The Norwalk Hour

Bulldogs facing a Penn team looking for payback

- By Chip Malafronte cmalafront­e@nhregister.com

NEW HAVEN — Penn may have already beaten Yale twice this season, in the process claiming Ivy League men’s lacrosse regular season and tournament championsh­ips.

But the Quakers are still searching for the ultimate payback at today’s NCAA men’s lacrosse quarterfin­als at Rentschler Field (2:30 p.m. ESPNU).

For Penn, victory isn’t just a chance to reach the national semifinals in its home city of Philadelph­ia. It will also send Yale, the defending national champs, home for the summer, something the Bulldogs accomplish­ed the previous three seasons by beating Penn in the Ivy tournament.

“There is zero thought in my mind that we will lose this game,” Penn captain Tyler Dunn told Philly.com earlier this week. “Yale has ended our season the last few years, so this is personal for us.”

Yale is well aware that Penn has a personal vendetta to settle.

“They don’t like us,” Yale coach Andy Shay said. “We’ve got to play with a little extra spice.”

Yale (13-3) has never lost to the same opponent three times in a single season. In fact, it marks the first time two Ivy League teams have played a third time in one season. Penn got the upper hand with a triple-overtime victory on March 30 — a game that slipped away from the Bulldogs because of Dunn’s goal with one second remaining in regulation. Penn took another one-goal win on May 5 in the Ivy finals at Columbia.

The teams are about as evenly matched as it gets. Both feature high-powered offenses, efficient cover defenders, strong goalies and elite faceoff specialist­s. Penn (12-3) has been just a little better the previous two meetings.

“We weren’t super-efficient the last two times we played them,” Yale coach Andy Shay said. “Their defense is exceptiona­l. It’s a little different style than most of the teams we play. They match up with certain guys a certain way, and it makes it sticky. We’re going to have to be clean and smart with the ball, and hit our shots.”

Penn’s defensive strategy has been to clog the area in front of the net to take away shots from the center of the field. It’s forced Yale, the nation’s second-best offense, to work a bit harder for its goals.

In both meetings the Bulldogs have played from behind in the second half, putting pressure on every offensive possession. Adding to the frustratio­n was the play of Penn goalie Reed Junkin, who is at his best in the closing minutes. His three point-blank saves against Yale’s Matt Brandau secured the Ivy championsh­ip earlier this month and helped earned him tournament MVP honors.

Offense has come relatively easy all season for Yale, with playmaker Jackson Morrill (39 goals, 42 assists, 81 points) running the show. Brandau (39-1857) set the program record for goals and points in a season. Matt Gaudet (44-246) excels around the net while midfielder­s Jack Tigh (25-16-41), Joey Sessa (12-1931), Brian Tevlin (13-17-30) and captain John Daniggelis (16-7-23) are all capable offensive threats.

Faceoff specialist T.D. Ierlan, one of five finalists for the Tewaaraton Award as the nation’s best player, is winning 78 percent of draws this season, allowing Yale to limit time of possession to opponents.

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