BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — As the U.S. women’s Sixes team walked off PNC Field at halftime of their The World Games opener against Australia — a half characterized by a few growing pains — Belle Smith pulled Madison Doucette aside.
The U.S. had struggled to find its offense early on and trailed Australia after one quarter. Doucette was locked in, keeping her team in the game, but both could sense the Australian team was tiring,
“‘Hey, I do transition at BC,’” Smith told Doucette. “‘That’s my job. Hit me.’”
Doucette looked at Smith, nodding her head.
“‘Ok, I got you,’” she answered.
The two college lacrosse stars were once teammates on the U19 national team that won gold in 2019. Now, they’re two of the leading voices on a young core for the U.S. Sixes Team in Birmingham, Alabama for The World Games.
Together, Smith and Doucette led a second-half effort that proved why the U.S. are among the favorites to win a gold medal at the World Games on the heels of the U.S. women's senior team's gold medal at the World Lacrosse Women's Championship. The U.S. pushed in transition throughout the second half, pulling away from an Australian team that featured a few names that played in the Women’s World Championship in Towson en route to a 16-6 victory.
Madison Ahern dodged her way to two goals and dished off three assists to lead the U.S. offensive performance, while Doucette chipped in 12 saves and fellow U19 alums Smith, Kasey Choma and Caitlyn Wurzburger each had four points in the big win to kick off The World Games — where Sixes is being displayed as part of a 10-day multi-sport global event taking over the city this summer.
The U.S. roster features a core of players competing in their first official international competition in the red, white and blue. However, those with the experiences from 2019 helped lead the home team out of a first-quarter rut and into a blowout win.
“Yeah, we haven’t played together in a while, but it’s like riding a bike,” Doucette said of her U19 teammates. “Every time you play, you shake off the rust and get going. It’s a different atmosphere, but having that experience of international lacrosse is fantastic. We knew we could execute even though it was rocky at the start.”
Tuesday was the beginning of a process that started in 2021, when Regy Thorpe convinced Florida women’s lacrosse coach Mandy O’Leary to apply to become a coach of the U.S Sixes team. After the Super Sixes event at USA Lacrosse headquarters and a training camp in June, O’Leary had already fallen for this roster, and the new discipline in general.