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2009 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse tournament

The 2009 NCAA Division I lacrosse tournament was the 39th annual tournament hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the team champion of men's college lacrosse among its Division I programs, held at the end of the 2009 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse season.[2] The tournament was played from May 9–25, 2009.

2009 NCAA Division I men's
lacrosse tournament
DatesMay 9–25, 2009
Teams16
Finals siteGillette Stadium
Foxborough, Massachusetts
ChampionsSyracuse (11th title)
Runner-upCornell (7th title game)
SemifinalistsDuke (5th Final Four)
Virginia (20th Final Four)
Winning coachJohn Desko (5th title)
MOPKenny Nims, Syracuse
Attendance[1]36,594 semi-finals
41,935 finals
78,529 total
Top scorerRob Pannell, Cornell
(16 goals)

Syracuse defeated Cornell in the final, 10–9 in overtime.[3]

The championship game was played at Gillette Stadium, the home of the NFL's New England Patriots, in Foxborough, Massachusetts, with 41,935 fans in attendance.

The first round of the tournament was played on May 9–10 at the home fields of the seeded teams. The quarterfinals were held on May 16–17 on neutral site fields at Hofstra University (James M. Shuart Stadium) and the United States Naval Academy (Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium). The tournament culminated with the semifinals and final held on Memorial Day weekend.[4]

Qualifying teams edit

Sixteen NCAA Division I college men's lacrosse teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament, to play in the NCAA Tournament.

The NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Committee selected the participating teams for the championship tournament. The committee announced the qualifying teams and the seeding order on Sunday, May 3, 2009. Seven conferences received automatic bids for their top team. The remaining nine teams were selected by the committee as "at-large" bids.[5]

Five conferences held tournament championships, which also determined their NCAA bids. Siena earned an automatic bid by winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) championship for both their first conference title and first NCAA tournament appearance.[6] Villanova earned an automatic bid by winning Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) championship and also made its NCAA tournament debut.[7] Navy earned an automatic bid by winning its fifth Patriot League championship in six years.[8] Both Notre Dame and UMBC repeated as conference champions by winning the Great Western Lacrosse League (GWLL) and America East Conference, respectively.[9][10]

Two conferences awarded their bids based on regular season performance. UMass earned the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) championship and its automatic with a 6–1 conference record.[11] The Ivy League awarded its automatic bid to Cornell. Princeton and Cornell possessed identical conference records and were named co-champions. The head-to-head regular season game, which Cornell had won, acted as the tie-breaking criterion.[12]

The remaining nine berths were awarded to at-large teams. Duke won the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) tournament for the third straight season,[13] but the league does not receive an automatic bid because it does not have at least six members.[14][15] Nevertheless, all four ACC teams received at-large bids: Duke, Maryland, North Carolina, and Virginia.[14] Additionally, the NCAA Selection Committee awarded at-large bids to: independents Johns Hopkins and Syracuse, Brown and Princeton of the Ivy League, and Hofstra of the CAA.[5][12]

Tournament bracket edit

First Round
May 9–10[16]
Quarterfinals
May 16–17[16]
Semifinals
May 23
Final
May 25
            
1 Virginia 18
  Villanova 6
1 Virginia 19
8 Johns Hopkins 8
  Brown 11
8 Johns Hopkins 12 *
1 Virginia 6
5 Cornell 15
5 Cornell 11
  Hofstra 8
5 Cornell 6
4 Princeton 4
  Massachusetts 7
4 Princeton 10
5 Cornell 9
2 Syracuse 10*
3 Duke 14
  Navy 5
3 Duke 12
6 North Carolina 11
  UMBC 13
6 North Carolina 15
3 Duke 7
2 Syracuse 17
7 Notre Dame 3
  Maryland 7
  Maryland 6
2 Syracuse 11
  Siena 4
2 Syracuse 11
  • * = Overtime

Game summaries edit

First round edit

The 1st round of the tournament, seven of the eight seeded teams advanced. Every past NCAA tournament had been won by seven of the eight teams that advanced to the quarterfinals, with Duke being the only one to have never won a national title, up to this tournament.[17] For the first time, all four Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) teams advanced to the second round. It was just the second time in tournament history that four teams from the same conference advanced. The first instance occurred in 1990 with Brown, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale of the Ivy League.[18]

