
OPENING DRAW
• Johns Hopkins is back at Homewood Field to take on the Oregon Ducks in Big Ten action. Sunday’s game kicks off a stretch where the Blue Jays will play six straight conference games to end the regular season.
• Hopkins is coming off a 17-8 win at 14th-ranked James Madison on Wednesday in the Blue Jays’ final non-conference game of the season.
• Wednesday’s win over the Dukes boosted the Blue Jays’ record to 8-2 overall. The win also pushed Hopkins’ win streak to seven games.
ROAD WARRIORS
• Hopkins kicked off a four-game road trip on February 25 that saw the Blue Jays travel nearly 6,600 miles.
• After a short trip to Georgetown, JHU made back-to-back trips to New York (Stony Brook, Syracuse) before heading to the West Coast to open Big Ten play at USC.
• In fact, after playing three of their first four games within the friendly confines of Homewood Field, the Blue Jays will play just four of their final eight regular season games at home.
• Under head coach Tim McCormack, Hopkins is 18-11 (.621) away from Homewood Field.
LAST TIME OUT
• Ashley Mackin scored a school Division I record nine goals to lead Johns Hopkins to a 17-8 win at 14th-ranked James Madison Wednesday evening.
• Savannah Derey sandwiched a pair of goals around Mackin’s first strike and James Madison led 2-1 just four minutes into the game. Mackin then scored back-to-back goals in a four-minute span to give Hopkins’ its first lead at 4:07. Samantha DiCarlo scored on an eight-meter just 73 seconds later and it was 4-2 Blue Jays.
• Olivia Matthews opened the second quarter with a free position goal to cut the deficit in half. Hopkins answered with some quick passing that ended with an MK Lescault feed to Mackin in front for a turn-and-fire at 11:16. Maddie Epke came right back for the Dukes, spinning and scoring to make it 5-4.
• Mackin scored twice in the final eight and a half minutes of the second to spark a 6-0 Hopkins’ run that saw the Jays go up 11-4. Ava Angello extended her goal scoring streak to 29 games when she went high-to-low off a feed from Lacey Downey to open the third quarter. Downey then blew home a shot from eight meters off a helper from Campbell Case. Megan Kielbasa scored in traffic at 7:35 and three minutes later, Mackin capped the run with her seventh of the afternoon.
• Epke ended a Dukes’ scoring drought of nearly 24 minutes when she scored on a low shot with 1:13 to play in the third. Brianna Mennella then scored off a dodge from behind just 35 seconds into the fourth to make it 11-6. Hopkins answered with goals from Charlotte Smith, Lescault, Angello and Mackin in just five minutes and seven seconds to push its lead to 15-6.
• The Dukes snapped the run of four straight Blue Jay goals with an Epke eight meter score at 6:51. Mackin answered with her record-breaking goal off a pass from DiCarlo with 4:59 on the clock. Angello then capped a five-point day when she scored on the doorstep just over two minutes later. Derey had the final say of the game, scoring for the Dukes with 1:07 on the clock.
• Mackin’s nine goals are the most in school Division I history and the most since Rebecca Savage scored nine in 1994. The nine goals are also the most in the nation this season. Angello finished with five points (3g, 2a) and now ranks ninth in school Division I history with 126 career goals. Downey (1g, 2a), Lescault (1g, 1a), Campbell (2) and DiCarlo (1g, 1a) also had multi-point games.
• Reagan O’Brien had a career-high seven ground balls to go with four caused turnovers and became just the fourth player in program history with 100 career caused turnovers. Paris Colgain had a game and career-high five caused turnovers. Laurel Gonzalez controlled six draws and Morgan Giardina made seven saves in the win.
MIDSEASON ALL-AMERICANS
• Inside Lacrosse released its Midseason All-America teams on Thursday, and the list included five Blue Jays. Ashley Mackin and Reagan O’Brien were named to the First Team while Ava Angello, Lacey Downey and Laurel Gonzalez were named Honorable Mention.
