








BALTIMORE - A dominating defensive performance and four goals from
junior Owen Blye propelled the No. 10 Maryland men's lacrosse team to a
9-6 victory over No. 3 Johns Hopkins in the 108th meeting of Lacrosse's
Greatest Rivalry Saturday evening in front of a sold-out crowd at Homewood Field.
The victory lifts Maryland to 7-3 on the season, while Hopkins stands at 9-2.
The
first quarter started off rocky for the Terps as the Blue Jays took an
early 2-0 lead, capitalizing on some saves by Hopkins goalie Pierce
Bassett. Rob Guida scored the first for JHU less than three minutes into
the quarter. Lee Coppersmith upped the lead to 2-0 at the 11:41 mark
with an unassisted goal.
But Maryland used a patient offense and
clamped down on the defensive end to stay within striking distance and
the Terps closed the quarter with two scores in the final 1:23 to tie
the game heading into the second.
Junior Kevin Cooper put
Maryland on the board with a terrific jumping left-hand shot from the
right alley. He took the ball from Blye and Cooper then beat Guida to
the inside and slipped the ball inside the near pipe.
The Blue
Jays had the ball with the clock winding down, but they stepped out of
the box after a stall warning was issued giving the ball to the Terps.
Junior Landon Carr picked up the ball for the quick restart and raced
down the right side of the field. He pulled up and beat Bassett low from
14 yards out to knot the score with just 20 seconds left in the
quarter.
Hopkins regained the lead at the 10:34 mark of the second when Greg Edmonds scored from the right side.
Sophomore
Niko Amato made a save on a John Ranagan shot, but a turnover on the
clear attempt gave Hopkins another possession and this time Ranagan
connected with 9:27 left, making it a 4-2 JHU lead.
Amato made
another terrific save at the 5:11 mark on a Chris Boland shot and
sophomore Brian Cooper came up with the tough groundball, but a quick
turnover gave Hopkins another crack at the Terps and Brandon Benn
capitalized with a quick shot off a feed from Boland to up the Blue Jay
lead to 5-2 with 3:35 remaining in the second.
The tables were
turned when Hopkins' John Greeley turned the ball over to the Terps just
under the 2:00 mark. Brian Cooper again scooped up the groundball and
Maryland's offense took over. Senior Drew Snider dodged down the left
side from the high slot and passed back to junior John Haus. Haus fired a
quick pass from near the top of the box to the top-right of the crease
where junior Billy Gribbin lost his defender. Gribbin then beat Bassett
to make the score 5-3 with 54 seconds left.
Hopkins' Mike
Poppleton won the opening faceoff of the third quarter and Boland
quickly made it a 6-3 Blue Jay advantage, scoring off a feed from
Greeley just 43 seconds into the third.
The Terps responded with a
terrific look by Mike Chanenchuk to the right side of the crease for
Blye. Maryland's good ball movement moved the Blue Jay defense out of
position and Blye had enough time to make six fakes before slipping a
bouncer past Bassett with 9:04 remaining.
Terrific defensive
pressure by junior Jesse Bernhardt created a turnover for the Terps and
Blye scored his second straight to make it a one-goal Maryland deficit.
The goal was in question for a moment as Hopkins' defender Robert
Enright got tangled in the net tracking Blye from behind the cage and
actually pulled the net onto its side as Blye shot. The officials
counted the goal, making it a 6-5 game at the 6:16 mark.
The
Terps continued their comeback as the third quarter came to a close.
Kevin Cooper took the ball behind the net and initiated the offense with
around 20 seconds left on the clock. He went around the right side and
moved the ball on the senior Michael Shakespeare, who was able to step
into a high-to-low shot from the right alley, tying the game at 6-6
going into the fourth quarter.
It appeared as if Wells Stanwick
regained the lead for the Blue Jays with under 10 minutes to play, but
he was ruled to be in the crease, which waived off the goal.
Maryland
capitalized on the opportunity as Blye scored for the third time to
give the Terrapins their first lead of the game at the 8:46 mark. Blye
started from behind the cage and came around the left side of the goal.
He continued up the field, creating some space to get his hands free and
his shot beat Bassett low.
A slashing call on sophomore Michael
Ehrhardt put the Blue Jays up a man, but sophomore Emmett Cahill picked
off a pass by Boland and Carr raced the ball into Maryland's offensive
zone, ending the threat.
Maryland killed off the remaining time
on the penalty and was given a stall call as the Terps worked the clock
up by a goal. That didn't stop Blye from exploiting a mismatch with
Hopkins shortie Nikhon Schuler and beating Bassett low again for an 8-6
Terrapin lead with 5:05 remaining.
Some terrific transition
lacrosse gave the Terps a three-goal lead with 2:31 to go in the game.
Haus picked up a loose ball inside the Maryland defensive box and
quickly found Bernhardt breaking up the field. Bernhardt pump-faked the
Blue Jay defense, drawing them to him. He moved the ball to senior Joe
Cummings, who made the one-more pass to Kevin Cooper on the doorstep for
the easy goal.
Hopkins had one last chance to get back in the
game, but Amato rose to the occasion, stopping a shot by Boland with 49
seconds left. Amato finished with a flourish, making eight saves for the
game.
Maryland's defense dominated the second half, holding the
Blue Jay offense, which entered the game scoring 11.0 goals per game, to
just one goal in the second half and none over the game's final 29:17.
Maryland
next heads to the ACC tournament as the No. 4 seed where it will meet
up with No. 1 seed Duke. The Terps and Blue Devils will play in the 5
p.m. game, while No. 2 seed Virginia and No. 3 seed North Carolina play
in the 7:30 p.m. game at the Cavaliers' Klöckner Stadium in
Charlottesville, Va.
Game Notes:
• With today's 9-6 win, Maryland is now 39-61-1 all-time vs. Johns Hopkins.
• The victory is the first for Maryland at Homewood Field since 2006.
•
With four points on four goals, junior Owen Blye now has three hat
tricks, 17 multi-point and 11 multi-goal games for his career.
•
With three points on two goals and an assist, junior Kevin Cooper now
has eight multi-point and three multi-goal games for his career.
•
Maryland shutout the Blue Jays in the fourth quarter, which marks the
fourth time this season the Terps have held an opponent scoreless for a
quarter.
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