3. The coaching staff has some clarity about the offense.
Today’s matchup was a high-scoring affair, but who stood out offensively?
Cummings, Danielle Etrasco (Boston University 2013), McCool and Kylie Ohlmiller (Stony Brook 2018) each tallied a hat trick, while Alex Aust (Maryland 2013), Brooke Griffin (Maryland 2015) and Kayla Treanor (Syracuse 2016) had two goals. Katie Schwarzmann (Maryland 2013) and Cortney Fortunato (Notre Dame 2017) added one apiece.
Entering this weekend, Fried noted that the offense was the toughest position to cut when determining the final World Cup roster. There are eight attackers in the mix – Aust, Etrasco, Fortunato, Griffin, Alyssa Murray (Syracuse '14), Ohlmiller, Treanor and Michelle Tumolo (Syracuse '13) However, he and his coaching staff now have some clarity as to who might lead the offense best this summer. Names were not disclosed, but specific evaluation topics were.
“Who’s listening, who’s not listening, who’s executing – those are the things that are more clear right now,” Fried said.
4. The draw game needs to be cleaner.
Ally Carey (Vanderbilt 2012), Cummings, and Shannon Gilroy (Florida 2015) are Team USA’s draw specialists, but Fried said Cummings is their primary one. But to him, it’s more important to solidify play after the draw is taken.
International rules place four players per team on the circle, which is eight total surrounding the two draw specialists in the center. Once the ball flies in the air or drops to the ground, it’s a battle of the fittest. However, Florida got the best of Team USA in some instances.
“It becomes a little bit of a cluster in the circle if you don’t box out,” Fried said. “Everybody’s pretty athletic so they fight to get to the middle, then it’s just a scrum and that’s not something [we want]. We need to be a little cleaner in boxing out and then come up with loose balls. We bobbled a lot, we pushed a lot around and we didn’t come out of the pack hard with the ball.”
5. The response is crucial.
Fried’s biggest takeaway? Look to Sunday. Team USA has a quick turnaround, facing Notre Dame at 10 a.m.
“The response from today that we get tomorrow – that was our challenge tonight,” said Fried. “We should disappointed in the standard we played at today, and that doesn’t take anything away from how Florida played, but that disappointment ends when we get out of the ice baths and we go forward.
“So, who can mentally do that? Who is not only going to challenge themselves, but challenge their teammates? That’s the hardest thing right now. They’re not all really teammates because they’re here for a selection. The people that get past that, ironically, are the ones that are able to be a part of that team.”
Fried and his coaching staff – Amy Bokker, Liz Robertshaw and Jess Wilk – will be looking for players who expect more out of everyone on the field. The key is not to continually challenge friends or those who were college teammates.
“Make sure that we play to the standard that we play to ourselves,” said Fried. “That is the biggest thing that we learned. We learned today that there are other really athletic teams that fight and that we have a target on our back because everyone is going to give us their best opportunity, so we have to mentally be prepared.”
The mental piece is important. Once the final 18 are selected, it’s easier for a player to not worry if and how she is playing. But if she is thinking about that now, Fried said she’ll likely think about it later. That’s a key part of the evaluation.
“It’s challenging when everybody knows this is what’s at stake,” said Fried. “As we evaluate that, that’s part of it because there’s a lot at stake this summer. When things are at a crossroads, or when things get tough, how do people respond, and individually, how do they respond for themselves and how do they respond with each other?”
Team USA is always about the team, even if this weekend is a tryout.