• Hopkins’ two first team selections and five total honorees, are tied for second most in the nation.
• Mackin leads the Blue Jays in goals (45) and points (59) and is third in assists (14). O’Brien leads the team and the nation in caused turnovers (38). She also leads the team and the Big Ten in ground balls (27).
• Angello ranks second on the team and fourth in the Big Ten in goals (33). She is also second on the Blue Jays and fifth in the conference in points (44). Downey has a team-best 17 assists, which ranks sixth in the B1G. She has also scored 13 goals and totaled 30 points on the season. Gonzalez leads the Big Ten and ranks 13th in in the nation in draws (90).
ON A ROLL
• Senior Ashley Mackin is on a tear to start the season. She has notched at least four points in eight of nine games. In addition, in each of those eight games she scored at least four goals.
• She opened the season by notching four or more points in the first seven games. That streak is the fourth longest streak in school Division I history. Mary Key holds the record with 11 straight games with four or more points, set in 2005-06.
• Mackin’s seven straight games with four (or more) goals is the longest in Johns Hopkins Division I history. In fact, since the program moved to Division I in 1999, the longest such streak was three games.
• Mackin has scored 45 goals in nine games this season, four shy of her 2024 total (19 games). In addition, she has totaled 59 points, seven shy of her total from last season. She leads the nation in goals per game (5.00) and ranks second in points per game (6.56). She also ranks eighth in the Big Ten in assists per game (1.56).
• Mackin scored nine goals on Wednesday at James Madison to eclipse the 40-goal mark for the second straight season. She is the 13th player all-time in Johns Hopkins history with multiple 40-goal seasons.
RECORD SETTING
• Senior Ashley Mackin’s 13 points (6g, 7a) at Georgetown on February 25 tied the Johns Hopkins’ Division I record, set by Mary Key (6g, 7a) versus Oregon in 2007. In addition, it is one shy of Alice Collins’ all-time record of 14 (12g, 2a), set against Widener in 1987.
• Mackin’s 13 points are the most in the nation since April 30, 2022, when Vanderbilt’s Gabby Formia had 13 points (3g, 10a) versus Cincinnati. The 13 points are also four shy of the NCAA Division I record.
• There have been 26 13-point performances in NCAA Division I history. In just nine of those games, including Mackin’s, did the player have at least six goals and six assists.
• On Wednesday, Mackin set a school Division I record with nine goals at James Madison. Her nine goals are three shy of both the all-time Johns Hopkins record, set by Collins versus Widener in 1987, and the NCAA Division I record.
CENTURY CLUB – PART I
• In the season opener versus Florida, senior Ashley Mackin became the 32nd player in school Division I history, and 49th all-time, to notch 100 career points. She entered the game with 96 career points and went on to score a game-high five goals versus the Gators.
• At Georgetown, graduate student Campbell Case totaled four points (2g, 2a) to become the 50th player all-time with 100 career points. The milestone came with an assist at the 4:39-mark in the third.
• Mackin and Case joined junior Ava Angello in the 100-point club. This marks the second straight season and 14th time overall that JHU has had at least three players on the same team with 100 career points.
• Mackin now boasts 155 career points in 46 games. Case has tallied 109 career points in 56 games and Angello has totaled 165 points in 48 games.
CENTURY CLUB – PART II
• At Loyola, junior Ava Angello became just the 16th player in school Division I history (since 1999) to score 100 career goals. She reached the milestone in highlight-reel fashion with a behind-the-back shovel shot versus the Greyhounds. Angello is the first Blue Jay to reach the milestone since Shelby Harrison in 2022.
• In Johns Hopkins’ history (since 1976), she is the 30th player to have scored at least 100 goals in their career. Angello has now scored 123 goals in 47 career games.
• Senior Ashley Mackin joined Angello in the 100-goal club at USC. She entered the game with 96 career goals and reached the milestone just 12:15 into the game. Mackin now has 104 goals in 45 career games.
• This is the ninth time in program history that JHU has two players with 100 or more career goals on the same team. It is also the sixth time that two or more players scored their 100th goal in the same season.
