
Man Utd reach broad agreement with Carrick to become permanent boss
Manchester United reaches agreement with Carrick for head coach position
Dillo Day is approaching, coinciding with an NCAA Womenâs Lacrosse Quarterfinal. Northwestern athletics has a rich history on Dillo Day, highlighted by their seventh NCAA title in women's lacrosse in 2012.
Mentioned in this story
Dillo Day is right around the corner, and with an NCAA Womenâs Lacrosse Quarterfinal wrapping up and Rutgers coming to town to take on Ben Greenspan and company, we at InsideNU put our minds to work to find what memories Northwestern athletics have given âCats faithful on Dillo Day weekend.
Hereâs what we came up with.
In a scrappy National Championship contest, Northwestern found some late-game magic from Honda Sports Award winner Taylor Thornton to rise over No. 4 Syracuse for its seventh national title in eight years. Despite the âCatsâ lack of ball security on the night, much of their success in the clutch emerged from dominance on the draw, led by Alyssa Leonard on her ascendency to becoming one of the best draw takers in the nation. At nightâs end, Shannon Smith would take home her second consecutive MVP award of the NCAA Championship after a two-goal, two-assist performance, solidifying her place amongst the all-time greats in the Kelly Amonte Hiller era.
In short, this seventh title marked the poetic end to the beginning of what would later be known as âThe Lake Showâ.
Heading into the final weekend of the regular season, second-year head coach Spencer Allen was in the middle of a competitive playoff push: a three-team race for the final two spots in the Big Ten Tournament. With Purdue breathing down its neck and Michigan State not too far behind, seventh-place NU needed a series win over the Scarlet Knights to give itself the best chance to clinch its first berth in the conference tournament since 2010.
It emphatically did the job: the series win fueled by two shutout efforts led by Cooper Wetherbee, who had dropped his ERA five runs from an 8.89 mark a season ago, and Hank Christie, who was in the middle of an All-Big Ten Freshman Team campaign, in games one and two, respectively. Josh Davis secured the sweep with seven innings of one-run ball in game three, fueling the most improbable run Northwestern has ever had in the Big Ten Tournament, overcoming No. 2-seed Michigan, No. 3-seed Minnesota and No. 4-seed Maryland to reach the final, where they fell agonizingly short to No. 5-seed Iowa.
Nonetheless, NUâs eight-game win streak at the end of 2017 stands as one of the most memorable runs in recent Wildcat diamond sports memory.
On Dillo Day in 2012, Northwestern lacrosse secured its seventh NCAA title by defeating No. 4 Syracuse.
Taylor Thornton was a standout player, contributing significantly to Northwestern's victory in the 2012 NCAA Championship.
Northwestern women's lacrosse has won seven NCAA titles, with six of them coming in eight years leading up to 2012.
Alyssa Leonard played a crucial role as a draw taker, helping Northwestern dominate in the draw during the championship match.

Manchester United reaches agreement with Carrick for head coach position
CSK and LSG players wear black armbands to honor storm victims in IPL match.
Strasbourg hosts Monaco in Ligue 1 on May 17. Team news and predictions inside!
Lorenzo Musetti's thigh injury sidelines him for clay season, eyes Queen's return.
Lexi Moon aims to do more for Lakota softball as Gibsonburg wins 9-5
Scottie Scheffler on PGA Championship pins: 'Kind of absurd'
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.
In front of a sold-out audience, a junior Izzy Scane sparked an all-out Wildcat offensive barrage in the second half of the NCAA Quarterfinals against the Blue Devils.
At halftime, this game was a back-and-forth, tug-of-war-like contest. Duke seized a five-goal lead just twelve minutes into the game and seemed to have an upset within its grasp.
That was before an 11-2 Northwestern run altered that sentiment. Before Blue Devil fans could even think to utter the word âupsetâ, the âCats silenced the noise.
But a four-goal advantage wasnât enough for Scane and friends. They decided to empty the clip in the second half, hurling 21 shots at a helpless Sophia LeRose in goal for Duke. By the final buzzer, 22 Northwestern shots had found the back of the net, five of which were credited to Scane. Six additionally went to NUâs leading scorer and senior attacker Lauren Gilbert, while a pair went to the Wildcatsâ resident âpoint guardâ Erin Coykendall, to go with two assists and four ground ball pickups.
Sheer dominance.
At the turn of the decade, the Northwestern baseball program was undergoing a changing of the guard. In its transition to a new era, it would see four different head coaches within five years, while winning took a back seat to the larger issue of finding its identity.
However, the âCats would find some 2017-like heroics in its season finale against the Golden Gophers.
After being silenced for seven frames, NU put up a pair of runs in the eighth to cut into a five-run Minnesota lead. The Wildcats would load the bases soon after, but a Stephen Hrustich flyout seemed to end the comeback bid.
Then came the ninth â the âCats revival.
Anthony Calarco went deep to left to chop the lead to one, Jay Beshears doubled just two pitches later and Ethan OâDonnell moved him to third with a base hit.
On the brink of victory, Ruben Fontes pushed the Wildcats over the hump with a bases-clearing double. 6-5 Northwestern and it wouldnât look back from there, eventually plating two more to lock down the win.
Kate Drohanâs best team of the last decade, led by Jordyn Rudd and Rachel Lewis, made quick work of Oakland and McNeese at Sharon J. Drysdale Field to punch its ticket to the Tempe Super Regional. On a memorable day that brought 1,120 members of âCats faithful to The J, NU smoked the Cowgirls for the second consecutive game, wrapping it up in five innings to advance in the NCAA Tournament. Rudd finished the regional with five hits and six RBIs at the dish, while Lewis doubled, tripled and homered over the weekend.
The duo would power the Wildcats over No. 8 Arizona State in a hard-fought three-game series to advance to the Womenâs College World Series, Northwesternâs first since 2007.
With a second-place finish in the Norman Regionals, Northwestern womenâs golf booked a trip to its third consecutive NCAA Championship Finals.
This one, however, was more magical than any other.
Three NU golfers finished the preliminary round of championship week in the top-20 en route to a team score of 2-over and moved on to match play, building a head of steam into the following Tuesday. Against Arkansas, the Cardiac âCats secured a 3-2 win on the 19th hole, thanks to Lauryn Nguyenâs cold-blooded playoff victory on hole 19.
In the semifinals, Northwestern ran into the Big Ten Champion Oregon Ducks â the No. 2 team in the nation. It didnât matter. Another 3-2 win for the Wildcats later in the day, which came via individual triumphs from Ashley Yun, Elise Lee and Dianna Lee (who was battling through sickness all week).
That brought them to Wednesday, where they saw the top-ranked Stanford Cardinal in an epic championship matchup.
The result? Copy and paste for NUâs first-ever national championship in womenâs golf, secured by none other than the sickened Lee with a putt that will forever live on in Northwestern glory.