National Champions! ECAC Lacrosse League Member Loyola University Maryland
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. – Loyola University Maryland defeated the University of Maryland, 9-3, to capture the 2012 NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Championship on Monday at Gillette Stadium.
The top-seeded Greyhounds (18-1 overall), who entered the season unranked, become the Eastern College Athletic Conference’s first member to win a national title in the sport. The unseeded Terrapins end their season at 12-6. Former ECAC member Massachusetts lost to an undefeated Virginia squad in the 2006 National Finals.
Most Outstanding Player Eric Lusby led six Loyola scorers with four goals to become the school’s all-time single-season leader (54) and he set another benchmark for goals (17) in a single NCAA tournament.
Loyola Game Recap
The Loyola University Maryland men's lacrosse team checked off a
lot of firsts throughout the 2012 season, and the Greyhounds capped
their magical season with another on Memorial Day at Gillette
Stadium.
Loyola won its first-ever NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship and the
first national title in the school's Division I history. The
Greyhounds set a record for fewest goals allowed in an NCAA
championship game, defeating the University of Maryland, 9-3.
"I thought Saturday was a pretty cool day for the Greyhounds. But,
today is special," said Charley Toomey, who became the first coach
to win an NCAA title in his first trip to the NCAA Semifinals.
"When I look at my locker room, I'm just so proud of them. They've
handled every situation with dignity and class this year. Coming
back on short preparation to play a tough Maryland team, a physical
Maryland team, they responded in a big way to give Loyola our first
national championship."
Eric Lusby was named the Championship's Most Outstanding Player
after scoring four goals in the title game and setting a tournament
record with 17 in four games. He also ends his season with a
school-season record 54 goals, surpassing teammate Mike Sawyer who
set the record two games ago and finished the year with 52.
Four Greyhounds joined Lusby on the All-Tournament Team: Josh
Hawkins, Joe Fletcher, Scott Ratliff and Jack Runkel.
The Greyhounds trailed on two occasions during the game, 1-0 and
3-2, but after Maryland's Kevin Cooper scored at 10:40, Loyola did
not allow a goal for the remaining 40-minutes, 40-seconds of the
contest.
Loyola's win capped a season that it started outside the national
Top-20 after concluding 2011 with an 8-5 record. The Greyhounds' 18
wins set a program record, and Loyola became just the ninth team to
win an NCAA Division I title since the first Championship in
1971.
The team is also the second in Loyola history to win a national
crown, joining the 1976 men's soccer side that won the NCAA
Division II title.
Maryland took a 1-0 lead 5:26 into the game when Jesse Bernhardt
caused a turnover and went the distance to score. The Terrapins
(12-6) held Loyola scoreless for more than four more minutes, but
Davis Butts broke through for the Greyhounds, scoring on a bouncer
from nine yards out after taking a feed from Chris Layne.
Lusby pushed Loyola in front at the 1:55 mark in the first quarter,
spinning free from a defender to dump in his first goal of the
game.
Maryland, however, scored two in a row in the first five minutes of
the second quarter to take brief 3-2 lead. Mike Chanenchuk got
loose curling around the crease and scored at 12:12, and Cooper's
goal off a Joe Cummings feed made it 3-2 with 10:40 left in the
frame.
The Terrapins' advantage, however, did not last long as Pat Byrnes
dodged around a defender from goal-line extended on the right side,
putting a low-to-low shot around Maryland goalkeeper Nikko Amato
1:18 after Cooper's goal.
Layne then found Sawyer open about seven yards out, and Sawyer put
a low-to-low shot into the net at 5:57 to put the Greyhounds up for
good.
With 3:57 to go before the half, Phil Dobson came down the right
side and ripped a shot to make it 5-3 at the break.
From that point, it was the defense's turn to take over. Maryland
took 19 shots in the third and fourth quarters, but Loyola did not
yield a goal. Runkel made six of his seven saves in the second half
in goal for the Greyhounds.
"Jack was tremendous this week, but that is what we see of him in
practice every day," Toomey said. "I felt like he got his first
save, and that started things off right."
Runkel was quick to credit the defense in front of him.
"A dream come true to play with these guys," he said. "They give
me shots that I want to see. I'm a lot better up top seeing shots
and saving them."
The close defense of Fletcher (2 ground balls, 1 caused turnover),
Reid Acton (3, 2) and Dylan Grimm (1 gb) and rope unit of Ratliff
(5, 2), Hawkins (2, 2), Pat Laconi (1 gb), Kyle Duffy and Kevin
Moriarty led the way in front of Runkel.
Justin Ward scored the only goal of the third quarter, wrapping
around the crease and depositing a high-to-high shot into the goal
at 10:12, making Loyola's lead 6-3.
The fourth quarter offense, then, belonged to Lusby.
He took a Layne pass and whipped a hip-high shot for a goal with
11:12 on the clock, and he made it an 8-3 Greyhounds lead with 5:07
to play when Layne worked the ball to Sawyer, and Sawyer found
Lusby alone on the top right side, and he scored from eight yards
in front of the crease.
Lusby scored his record-setting goal with 3:45 left on the clock
after Maryland had called a timeout to set up a ride.
Butts carried the ball around a double team for the Greyhounds, and
then when he appeared to be trapped near the top of the box, Butts
split the defenders and raced toward the goal. He sliced a pass in
front of the crease to Lusby who finished his fourth goal of the
afternoon.
"I just got hot at the right time," Lusby said of his 17-goal
outburst in the Championships. "I knew going into the tournament,
my shot was a little off. I kept missing the cage, so I knew I
wanted to shoot for net. But I have to give credit to all the other
guys in the offense. From the middies to Davis Butts and Pat
Byrnes, all those guys."
"They were dodging hard all weekend and drawing slides and giving
me all the opportunities I had. And, Mike Sawyer drawing all the
attention on his side of the field. When I had the opportunity to
shoot and score, I wanted to make sure I made it count."
Lusby opened the Championships with three goals and two assists
against Canisius, and he then scored five goals with two assists in
a Quarterfinal win over Denver. Saturday, he tallied five goals and
a helper in the Semifinals against Notre Dame, leading to his
four-goal performance in the title match.
He eclipsed the previous record of 16 goals set in 2006 by
Virginia's Matt Ward and tied a year later by Duke's Zach
Greer.
Lusby's 17 goals came on 40 shots, and his 22 points were just
three shy of tying the Championships' record set in 1977 by
Cornell's Eamon McEneaney and tied in 1987 by Cornell's Tim
Goldstein.
The Greyhounds, who had made one previous appearance in the
Division I Championship Game (1990 when Toomey was a co-captain and
starting goalkeeper) and one in the Division II title contest
(1981), joined Cornell, Duke, Johns Hopkins, Maryland, North
Carolina, Princeton, Syracuse and Virginia as teams that have won
Division I titles.
"For our alumni, for our past presidents (Rev. Joseph Sellinger and
Rev. Harold Ridley), for our current president (Rev. Brian
Linnane), (Assistant Vice President/Director of Athletics) Jim
Paquette, for (Athletic Director Emeritus) Joe Boylan, (Executive
Vice President) Susan Donovan, the people (who) have supported us
for so many years to allow this team to be what it is, I'm just so
happy for those people," Toomey said.
"This is a special group of guys. This is a special group of young
men that fought through a lot of things this year to put themselves
in position, and they stood tall on the biggest day."