CENTURY CLUB – PART III
• Junior Reagan O’Brien caused four turnovers in Wednesday’s win at James Madison to become only the fourth player in program history with 100 career caused turnovers. She now has 101 in her career.
• O’Brien ranks fifth among active players in NCAA Division I with her 101 career caused turnovers.
• O’Brien is the first Blue Jay to tally 100 caused turnovers in a career since Lacey-Leigh Hentz in 2004. Hentz holds the school single season (54 / 2002) and career (146 / 2002-05) records for caused turnovers.
DOWNEY DEBUT
• Sophomore Lacey Downey had an impressive debut for the Blue Jays in the season-opener versus the Florida Gators. Making her first career start, the transfer midfielder led the team with three ground balls and finished second in points (2g, 1a), caused turnovers (2) and draw controls (2).
• Ten games into her Hopkins’ career, Downey leads the team in assists (17) and ranks third in goals (13) and points (30). She is also third in draw controls (14) and fourth in caused turnovers (11).
HOMETOWN HERO
• Junior Ava Angello was the hometown hero in the come-from-behind win at eighth-ranked Syracuse on March 10. She tied her career-high with six goals, including three free position scores, on just nine shots.
• Angello is a Manlius, NY native and grew up less than 15 miles from Syracuse University. In her career, she has played in three games at Syracuse – UMass (2023 NCAA First Round) and Syracuse (2023 NCAA Second Round, 2025 regular season). In those three games, she has totaled 12 goals and one assist.
POLL POSITION
• Hopkins is ranked fifth in the IWLCA Coaches Poll, fourth in the KANE Inside Lacrosse Media and seventh in the USA Lacrosse Media poll.
• The Blue Jays jumped two spots in the IWLCA and KANE IL polls and three spots in the USA Lacrosse poll.
• JHU has been ranked in the IWLCA Coaches Poll for 28 consecutive weeks and in 47 of 52 polls under head coach Tim McCormack. This is the highest the Blue Jays have been ranked in the IWLCA poll since April 3, 2006.
• Thirteen of the Blue Jays’ 2025 opponents are ranked in the IWLCA, 12 are ranked in the KANE Inside Lacrosse poll and 10 are ranked by USA Lacrosse. Hopkins’ schedule is the fourth toughest in the nation and its opponents are a combined 97-45 (.683) so far this season.
EXTRA LACROSSE
• Hopkins has played in three overtime games this season and won all three. The Blue Jays have never played more than three overtime games in the same season. In addition, the three overtimes wins are the most in one season.
• Hopkins has won six straight overtime games, dating back to 2023, and is 6-1 in overtime games under head coach Tim McCormack.
• At eighth-ranked Syracuse on March 10, MK Lescault’s first goal of the game was arguably the biggest of her career – it was the overtime game-winner. It was her first career overtime goal and first game-winner.
• Ashley Mackin scored the game-winner with 3:20 to play in overtime versus 12th-ranked Penn on February 22. It was her second overtime goal this season, tying the program single-season record. She also scored the game-winner versus 25th-ranked Duke one week earlier.
• Mackin’s two overtime goals are also tied for third most in a career in Johns Hopkins’ history. Jamie Larrimore (1999-2002) holds the record with five.
CARDIAC KIDS
• For the second time this year, and fifth time under head coach Tim McCormack, Johns Hopkins trailed entering the fourth quarter and rallied to win. Three of the five wins came in overtime, including the win at Syracuse.
• The last three fourth quarter/overtime comeback wins have come on the road.
• In two of the comebacks (Rutgers 2023, Stony Brook 2025), Hopkins shutout the opponent in the fourth quarter. And in each of those games, the Blue Jays outscored their opponent 6-0 in the fourth.
AGAINST THE DUCKS
• Hopkins and Oregon meet for just the sixth time in a series that began in 2006. This is the first meeting between the two since 2010. The Blue Jays are 4-1 all-time in the series and won the last meeting, 20-12.
