Baltimore Sun

Loyola first to clinch NCAA spot

Greyhounds beat Army, 14-6, behind Spencer’s record-tying 10 points for eighth win in a row, second title in three years

- By Edward Lee

Coach Charley Toomey is fond of saying that his Loyola Maryland men’s lacrosse team must be aware of the knowns.

The No. 11 Greyhounds can take a certain amount of comfort in knowing they are the first program in Division I to clinch a spot in the NCAA tournament after dusting Army West Point, 14-6, in the Patriot League tournament final Sunday at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis.

In a near-repeat of a 12-6 victory over the Black Knights on April 22, Loyola, the No. 2 seed in the conference tournament, was convincing and overpoweri­ng on both ends of the field before an announced 964.

The Greyhounds (12-3), who won their eighth straight game, can rest easy and wait to see where their name will appear when the 18-team field for the NCAA tournament is announced Sunday night. With a strong Ratings Percentage Index (RPI) bolstered by victories over No. 8 Johns Hopkins, Virginia and Army twice, the team appears to have positioned itself to host a first-round game at Ridley

Athletic Complex.

“It’s a special day for this program,” Toomey said. “After being away for a year, we kind of felt like to be back and to be going back to the tournament, there’s truly a special feeling in our locker room. … We’ve dealt with some things this year. We’ve bulled our necks at times, and I just think both sides of the ball are playing really well right now.”

Loyola, which won its second Patriot League tournament crown in three years, was fueled by attackman Pat Spencer. The Davidsonvi­lle resident and Boys’ Latin graduate, who became the first player in conference history to claim Offensive Player and Rookie of the Year honors outright, set a league title-game record for points with 10 on five goals and five assists.

Spencer’s 10-point outburst also tied a Patriot League tournament record set by Bucknell’s Will Sands in Tuesday’s quarterfin­al win against Holy Cross. Spencer, who tied Eric Lusby (2012) and Justin Ward (2014) for the school’s Division I mark for points in a season with 71, registered two goals and two assists to propel the Greyhounds to a 6-2 lead in the first quarter and then added one goal and three assists in the third quarter that gave them a 12-5 advantage.

Spencer credited offensive coordinato­r Ryan Moran with crafting a strategy in which Spencer initiated from up top. That forced the Black Knights to slide early and open the interior for Spencer’s teammates.

“I was trying to take what the defense gave me,” Spencer said. “Their defense liked to haze and get back. We knew that going in, and Coach Moran gave us a pretty crystal-clear game plan.

“We don’t really change much up. We change a few things to tweak our offense overall, but honestly, it’s just winning your one-on-one matchup and getting guys to slide and moving the ball.”

Redshirt junior midfielder Brian Sherlock notched one goal and two assists, and senior attackman Zach Herreweyer­s, senior midfielder Tyler Albrecht and sophomore midfielder Jay Drapeau scored two goals each.

The offense got multiple opportunit­ies courtesy of faceoff specialist Graham Savio. After claiming 10 of 20 draws in the regular-season meeting, the junior went 15 of 23 and scooped up a game-best 11 ground balls en route to being named the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. Freshman goalkeeper Jacob Stover (McDonogh) made a game-high 10 saves and surrendere­d a total of 11 goals in tournament wins against Bucknell and Army. Junior attackman Cole Johnson, the Black Knights’ leader in assists (37) and points (71), was held to a single goal by sophomore defenseman Foster Huggins.

“I just sat on his left hand,” Huggins said. “Obviously, I had great help on defense. Guys may not have slid, but they hazed and he backed out, and it made my job a lot easier. It was the team that kind of helped suppress him. It’s not just me.”

Army (10-6) was paced by senior attackman Connor Cook and sophomore midfielder Ted Glesener, who had one goal and one assist each. But the Black Knights looked like a shell of the team that had suffocated top-seeded Navy, 9-3, in Friday’s semifinal round.

“I thought they were tough on the defensive end, they were exceptiona­l offensivel­y, and then really with Savio in the middle against two really good faceoff guys from our squad was a huge piece that, going into the game, that’s not what you’re thinking — that you’re only going to win 33 percent,” coach Joe Alberici said of Loyola. “That just tilted the field in their end.”

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