Ben LarrisonThe Daily Northwestern
She's one of the hardest working people on the best team in the country, but you've never heard of her.
Not that anyone's blaming you. After all, Andrea Doherty can't be found on the sidelines during games, doesn't capture major awards like her teammates and coaches and isn't on the lacrosse team's official roster at the Northwestern athletics Web site - not even down at the bottom with the coaches and assistants.
Yet if you ask around the NU lacrosse team about the girl they all know as Mini, you tend to get the same response from everybody: that without her, things would be a lot tougher for the two-time defending champs.
"She's just like everyone else on the team," said senior Aly Josephs, who is also Mini's roommate. "I wouldn't even consider her a manager. I'd consider her a teammate."
Though glorious it is not, the life of a manager consists of doing anything and everything it takes to ensure things run smoothly. Missing a ball bag? Mini's there to run back and get it. Need the game taped? Just ask Mini. Chilly day? Mini can help you out there, too.
"During a cold game or practice, she'll come over and warm up our fingers for us," senior and roommate Kristen Boege said. "She's really good at warming up fingers."
When not thawing others' extremities, Doherty is quite possibly freezing off her own. Take the infamous Rutgers Incident of 2006. In temperatures hovering around zero degrees, she climbed what Josephs called "this huge tower" in order to tape the contest for the coaching staff and team to review after the game.
"She was crying, it was just freezing, but she didn't complain," Josephs said. "She just did it, and it shows how selfless she is and willing to do anything for the team."
Not that Doherty came to NU anticipating a life of managing. The senior arrived in Evanston as a lacrosse player, not a manager. But midway through her sophomore year, after a freshman season troubled by injuries, Doherty's interest in playing had dwindled.
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