• This is the third meeting in the series at Homewood Field. Hopkins and Oregon have met twice at neutral sites – Honolulu, HI (2006) and Carlsbad, CA (2008).
AGAINST THE BIG TEN
• Sunday’s game is the 130th game for Johns Hopkins against a current member of the Big Ten (B1G).
• Hopkins is 53-76 all-time against members of the B1G, including 19-19 in regular season games since joining the conference in 2017.
GETTING DEFENSIVE
• Johns Hopkins has held opponents scoreless for 10 or more minutes, 10 times this season. In addition, four of those 10 scoreless streaks are at least 15 minutes.
• Under head coach Tim McCormack, Hopkins has held its opponent scoreless for 15 or more minutes, 24 times.
• In the game at Stony Brook, JHU held the Seawolves scoreless in the fourth quarter as the Blue Jays rallied to win, 14-13. It was the ninth time under McCormack that the Blue Jays shutout an opponent for a quarter. In fact, it was the third time that Hopkins has done so in the fourth quarter.
ON THIS DATE
• This is Hopkins’ 16th game on March 30 and second in the last two seasons.
• The Blue Jays are 12-3 all-time on this date, but are just 1-3 in their last four. JHU won its first 11 games on this date before dropping the next three.
AROUND THE BIG TEN
• Johns Hopkins has been picked to finish tied for third in the Big Ten in a preseason vote of the league’s head coaches.
• Defending B1G champion Northwestern is the preseason favorite to win the title in 2025. Michigan is second with Hopkins and Maryland tied for third. Penn State is picked fourth, followed by USC, Ohio State, Rutgers and Oregon.
• The top seven teams will make the Big Ten Tournament with the top team in the final league standings earning a bye into the semifinals. The teams that finish second through seventh will play quarterfinal games on Wednesday, April 23. The semifinals are set for Friday, April 25 with the championship game scheduled for Sunday, April 27. Maryland will host all three rounds of the tournament.
BRING BACK THE O
• Hopkins brought back more than 66 percent of its goals (170 of 258) but only 41 percent of its assists (66 of 161) in 2025. The Blue Jays returned their top three goal scorers and 11 of the 17 players that scored at least one goal last season.
• JHU boasted a balanced attack in 2024 as four players scored at least 28 goals and six had at least 40 points. It was the first time in program history that Blue Jays had six players with 40 or more points. In addition, it was the first time Hopkins had two players – Ava Angello (68) and Ashley Mackin (66) with 60 or more points since 2019.
• So far this season, 12 Blue Jays have notched at least one point and 10 have scored at least one goal. In addition, 10 of the 12 have at least one goal and one assist.
• In addition to Angello and Mackin, Bailey Cheetham (14g, 35a), Campbell Case (32g, 16a), Maeve Barker (28g, 18a) and Abbey Hurlbrink (19g, 22a) also eclipsed the 40-point mark in 2024.
IN THE CIRCLE
• Hopkins entered the season looking to replace 86 percent of its draw controls from 2024. The Blue Jays seem to have found the answer in freshman draw specialist Laurel Gonzalez. In the season opener, she outdrew Florida all on her own, as she controlled 12 draws to the Gators’ seven. As a team, Hopkins outdrew Florida, 15-7. Gonzalez’s 12 draws broke the program record for draws by a freshman and were four shy of the overall single-game record.
• Gonzalez has posted four double-digit draw performances this season. After a pair of 12-draw outings, she broke her own record with 13 draws at Stony Brook. It was the second time she outdrew a Hopkins’ opponent. The 13 draws against the Seawolves are tied for second most all-time in program history and are three shy of the record.
• Gonzalez’s 90 draws already rank second most by a freshman in JHU history. She needs just two draws to break Shelby Harrison’s freshman record of 91, set in 2018. Her 90 draws rank fourth all-time in Johns Hopkins single-season history. In fact, Gonzalez already ranks 20th in career history with her 90 draws. She currently leads the Big Ten and ranks 11th in the country with 9.00 draws per game.
