Baltimore Sun

Hopkins’ rally falls short against Duke, 14-9

- Mike.preston@baltsun.com twitter.com/MikePresto­nSun

drubbing we took at the end of last year,” Hopkins coach Dave Pietramala said. “We did a lot of soul-searching. Changes were made, and we decided to readjust our culture. Clearly, we have done that.

“We knew this was going to be a fight. They were a very good team, talented, well-coached. We knew it was going to be a fight, and we knew we’d swing.”

Let’s be blunt. A year ago the Blue Jays just weren’t very tough mentally or physically. The players can talk about new adjustment­s in the offense and defense during the 2018 season, but this group had more grit and desire than recent teams. It started playing like some of the recent Hopkins greats, like Kyle Harrison (Friends) and Jesse Schwartzma­n (Pikesville).

They don’t have the same skill set, but similar desire. They had rallied from three-goal deficits in four games this season and put together comeback wins against Virginia, Georgetown, Rutgers, Delaware, Maryland, Ohio State and UMBC. And Hopkins almost pulled off another one Sunday, coming back from down 9-5 at the end of the third quarter to pull within 9-8 on a goal by Kyle Marr with 7:11 left in the game.

The Blue Jays weren’t pretty in their attempt. They simply rode Duke hard on two clearing attempts for two early fourthquar­ter goals and got another off a man-up goal from senior midfielder Patrick Fraser. This game had the similar look of all the other recent comebacks, but Duke’s athletic talent took over once the Blue Jays pulled within 9-8.

Blue Devils freshman midfielder Nakeie Montgomery beat Hopkins short-stick midfielder­s not only once from the right wing, but twice, scoring with 6:25 left in the game and then a minute later.

Then with 1:59 left, Duke senior attackman Justin Guterding, one of the game’s top finishers, scored from the right of the goal on the outside of the crease to seal the win for Duke and push the Blue Devils’ lead to 13-9.

“It’s definitely tough and we’ve gotten ourselves into some holes and we’ve been able to claw our way back,” said Marr, who Johns Hopkins’ Cole Williams, right, tries to get around Duke’s Sean Cerrone in the first quarter. The Blue Jays put only 20 of 44 shots on goal against the Blue Devils. Hopkins came into the game having won only 214 of 397 faceoffs and won only seven of 25 on Sunday. finished with two goals and an assist. “It’s not the recipe for success. The resilience we’ve had — to pull back to 9-8 — being able to put them back on their heels, that was awesome for us to do again. It’s just slipped away at the end.”

Resilience can take a team a long way as it did Hopkins, which had won four of its past five games before Sunday. But sooner or later talent overrules and the inconsiste­ncy is too much too overcome. Before the Duke game, the Blue Jays had a shooting percentage of .300 which is OK, but not great.

Against Duke, Hopkins put only 20 of 44 shots on goal. The Blue Jays came into the game having won only 214 of 397 faceoffs and won only seven of 25 on Sunday. That’s why they needed so many comebacks this season. Inconsiste­ncy hurt the Blue Jays on offense and defense this season, but especially on offense.

“You can’t lose the possession battle like we did, lose at X and shoot the way we did,” Pietramala said. “We made some selfish mistakes on the defensive end at the end, and good teams take advantage of those things and they did.”

Marr said: “Some days they go in. Some days they don’t, As a whole on offense, we got good looks, just today wasn’t our day to bury them.”

Hopkins will lose some key seniors like attackman Shack Stanwick (Boys’ Latin), midfielder Joel Tinney, Thomas Guida and goalie Brock Turnbaugh (Hereford). But maybe the Blue Jays learned some other things. Sooner or later those last-minute comebacks catch up with a team and too much energy is used trying to climb back into a game.

It’s nice to have the swag back, but consistenc­y gets a team to the title game.

 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN ??
KENNETH K. LAM/BALTIMORE SUN

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