Our #1 Notre Dame Fighting Irish men’s lacrosse (11-0, 4-0 ACC) broke the Triangle of Doom by beating the #5 Virginia Cavaliers (10-4, 1-3 ACC), 11-9. The boys finished the regular season undefeated and at the top of the ACC.

The Cavaliers gave the Irish a difficult test and forced the boys to come back from a considerable deficit, but ACC Coach of the Year and Baumer Family Head Men’s Lacrosse Coach Kevin Corrigan summed up the victory well: “We don’t flinch.”

The Plot

Morning rain made the Klockner field very slick for the competitors, with both teams frequently struggling to stay upright.

The Irish got on the board first on a goal by Devon McLane, assisted by CKav. The home team responded, but this time CKav scored to but the Irish back ahead.  The quarter continued with the teams exchanging goals and finishing the frame even at 3-3.

The second quarter proved to be more difficult for Notre Dame, with Virginia goalie Matt Nunes frustrating the Irish shooters with 6 saves. Jake Taylor scored man-up, but 3 Cavalier goals but the home team up 6-4 at the half.

Virginia’s Payton Cormier scored his 3rd goal early in the second half to put them up 3.  From this point forward the Irish established control with consecutive goals by Taylor, PKav, Busenkell, Ricciardelli and Taylor again. A late Virginia goal kept the teams even at 8-8 to end the quarter.

Virginia opened the scoring in the 4th to take a 1-goal lead, but the Irish did not flinch. The Notre Dame defense shut their opponent down for the rest of the game, and goals by McLane, Faison and McLane again kept the Irish up for good. The boys commanded the middle of the field and Lynch was a perfect 5 for 5 in the quarter to erase any hope of a home team comeback.

The Scoring

Devon McLane (3g, 1a, 2gb) and ACC Offensive Player of the Year Pat Kavanagh (2g, 2a, 5gb) led Irish scorers. Chris Kavanagh and Max Busenkell each had a goal and 2 assists. Jake Taylor had 2 goals, and Faison and Ricciardelli each had a goal. Parlette and Dobson rounded out the scoring with assists.

The Notre Dame poles had a great day, led by ACC Defensive Player of the Week Will Donovan’s 4gb, 4ct day.  Chris Conlin (5gb, 2ct), Marco Napolitano (1gb, 2ct) and Shawn Lyght (3gb) were stellar as well.

ACC Defensive Player of the Year and ACC Goalie of the Year Liam Entenmann was impressive with 11 saves. Will Lynch returned from injury to go 10 of 21 from the dot, including a perfect 5 for 5  4th quarter.

The key stat of the game: The Irish won the ground ball battle by a massive 50-26 margin, including dominating the 4th quarter 16-3.

It was a day for the defenses, with both team’s playing well below their season average efficiency (ND 24.4%, UVa 23.1%).

27 Irish players saw the field, all with significant minutes.

Our Pregame Questions

We think the boys answered our questions well!

  1. Trust depth: 100% yes!! The Irish ran 3 midfield lines, 5 SSDMS (Buchner regularly in the rotation) and Ricciardelli and Bayman had relief shifts on attack.  We cannot overstate the impact this had late in the game.  While fatigue made Virginia incredibly sloppy, Notre Dame was able to play full gas and dominate the middle of the field. Virginia was not used to being on the back foot like this.
  2. Manage the forest: It wasn’t easy for the Irish, but they did a better job of managing Kastner & crew than they have in quite a while. Virginia had to throw in a few defensive gimmicks to keep the Irish offense off balance, and indicator of the progress the Irish were having in solving for Virginia’s internal size.
  3. Don’t let Virginia run:  The Irish were disciplined throughout the game and gave the Cavaliers few transition opportunities. As noted above, Notre Dame’s great use of depth may the home team unable to play the uptempo game they wanted to play. Well done, boys!

Special mention goes to Shawn Lyght for limiting Shellenberger. The All-American struggled to beat the Notre Dame freshman straight-up. He then had to waste valuable possession time working out picks to shed Lyght, only to have Lyght’s support hold their ground. Virginia will likely have a new wrinkle in the rematch, but is was great to see the freshman pass such a difficult test.

Up Next

The win earned the Irish the #1 seed and a rematch with Virginia in the opening round of the ACC Tournament in Charlotte. The boys play Friday at 5:00 pm (ACCN), with the winner playing in the finals on Sunday at noon.

As we have been noting for a few weeks, the boys’ success will be directly related to the degree to which a full 27+ players can be productive. First, it’s how the team counters Virginia’s efforts at tempo and transition. Second, it’s by far the best way to survive such a compressed weekend schedule.  It will hopefully be a successful trial run towards Memorial Day success.

While Friday’s game is probably more critical to the Cavalier’s NCAA prospects, it is also an important opportunity for the Irish offense to find solutions to some of the gimmicky wrinkles the Cavaliers deployed this past weekend, such as locking out PKav on the man-up. Coach Tiffany will open up the full bad of tricks. He’s not afraid of  novel solutions.  The boys will need to show themselves that they can solve these problems in real time and solve them quickly.

Sunday evening will be the NCAA selection show.

It will be an exciting weekend of lacrosse!

#GoIrish

ND-ATL 2.0