• Hopkins controlled 20 draws in the overtime win versus Penn on February 22, the most in a game since JHU had 23 in a win over James Madison on March 30, 2024. Hopkins followed that with 20 draws in the win at Georgetown on February 25. The 20 draws are also tied for the eighth most in a game in program history.
• Hopkins had a lot to replace in the center circle with the graduation of Jennifer Barry, Abbey Hurlbrink and Jordan Carr. The trio alone combined for 233 draws – 79.5 percent of JHU’s 293 total draws. In total, Hopkins graduated 86 percent (252) of its draws from 2024.
• Barry broke the program single-season record with 133 draws last season. A graduate transfer who spent one season with the Blue Jays, she also ranks ninth in career draws. Hurlbrink finished her career ranked seventh in school history with 158 career draws.
• Hopkins did get senior Annie Marshall back after she missed last season with an injury. She led the team with 87 draw controls as a sophomore in 2023 and is currently 13th in school Division I history with 101 career draws. Marshall needs 27 draws to move into the top-10.
• As a team, JHU ranked third in the Big Ten with 14.65 draws per game in 2024. That is the best per game average in school history. In addition, the Blue Jays broke the single-season record with 293 draw controls.
• Hopkins posted two of the top-three single-game draw performances in school Division I history last year. Hopkins controlled 23 draws in the win over James Madison on March 30 and had 22 in the win over Siena on February 11. The school single-game record is 26, set against Old Dominion in 2013.
LENDING A HAND
• Hopkins has totaled 90 assists through 10 games, including double-digit outings in the wins over Duke (10 assists), Georgetown (14 assists), USC (11 assists) and Rutgers (11 assists). The Blue Jays are assisting on 62.94 percent of its goals (143) this season, which ranks second in the nation. JHU leads the Big Ten and ranks fourth in the nation with 9.00 assists per game. The Blue Jays are also third nationally in total assists.
• JHU’s 14 assists at Georgetown on February 25 are the most this season and are tied for second most in school history. The Blue Jays have handed out 10 or more assists in a game 11 times under head coach Tim McCormack and set the school record with 16 against James Madison in 2024.
• Hopkins set the school record with 161 assists and 8.05 assists per game last season. In fact, JHU broke the single-season record by 31 assists. In addition, the Blue Jays led the Big Ten and ranked seventh in the nation in assists per game.
• Hopkins assisted on 62.40 percent of its goals (258g, 161a) last season. That was the highest assist-to-goal ratio in the nation and the best in program history.
TEWAARATON AWARD WATCH LIST
• Junior Reagan O’Brien was one of 14 additions to the Tewaaraton Award Watch List it was announced on March 6. She joined senior Ashley Mackin and junior Ava Angello, who were named to the initial list in February.
• O’Brien leads the nation with 3.80 caused turnovers per game and leads the Big Ten with 2.70 ground balls per game. She has also notched three assists and two draw controls in 10 games. She ranks third all-time in Johns Hopkins history with 101 career caused turnovers.
• The trio of Mackin, Angello and O’Brien are the first Blue Jays to be named to the Tewaaraton Award Watch List since 2022 and this marks the first time that three players were named to the list.
• Mackin earned preseason All-America honors from both USA Lacrosse and Inside Lacrosse in addition to being tabbed a Big Ten Player to Watch. She finished with career highs in goals (48), assists (18) and points (66) and ranked second on the team in both goals and points in 2024. Mackin has totaled 113 goals, 42 assists and 155 points in 46 career games.
• Angello was previously named to the USA Lacrosse Preseason All-America Team and a Big Ten Player to Watch. She led the Blue Jays with a career high 53 goals and 68 points in 2024. Angello has totaled 126 goals, 39 assists and 165 points in 48 career games.
40 AND 40
• In 2024, Ava Angello reached the 40-goal mark for the second straight season. She scored 40 goals in her freshman season (2023) and followed that with 53 goals last year.
