With Caroline Nozzolillo in command, No. 3 Westwood girls' lacrosse controls No. 2 Cohasset
Related
:
No. 2 Cohasset (10-2) didn't make it easy, coming back from several sizable deficits, but Nozzolillo, a Brown-bound senior, helped put the finishing touches on a signature victory for Westwood (14-1).
Advertisement
'It's great having her believe in me,' Nozzolillo said of Spatola. 'That gives me all the confidence in the world to know that I can go and finish the shot.'
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Big goal from Caroline Nozzolillo to make it 14-11 Westwood with 2:45 remaining
— Trevor Hass (@TrevorHass)
Hofstra-bound senior Cece Thurmond added four goals for Westwood, which hasn't dropped a game in-state.
UMass-bound junior Kate Greer and Bucknell-bound junior Avery Regan paced the No. 2 Skippers (10-2) with three goals apiece. Reese Hansen, Libby Schiffman, and Emily Regan also contributed for Cohasset.
Related
:
Westwood built a 5-3 edge through one quarter, led 8-7 at halftime, and surged ahead, 12-8, through three. The Wolverines were up 13-8 with 7:20 left, but the Skippers never relented.
After 3Q: Westwood 12, Cohasset 8
Strong defensive quarter from the Wolverines, plus a goal from Kate Sullivan here. Caroline Nozzolillo dictating the action from behind the net.
Libby Schiffman active for the Skippers
— Trevor Hass (@TrevorHass)
'I feel like we were always chasing today, instead of playing proactively,' Cohasset coach Kara Connerty said. 'We talk about that a lot. We made adjustments, but the adjustments didn't come quickly enough.'
Advertisement
Charlotte DeMaio, Nozzolillo, and Jenny Mackin hustled on draws to help Westwood find a rhythm. Pinpoint alley-oops from Nozzolillo to Thurmond proved lethal, as well. Goalie Kathryn Donnellan provided a steady presence, Kate Sullivan stood her ground defensively, and Nozzolillo was always in command.
Hofstra-bound senior Cece Thurmond finishes the 'alley-oop' from Brown-bound Caroline Nozzolillo, then Nozzolillo adds another. 2-0 Westwood early
— Trevor Hass (@TrevorHass)
Spatola endearingly said that though Nozzolillo is 'a knucklehead' at times, she loves her and wants her on her side.
'There are days where maybe it's not her best day, and I may tell her that's not yours to take, pull it out, whatever,' Spatola said. 'But most days are her days, and I trust her with it. Her teammates trust her as well.'
Trevor Hass can be reached at
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
10 hours ago
- USA Today
Sherrone Moore seeks undefeated Michigan season, not just in 2025, but every year
Despite being the protégé to Jim Harbaugh, Sherrone Moore isn't getting the same love as, say, David Shaw had after Harbaugh left Stanford. Yes, the Cardinal still thrived in the immediate aftermath, but Shaw also still had Andrew Luck to lead the charge on offense -- Moore wasn't dealt such a hand. Yet, we see him recruiting at an elite level -- even better than Harbaugh -- while also getting wins over Michigan's rivals, even in a year when it appeared the Wolverines had no business doing so. Moore may have led Michigan to an 8-5 record in 2024, but that's not his intent. With his recruiting and transfer portal prowess, he's looking to build a monster. And though he doesn't get the same benefit of the doubt as, say, Marcus Freeman at Notre Dame, or Kalen DeBoer at Alabama, he's seeking excellence commensurate with the maize and blue's ceiling. "I'm hell-bent on being undefeated every year. That's the standard," Moore said at Big Ten media days. "You don't want to lose any game. That's the goal (as a coach. You want to be undefeated every year. So for me, yeah, the standard is not 8-5, and the goal is to win every single game and to be successful and hoist the trophy again. Because once you win one, you get greedy. You want to win another. And that's the goal over here. "But we know it's going to take work, so can't be worried about the past, can't be worried about tomorrow. Because they don't owe you anything, so all we're worried about is today, and that's all we're going to do is work to be the best version of ourselves today." Michigan finished the season better than any team not named Ohio State in 2024 -- and that's because it beat the eventual national champion Buckeyes. That carried over to the ReliaQuest Bowl, where the Wolverines shocked Alabama -- a team bringing in all of its starters -- despite being significantly shorthanded. It was a reflection of the head coach, as his confidence going into those weeks permeated through the locker room (though that's not something he'd admit). He never lost his team, and they continued to believe, and it showed on the field. Moore recounted the killer instinct that his Wolverines had and why they were able to overachieve compared to expectations. "Just the instilled confidence that they have and the confidence that they got in those games. It wasn't a magic potion or something that we did, and it wasn't the way we changed practice because we practiced the same," Moore said. "But the energy, the focus, the level of confidence that they had in those games was definitely different than the others, and we'll just continue to apply it like that and just work. The leaders on the team saw it. The leaders on the team see it and continue to let our leaders be leaders and empower them as much as possible to make sure we continue that." Despite the late-season success and Moore's 4-0 record as Michigan's interim coach in 2023, he's not given much of a chance, according to many. In Big Ten head coaching rankings, CBS Sports listed Moore as the 15th-best in the conference, even though he's one of only two in the Big Ten who have beaten a Ryan Day-led Ohio State team (Dan Lanning is the other, though he also lost to the Buckeyes). But if his closing statement in 2024 is any indication, that ranking, and his national perception, will be changing in short order.


