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Bryson DeChambeau exits the 2026 PGA Championship early, missing the cut by three shots.
Northwestern lacrosse defeated Colorado 13-12 in a thrilling double overtime quarterfinal match, securing a spot in the national semifinals. The game featured dramatic moments, including a tying goal from Colorado and a decisive shot by Noel Cumberland.
On Thursday, the game between Northwestern and Colorado ascended beyond anything you’d ever expect from your stereotypical midday ESPNU slot.
It had everything you could want from a lacrosse game and drama that matched the immense magnitude of the moment. Double-digit card totals, posts that groaned instead of rippled, a tying goal from Colorado’s Maddie Shoup with four seconds on the clock, a yellow card to Madison Taylor at the absolute worst possible moment, a lengthy review that held the entire lakefront in complete silence and finally Noel Cumberland stepping up to a free position shot with a Final Four berth hanging in the balance. After a couple of deep breaths, she confidently shimmied towards the goal and bounced a howler into the bottom left corner.
Northwestern had done it. They survived Colorado 13-12 in double overtime and advanced to the program’s seventh straight national semifinal.
Anyone who watched it likely feels they witnessed something, maybe not as convincing as they’d hoped, but no doubt special. Here are the three biggest takeaways from a quarterfinal that showcased resilience from passionate players and their home crowd, who both refused to let NU lose.
For most of the season, Jenika Cuocco has been the ultimate safety net for the Wildcats. When the defense breaks down, she is a literal brick wall. When a shot seems destined for the back of the net, she somehow finds a way to reach out a stick and send it the other way. Northwestern has leaned on her heavily in the biggest moments because she’s proven she can step up. There’s a reason she is consistently listed amongst the best goalies in the country.
Against Colorado, she didn’t NEED to be superhuman, and she wasn’t. But she was just good enough.
Cuocco finished with six saves on the afternoon, which is a perfectly respectable number but not the kind of video game performance she has delivered so many times before. Elena Oh, the Colorado goalkeeper, actually had the better statistical day with 11 saves, including several point-blank denials in the fourth quarter and overtime that kept the Buffaloes alive. On paper, losing the save battle by five should be a problem — but it wasn’t.
The reason Northwestern could survive a modest day from its star goalie was simple: the offense generated enough volume to make up for it. The Wildcats outshot Colorado 29 to 20 and put 24 of those attempts on frame. They kept firing even when Oh was making saves. They didn’t get discouraged. They didn’t settle. They just kept attacking, and eventually the dam broke.
Key moments included a tying goal from Colorado's Maddie Shoup with four seconds left, a crucial yellow card to Northwestern's Madison Taylor, and Noel Cumberland's game-winning shot in double overtime.
Northwestern advanced by defeating Colorado 13-12 in a double overtime quarterfinal match, marking their seventh consecutive appearance in the national semifinals.
The passionate home crowd played a significant role in supporting Northwestern, helping to create an atmosphere of resilience that contributed to their victory over Colorado.
The victory signifies Northwestern's continued success in women's lacrosse, as they reach the national semifinals for the seventh straight year, showcasing the program's strength and competitiveness.
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This matters for the Final Four because it means Northwestern has options. If Cuocco stands on her head against Johns Hopkins, great. If she just plays solid and the offense carries the weight, that works too. Colorado was the hardest defensive test the Wildcats have faced all season, and they proved they can win without their goalie stealing the show. That is a terrifying realization for the (hopefully) two teams that come next.
Let’s be honest about what happened with the ball on Thursday afternoon. Northwestern was sloppy. Really sloppy. The Wildcats committed 19 turnovers. That is an alarmingly high number for the No. 1 seed in an NCAA tournament game. Taylor, the engine of the entire offense, was responsible for seven of those giveaways. She was stripped in the arc, she threw passes directly into Buffalo hands and she rushed shots under duress. Taylor Lapointe added two more turnovers, Maddie Epke had multiple giveaways and even Lucy Munro and Hannah Rudolph coughed up possession at critical moments.
But here is the thing about those 19 turnovers: they were not entirely Northwestern’s fault. Colorado’s zone defense is a nightmare. The Buffs play a hard, collapsing scheme that most teams never see. They switch aggressively, they deny the interior and they rotate a second defender to every single drive. They make every catch contested and every pass feel rushed. The turnovers were a direct result of the pressure Colorado applied, and that pressure was real.
So why didn’t Northwestern lose? The draw circle, plain and simple. The Wildcats dominated possession 20 to 7, with Madison Smith leading the way with seven draw controls, Epke adding six and Taylor chipping in four more. That eight-possession advantage acted as a massive safety net. Every time Northwestern turned the ball over, they won the next draw and got another chance to score. The turnovers are, of course, a concern moving forward, but the fact that they can survive those mistakes by owning the center of the field is a huge comfort.
Northwestern has not lost at Martin Stadium since 2019. That is seven calendar years of outdoor home dominance. The Wildcats are also undefeated at home in general throughout their lengthy NCAA tournament history. That is verifiably insane but somehow not fake.
On Thursday, the role of the crowd in that documented home success was evident throughout the game, but its true power revealed itself in overtime. Taylor received a yellow card at the end of the first overtime with just 11 seconds left in the period, forcing her to sit for two minutes. The Wildcats had to start sudden-death double overtime without their best player, and the lakefront crowd went completely silent. Not a nervous silence, but a stunned silence, enough that you could hear the players shouting on the field.
Northwestern opened the second overtime with yet another draw control from Smith, but without Taylor, the offense looked lost. A sloppy possession ended in a bundled Lapointe shot. But luckily for the ‘Cats, Epke caused a turnover, and the ball was back with the purple and white.
With that, they waited. They bled the clock. They passed around the perimeter. They waited some more. Taylor returned to the field with 25 seconds left on the shot clock, and the stadium erupted. The roar was not just loud but primal, a release of pure tension.
Taylor did not score the winner, but her return changed everything. Colorado’s zone had to account for her again, which opened up space elsewhere. The ball moved to Cumberland, who took a massive hit on the left side of the fan with 1:47 left in the second overtime. A lengthy review followed, which caused the lakefront to fall silent again. The officials confirmed the foul, and the rest was slow-motion cinema. Cumberland stepped up for a free position shot and buried the ball into the back of the net. Taylor couldn’t help but smile. The crowd exploded, the bench rushed the field and Northwestern had its ticket to the Final Four.
That home-field advantage now carries into championship weekend. Northwestern hosts Johns Hopkins on May 22 back at Martin Stadium, and the lakefront crowd proved against Colorado that it can will this team through mistakes, yellow cards, double overtime and the most stressful two minutes of the season. That is a psychological edge that’s hard to quantify but impossible to ignore.
Before the game, it was hard not to think about what happened at Ryan Fieldhouse at the start of the season. Colorado walked in unranked and walked out with one of the most improbable wins in college this year. The Wildcats looked frustrated and disjointed that day, unable to solve the Buffs’ zone and unable to generate any offensive rhythm. The loss made you wonder if Northwestern had a fatal flaw.
The L lingered for five months. Colorado entered the NCAA tournament as the No. 8 seed with the best scoring defense in the country, having not allowed 10 goals in any game all season. The Buffaloes had built their entire identity on making life miserable for opposing offenses, and they had done it to Northwestern once already.
Thursday felt different, even with some of the same trends.
Northwestern fell behind early and answered. They turned the ball over 19 times and still stayed in control. They gave up a tying goal with four seconds left and did not fold. They lost their best player to a yellow card at the worst moment and still found a way to win.
That is the difference: Not perfection or dominance, but resilience and response.
And in May, that is what wins championships.