• Angello was the first Blue Jay with consecutive 40-goal seasons since Dene DiMartino accomplished the feat in three consecutive seasons from 2014-2016. Ashley Mackin joined Angello with consecutive 40-goal seasons in Wednesday’s win at James Madison. Mackin scored 48 goals in 2024 and has already scored 45 this season.
• Since the program moved to Division I in 1999, Angello and Mackin are just the seventh and eighth players with consecutive 40-goal seasons. In the 50-year history of the program, they are the 12th and 13th players with consecutive 40-goal seasons.
TAKEAWAYS
• Junior Reagan O’Brien is the Blue Jays’ active leader with 101 career caused turnovers, which ranks third all-time in school history. She currently leads the nation with 3.80 caused turnovers per game. Last season, O’Brien ranked second on the team with 38 caused turnovers, the third highest single-season total in program history. Ten games into the season, she has already matched her 2024 total.
• O’Brien wasted no time in making her mark on the Blue Jay defense in 2023, her freshman season. She notched three caused turnovers and three ground balls in her collegiate debut versus UAlbany and led the team with 25 caused turnovers in 2023. The 25 caused turnovers were fifth most by a freshman in school history.
• O’Brien tied the Johns Hopkins single-game record with seven caused turnovers in the win over Rutgers last Sunday. Her seven takeaways are tied for the second most in the nation this season. Her 32 caused turnovers this season are already tied for eighth in school single-season history.
• O’Brien tied the program single-game record for caused turnovers by a freshman when she had six takeaways at Loyola in 2023.
• Senior Paris Colgain finished third on the team in caused turnovers (25) and junior Hannah Johnson ranked fourth (19) last season – both totals were career highs. This season, Johnson ranks second on the team with 16 caused turnovers and now has 42 for her career. Colgain is third with 15 caused turnovers and now ranks 17th in school Division I history with 56 career caused turnovers.
• As a team, Hopkins leads the Big Ten and ranks fourth in the nation with 12.50 caused turnovers per game. Last season, JHU led the Big Ten and ranked seventh in the nation with 10.65 caused turnovers per game. The Blue Jays’ 213 caused turnovers in 2024 were the fifth most in school Division I history.
OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN
• Graduate student Campbell Case, senior Ashley Mackin and junior Hannah Johnson have been selected as captains for the 2025 season.
• Case played in all 20 games on attack last season, finishing with 32 goals, 16 assists, 48 points and 12 ground balls. She ranked third on the team in goals and fourth in points. In addition, Case notched at least one point in 19 of 20 games last season.
• A year ago, Mackin finished second on the team in goals (48) and points (66) and was tied for third in assists (18). She had 11 hat tricks in 19 games and notched at least one point in 18 of 19 games in 2024.
• Johnson started all 20 games on defense and finished with career highs of 19 caused turnovers and 23 ground balls. She ranked fourth on the team in caused turnovers last season.
IT’S A FAMILY AFFAIR
• Athletics at Johns Hopkins is a family affair and this year’s team is no different.
• Junior defender Reagan O’Brien and senior defender Quinlan O’Brien are the 13th pair of sisters to don the Hopkins Blue & Black.
• Junior goalie Morgan Giardina is following in the footsteps of her father, Scott Giardina. He was a two-time All-American goalie and led the Blue Jays to the NCAA Semifinals as a senior in 1992.
• New to the Blue Jays is freshman Emmy Haugen, the daughter of Hopkins midfielder AJ Haugen. A three-time first team All-American, Haugen graduated from JHU in 2000 and was inducted into the University’s Athletic Hall of Fame in 2013.
WORLD CHAMPIONS
• Johns Hopkins head coach Tim McCormack and junior defender Reagan O’Brien won gold last summer with the US Women’s U20 National Team at the World Lacrosse Championships in Hong Kong, China. McCormack was named an assistant coach in May 2023.
• The US women have now won six of the eight world championships conducted by World Lacrosse from 1995 to 2024. World Lacrosse adjusted the age groupings for the 2024 championship up to the U20 age level.
