placed second
at the event to secure the USA a
spot in the Junior World Cup.
The U.S. team features three players
coming off U.S. senior team
appearances at the Rabobank
Champions Challenge held earlier in
July in Virginia Beach. Junior World
Cup selections Lauren Crandall (Doyelstown,
Pa.), Lauren Powley (Mountaintop,
Pa.) and Katie O'Donnell (Blue Bell,
Pa.) played key roles in the USA's
fifth place finish at the
international event. Crandall and
Powley started all six games for the
USA senior team while 16-year-old
O'Donnell scored a goal in the USA's
5-3 win over Spain in the
tournament's 5th/6th place game.
Coached by two-time Olympian and
current Univ. of Michigan assistant
coach Tracey Fuchs, the USA team
also includes goalkeepers Katherine
Blair (Louisville, Ky./Virginia) and
Brianna O'Donnell (Collegeville,
Pa./Methacton HS) in addition to
field players Laree Beans
(Allentown, Pa./North Carolina),
Rachel Dawson (Berlin, N.J./North
Carolina), Lauren Ehrlichman
(Wellesley, Mass./Princeton), Katie
Evans (Newtown Square,
Pa./Delaware), Katelyn Falgowski
(Landenberg, Pa./St. Marks HS),
Katie Grant (Lehighton, Pa./Duke),
Lori Hillman (Gibbsboro,
N.J./Michigan), Michelle Kasold (Chapell
Hill, N.C./Chapel Hill East), Mia
Link (Jenkintown, Pa./Virginia),
Cara-Lynn Lopresti (San Diego,
Calif./Duke), Heather Schnepf
(Medford Lakes, N.J./Iowa), Amy
Stopford (Hillsborough, N.C.)/Duke)
and Jamie Whitten (Maidens, Va./Wake
Forest).
The fall scheduling of the Junior
World Cup means the U.S. athletes
will miss a portion of their
collegiate or high school seasons
prompting a generous move from the
coaches to allow the athletes to
participate and continue the
development of the U.S. national
team.
The USA has qualified for the quadrennial event in three of the
four previous editions of the Junior World Cup. The USA's best finish
was a 10th place showing in 1989. The USA placed 12th in 1997 and 14th
in 2001.
Korea is the defending Junior World
Cup champion after winning the event
in Buenos Aires in 2001.