Following the Billerica-Stonehill trail
By David Pevear
Kristyn Gramzow enrolled at Stonehill College feeling intimidated
by its two-time national champion women's lacrosse program.
She remembered being a sophomore at Billerica High and going with
her lacrosse teammates to watch Stonehill play. Two former
Billerica High players, Brenna Newfell and Courtney Duggan, were at
the time standout players for the Skyhawks.
"It was such an amazing game," recalls Gramzow. "I didn't think I
could ever play on that team."
So as a freshman at Stonehill in the fall of 2005, Gramzow ran
cross country with the intention of becoming a miler on the track
team.
"But my body started breaking down from all that running," she
says. "I never made it to a track meet."
Gramzow's body was telling her something.
"I think she missed lacrosse," says Stonehill coach Michael
Daly.
"I missed it a lot," concurs Gramzow, a sophomore who this spring
returned to the game she loves and became a first-team
All-Northeast-10 Conference defender on a Stonehill team headed to
the NCAA Div. 2 Final Four this weekend in Salem, Va.
Stonehill (18-1), which won Div. 2 national titles in 2003 and '05,
will play C.W. Post (15-0) in the 2 p.m. national semifinal
Saturday. West Chester (18-1) will play Lock Haven (16-3) at 11:30
a.m. The national title game Sunday at noon will be televised
nationally on College Sports Television (CSTV).
Gramzow is intimidated no more. The biology major sounded more
uneasy about her final exam in genetics this week than about any
Final Four difficulties over the weekend.
"She plays with an extra fire in her belly that you can't coach or
teach," says Daly. "She is a tenacious defender. The sky is the
limit for her. She will be a dominant defender at this level."
Gramzow's return to lacrosse was not without its frustrations. The
heart was willing. Her legs felt tangled.
"I remember doing a drill at the first tryout and feeling like I
had never played before," she says.
Daly told Gramzow, whom he had considered only a "secondary
recruit" coming out of Billerica, to relax and keep at it.
Day by day, Gramzow felt the game coming back to her.
"She's got that whatever-it-takes Billerica attitude," says
Daly.
Like Newfell and Duggan before her, Gramzow became an
all-conference player for Stonehill from Billerica.
She presents a determined obstacle in a talented Stonehill defense
that has allowed 6.35 goals per game, which ranks third nationally,
headed by sophomore Michelle Kelly, the NE-10 Defensive Player of
the Year.
Gramzow to date has 25 ground balls, 21 draw controls and 14 caused
turnovers. She also has scored four goals and added one assist.
Over the nine years that women's lacrosse has been a Northeast-10
Conference sport, Stonehill has compiled an 81-1 record. The only
conference loss was a 9-7 overtime loss to Bentley in April
2000.
Stonehill has won all nine NE-10 regular-season titles and eight
straight league tournament titles. Despite graduating four
All-Americans after last season, the Skyhawks are making their
fifth trip to the NCAAs.
"Like most our young players, Kristyn's performance has exceeded
our expectations," says Daly.
Stonehill's only loss this season was 7-5 at home on April 27 to
C.W. Post, its opponent on Saturday. Daly felt his team on that day
played as well as it could defensively against a team that "is
basically a Division 1 team on offense."
"They're an amazing team, but we can hold them," says Gramzow.
"We're not intimidated."
No, her days of being intimidated are over.



