• McCormack and O’Brien weren’t the only Blue Jays in Hong Kong last summer as junior midfielder Jillian McNaughton took home silver as a member of Team Canada.
SIXES LACROSSE
• Lacrosse will make its return to the Olympics in 2028 in Los Angeles. In 2028, men’s and women’s lacrosse will be competed in sixes.
• The Women’s European Sixes Qualifier just wrapped up in Portugal with teams vying for a spot at the 2025 World Games in Chengdu, China. Haley Crosson, a 2019 Johns Hopkins graduate, backstopped the Ireland Lacrosse Sixes National Team to the Gold medal. She led Team Ireland to wins over Israel in the semifinals and Czechia in the championship.
• Crosson posted a tournament-best 73 saves (57% save average) and was selected to the All-Tournament Team. She also competed with Team Ireland at the 2024 World Lacrosse Box Championships in Utica, NY.
• Crosson ranks sixth in Johns Hopkins Division I history in career saves (314), save percentage (.444) and minutes played (2111:33). She also ranks seventh in games played (42) and tied for sixth in starts (37).
GRAZIANO AND VAN DYKE PROMOTED
• Head coach Tim McCormack announced in December that Nicole Graziano and Dorrien Van Dyke had each been promoted to Associate Head Coach. The pair came to Homewood in June 2022 when McCormack was named the fourth head coach in program history.
• Graziano will continue in her role as Offensive Coordinator while Van Dyke will continue as the Blue Jays’ Defensive Coordinator. The duo helped Johns Hopkins to a 12-8 record and a second straight trip to the NCAA Sweet 16. The Blue Jays’ 12 wins are the most in a season since 2015.
• Graziano’s offense broke multiple school records in 2024, including for points (419), points per game (20.95), goals (258), assists (161), assists per game (8.05) and assist-to-goal ratio (.624). The Blue Jays led the nation in assist-to-goal ratio and were the only team to assist on more than 59 percent of its goals. Hopkins led the Big Ten, and ranked seventh in the nation, in assists per game. JHU also ranked second in the league in points per game and goals per game.
• Facing the second toughest schedule in the nation in 2024, Van Dyke’s defense led the Big Ten and ranked seventh in the nation in caused turnovers per game (10.65). In addition, the squad’s 213 total caused turnovers rank as the fifth most in program history. Hopkins led the conference and ranked 16th in the nation in ground balls per game (18.45). The Blue Jays also ranked fourth in the Big Ten in scoring defense (10.76), the lowest goals against average since 2018.
SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
• Johns Hopkins will play at least one game on every day of the week during the regular season.
• JHU will play four games each on Saturday and Sunday, in addition the Blue Jays will play two games on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.
• Hopkins will also play one game each on Monday (Syracuse – March 10) and Friday (Florida – February 7).
ON THE TUBE
• Hopkins will play four nationally televised regular season games in 2025. JHU will face Syracuse (March 10), Rutgers (March 23) and Penn State (April 16) on ESPNU. In addition, the Blue Jays will take on the host Ohio State Buckeyes (April 10) on the Big Ten Network.
• The Big Ten Semifinals and Championship games will be televised on the Big Ten Network.
FOR THE RECORD
• This marks the 50th season for Johns Hopkins, which sports an all-time record of 492-320-4 (.605) and a 274-183 (.599) record as a Division I program. The Blue Jays are in their 27th season of Division I after making the move in 1999.
• The game against Maryland on April 10, 2024, was the 800th game in program history. Hopkins became just the 12th program in NCAA history, across all divisions, to play 800 games.
• The Blue Jays have posted 38 winning seasons, including 21 straight from 1987 to 2007. Hopkins has also made 21 NCAA Tournament appearances, including 12 in the Division I Tournament (2004, 2005, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024).
ON TAP
• Johns Hopkins returns to Homewood Field on Thursday, April 3 as the Blue Jays host the third-ranked Northwestern Wildcats. Opening draw is slated for 6:00 pm.
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