Daily News Tribune: 'Bentley Field Hockey Team Heads Down Familiar NCAA Road'
By Scott Souza/Daily News staff
WALTHAM — .The Bentley University field hockey team is back
in a familiar place looking ahead to matches against familiar
opponents.
It might all seem all too ordinary if it wasn't so very
extraordinary.
With a 2-1 victory over Stonehill College in the Northeast-10
Conference championship game on Sunday, the Falcons won for the
15th time in 17 games and avenged two of their four losses during
the regular season. One of their other losses came to UMass-Lowell,
which Bentley also bested, 1-0, in NE-10 tourney play this
weekend.
The conference crown earned the Falcons the second seed in the
North Region of the NCAA Division II tourney and potentially
another meeting with both of their fiercest rivals. Bentley (16-4)
hosts third-seeded UMass-Lowell Saturday at 1 p.m. with the winner
advancing to play at regional top seed Stonehill next Friday in the
semifinals. The national championship will be decided Nov. 15 in
Easton.
After rallying from a 1-5 start to reach the NCAA semis in King's
first season last year, the Falcons chipped out of a less-daunting
1-2 hole this year before tearing through the bulk of their
schedule.
``This year our early schedule was very difficult,'' King noted.
``It always is. It took us a while to find our identity. Once we
did, we were winning very consistently.
``Early on, we were trying a couple of new formations. Then we
finally found the one that fit our personnel. It just took a little
while to figure that out. Once that clicked, (the players) said
they felt very comfortable, and we were able to thrive in that
environment.''
Bentley improved as the season progressed and was at its best
during this weekend's twin killing.
``I think we didn't feel as much of a burden as we did last year
with the 1-5 start,'' said sophomore Stephanie Sideris, the
Watertown High alumna who was named NE-10 Freshman of the Year last
season and this year is the team's second-leading scorer with 28
points (10 goals, 8 assists) in 19 games. ``I felt like we were
more consistent and no matter happened we stuck together as a team.
This past weekend showed a lot of that. Those were the two games
where people could say we really, really pulled it together as a
team and won for each other.''
Sideris scored the game's only goal against UMass-Lowell on Friday.
She and senior Nicole Murphy then assisted on freshman Nicole
Dion's game-winning goal in the first half Sunday against
Stonehill.
``We just get ourselves personally fired up,'' Sideris said. ``This
weekend there was a fire under me, I guess, everyone was saying. It
was lot of positive talk on the field and keeping everyone
motivated.''
Senior Allison St. Jean scored Bentley's other goal and senior
goalie Alyssa Sliney made five saves. Sliney, Sideris and Murphy
were named to the All-Tournament team with Murphy named the event's
Most Outstanding Player.
``Over the two days, her efforts were off the charts - with the
ball, without the ball,'' King said of the Dedham High alumna.
``When she didn't have it, she got it back shortly
thereafter.''
Bentley had lost to Stonehill 4-1 in Waltham on Sept. 2 and 2-1 in
Easton on Sept. 27.
``We learned from our mistakes this time against them,'' Murphy
said. ``Everything they had been doing this season to shut people
down, we just countered it. We just really worked well together. We
maximized everything we could have done against them and did it
very well.''
The Falcons hope to maintain the golden touch this weekend when
they face UMass-Lowell for the third time in 17 days.
``All the games we played with Lowell were very close,'' King said.
``The stage is so big that I don't think we're going to consider
what happened before. It will just be preparing for what we know to
expect. We will make some adjustments, so they don't know quite
what to expect, and see if that works.''
Other than the slight variations in game plan, King said she will
try to keep things as normal as possible.
``It really is just UMass-Lowell coming here to play us,'' she
said. ``You'll know it's the NCAAs on Saturday. It's a lot of
fanfare and a lot distractions. But focusing on that isn't really
going to help us win.''
Neither will focusing a potential fourth game of the year against
Stonehill next week, or the national title game that may
follow.
``It is a game-by-game thing where you focus on the task at hand
and don't think about what's to come,'' Sideris assured. ``You keep
each other motivated. That's what got us through this
weekend.''
``It changes in the sense that your attitude becomes: `This is
it,''' Murphy allowed. ``If you lose, you go home.
``And no one wants to go home.''



