Chicago Tribune
11 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
3 City Series takeaways for the Chicago Cubs — including Nico Hoerner's baseball IQ — as they head to Milwaukee
Chicago Cubs manager Craig Counsell went into Sunday's series finale at Rate Field hoping to get four innings from Ben Brown. The right-hander, looking to move past a bad outing Monday, produced one of his best starts of the year in the Cubs' 5-4 win over the White Sox. Daniel Palencia recorded his first four-out save, taking over after Andrew Benintendi's three-run home run in the eighth. Pete Crow-Armstrong's two-run double in the first gave the Cubs a lead that for most of the day wasn't threatened. 'He gave us exactly what we needed, and he came up big time, for sure,' Counsell said of Brown. Brown allowed one run in five innings without walking a batter, limited the Sox to three hits and struck out four on 57 pitches. Benintendi's home run in the first inning was the only blemish. 'The curveball has just really been taking a step up,' Brown said. 'It's encouraging to see swings-and-misses, especially first and second, no outs. Those are some of the at-bats I've struggled with this year. I haven't done a good job minimizing damage or stopping the rally and being able to get the strikeout is something that I need as part of my game.' With the series victory, there are three takeaways from the Cubs' performance in the City Series. Nico Hoerner's baseball instincts and IQ are among his best attributes as one of the Cubs' best all-around players. That was on display against the Sox, especially during Sunday's series finale. Hoerner found multiple ways to positively impact the game for the Cubs: offensively, defensively and with heads-up play. Hoerner suckered Sox second baseman Lenyn Sosa into attempting to advance by deliberately letting a popup fall to the ground in the third after the umpire signaled for an infield fly with runners on first and second. When Sosa took off for third, Hoerner easily picked up the ball and threw him out for an inning-ending double play. 'You're kind of always running through plays in your head and things that might happen and things that really only happen maybe once a season or less,' Hoerner said. 'But it's fun when that stuff lines up and we've got a group that likes talking the game. And so it's really satisfying to get extra outs like that.' The double play gave Brown a big lift. 'I'm just super grateful that Nico's a teammate and the baseball IQ out of him is, I mean, it's Nico, it's just the way he is,' Brown said. 'It's through his veins, through his blood, like baseball, and no surprise, what he did there.' Hoerner later turned a mistake into a positive for the Cubs when he was caught off first base on a back pick play. He forced a rundown causing Happ, on second, to go to third during the sequence. As Happ started to head home, the Sox abandoned Hoerner to try to get Happ. But as Happ retreated to third, he trucked into Colson Montgomery, who was in the basepath and called for obstruction to bring Happ home for what proved to be the decisive run. Hoerner also forced Sox pitchers to work Sunday. His second-inning single off Sox right-hander Sean Burke capped a 14-pitch at-bat, and then he fought back from a 1-2 count in the eighth against reliever Mike Vasil for a nine-pitch walk. The Cubs have given Matt Shaw plenty of opportunities to prove he should be their everyday third baseman the rest of the season. After regrouping during the All-Star break and tweaking his stance, Shaw has taken off. Whether it will be enough to prevent the Cubs from acquiring an external, more proven offensive upgrade won't be known until the trade deadline passes at 5 p.m. Thursday. But Shaw is certainly making a case, beyond his stellar defensive work at third. Shaw's RBI double in the sixth Sunday extended his hit streak to nine games, all after the All-Star break. In that stretch, Shaw is 12-for-27 with four home runs, 10 RBIs and just one strikeout. The rookie credits the mental reset and an adjustment to his batting stance — standing slightly more open — which he experimented with off a tee before the second half resumed, for helping him get on track. 'Mentally just kind of letting things happen and not pressing and putting a lot of pressure on myself, and just kind of playing with a little more freedom,' Shaw explained of his recent production. '(The coaching staff) has done a good job of continuing to believe in me, and so it allows me to go out there and play. 'I think I put a lot of pressure on myself, and I just realized that I'm motivated, and I love this game. I like playing the game. I don't need to add pressure.' The Cubs' offense becomes deeper again with how well Shaw has been hitting in the nine-spot, especially with Happ and Kyle Tucker scuffling lately. Left-hander Matthew Boyd's spot in the rotation was pushed back one day to align him to get the ball in a big series this week in Milwaukee. The Cubs enter the three-game set that starts Monday night at American Family Field tied with the Brewers at the top of the division for the best record in the National League. They have done a good job not looking too far ahead, but there is no mistaking the importance of the next three days. The Cubs have put themselves in a great position, particularly with reinforcements expected to arrive soon with the trade deadline on Thursday. The Cubs will start Boyd, right-hander Colin Rea and left-hander Shota Imanaga against the Brewers, who will send right-handers Jacob Misiorowski, Quinn Priester and Freddy Peralta to the mound. 'It's two teams that are playing really well, that have postseason aspirations and it feels like we're gonna be battling for the division,' Counsell said. 'It's still July, but these are big games. … We're going to go face a good baseball team and on the road, it's a big challenge and a fun challenge.'


USA Today
11 hours ago
- USA Today
Ernest Hausmann lauds Bryce Underwood's maturity, preparation for Michigan's QB position
At the moment, Michigan football does not have a starting quarterback. But everyone -- at least outside of the program -- has a pretty good feeling about who it will be. Former five-star and No. 1 overall recruit in 2025, Bryce Underwood, got the bulk of the reps in spring ball. He has physical capability that cannot be taught. It may seem like a formality, but head coach Sherrone Moore says the Wolverines will still go through their paces, especially with Fresno State transfer Mikey Keene finally healthy. While everyone waxes poetic about Underwood, perhaps the best compliments he could receive come from the defense he went up against in spring ball and the one he's about to see in fall camp. At Big Ten media days, senior linebacker Ernest Hausmann joined the chorus praising the true freshman, noting what he does when people aren't looking and how that makes a difference. "Bryce is as good as advertised," Hausmann said. "But the thing that I'm really impressed about Bryce is the way he's matured beyond his years. You would never know that he's 17 years old coming into a college program, a five-star recruit, heavily recruited, has high expectations. You would never know that by looking at him, by talking to him at all. "The quarterback position it's completely open. We don't know who's going to be playing. We don't know who's going to be Week 1, Week 2, Week 3. It could all change, right? But I'm just very impressed at how he's really carried himself as a person because he fit right in well with his quarterback room. Because the whole quarterback room, they love to work. They do so much work behind closed doors that people don't even see -- that I don't even see. But I just know he's a perfect fit for that. He's going to continue to push that room, make that room better. I'm very excited to see what that room does this year." So, what stands out in particular to Hausmann? He shared an anecdote that shows just how mature Underwood is, even at 17 years of age. "Like I said, it's his preparation, right?" Hausmann said. "I remember one moment, I'm seeing him before practice, right? Most of the time, people are getting taped up, ready, but he's out there walking through his plays by himself. And so it just goes to show how bought in, how he cares about his preparation. "Like I said before, the whole quarterback room is so bought into preparation. They all do things like that that we don't see behind the scenes, and it's just so special. And as a defense, I can tell my whole defense. We can trust that. We can trust that room." The Michigan defense needs Underwood to work out just as much as the offense does. The offense was constantly stymied by subpar quarterback play in 2024, which meant that the defense had to work extra hard to get the ball back. It didn't always work out as planned. By the end of the season, the defense was the unit getting the job done. Though the offense had some timely drives -- particularly against Ohio State and Alabama -- it just wasn't the brand of complementary football that Michigan is accustomed to having. But now, beyond even Underwood, Hausmann says there's a trust that exists between the defense and the quarterbacks. But Underwood, in particular, has done enough to earn a seal of approval from Hausmann and company. "It's your daily actions that gain the trust of others, right? And he's shown and he's proven to us that he's a high-level person beyond just football players, and that's what we love about people," Hausmann said. "If you're a high-level person, we know what you're going to be on the field. Because with someone, you want to know what you're going to get out of the person on the field. You don't ever want to ask or expect. With Bryce, you know what you can get out of him. He's a high-level competitor. Like I said, he just fits that quarterback room perfectly well, and I'm excited to see who ends up being the quarterback." Fans will get their first opportunity to see Underwood in an actual college game on August 30 (even if he's not the starter) when Michigan hosts New Mexico for the season opener.