The tournament began on Saturday, May 9, when the Brown Bears traveled to face the eighth-seeded Johns Hopkins Blue Jays at Homewood Field in Baltimore. The Blue Jays pulled away to three-goal leads in the first and final quarters, but the Bears equalized both times. In the final ten seconds of regulation, Brown attackman Kyle Hollingsworth batted in a loose ball to even the score, 11–11. In overtime, Hopkins won the faceoff and called a timeout, before Brian Christopher drove up the right side of the field and made a game-winning top-corner shot on the run. It was the third overtime goal by Christopher in Hopkins' past four games.[19]

UMBC then played at number-six seed North Carolina. The UMBC Retrievers possessed the most efficient extra-man offense (EMO) and the best-rated midfield in the nation. Their roster, however, lacked depth, and the first-string midfielders were forced to play in the 90 °F (32 °C) heat for almost the entire game. At halftime, the Retrievers led the Tar Heels, 8–6. The lead changed hands several times in the third period, before North Carolina took control for the remainder of the game to win, 15–13. Tar Heels attackman Billy Bitter, who attempted only nine shots, matched the school single-game record with eight goals.[20]

Hofstra played at fifth-seeded Cornell, where the teams were even at halftime, 5–5. The third period was the decisive quarter, and Cornell won three face-offs and outscored Hofstra five-to-one.[21] In Durham, third-seeded Duke hosted Navy. At halftime, the Blue Devils led 10–0 and expanded the rout to 13–1 at the start of the final period. Duke advanced with a final score of 14–5.[22]

The second day of the tournament began with the Maryland Terrapins facing the seventh-seeded Notre Dame Fighting Irish at home in South Bend, Indiana. The Fighting Irish entered the game in possession of a perfect 15–0 record, but still considered an unknown variable due to their schedule.[23] The magazine Inside Lacrosse called the Terrapins a talented team that had underachieved during the regular season.[24] The first-ranked Notre Dame defense frustrated Maryland, but the Terps still managed to gain a 6–1 lead in the third quarter. Maryland's defense effectively shut-down Notre Dame and the leading Irish scorer Ryan Hoff was unable to make a single shot on goal.[25][26] Maryland was the only unseeded team to advance to the quarterfinals.[16]

Both schools making their inaugural NCAA tournament appearance suffered quick elimination. The Villanova Wildcats were trounced by the Virginia Cavaliers, 18–6. The Cavaliers were led by Brian Carroll's career-high five goal performance.[27] The Siena Saints were held scoreless for nearly 42 minutes in their loss to the Syracuse Orange, 11–4. Onondaga Community College transfer Cody Jamieson, who had just been cleared academically, scored three goals in his first start for the Orange.[28]

At Princeton University, the Tigers defeated the visiting UMass Minutemen, 10–7. Princeton was led by Mark Kovler's six-point effort. The game was the final in the collegiate career of Minutemen goalkeeper Doc Schneider who led his team to the 2006 championship game as a freshman. His opposite number, Princeton's Tyler Fiorito, became just the second freshman goalkeeper to start an NCAA tournament game for the Tigers.[29]

Quarterfinals edit

 
Duke and North Carolina met twice earlier in 2009, including during the ACC championship (pictured).

The quarterfinals took place over the weekend of May 16 to 17 at two neutral sites. The first doubleheader was sponsored on Saturday by Hofstra University, followed by games held at the United States Naval Academy on Sunday. Despite overcast weather at both locations, it was the first time that each NCAA quarterfinals venue attracted in excess of 11,000 spectators.[30]

The second round opened at Hofstra's James M. Shuart Stadium with the Maryland–Syracuse match-up. Al Cavalieri filled in as the Orange goalkeeper for long-time starter John Galloway who was sick with the flu. Syracuse scored three unanswered goals in the first quarter before Maryland goalie Brian Phipps suffered an ACL tear. Terrapins midfielder Grant Catalino narrowed the deficit to 5–3 before halftime on an extra-man score. In the second half, Syracuse made defensive adjustments to shut down Maryland's behind-the-goal attack,[31] and the Orange tallied three times in the span of 2:10 to pull away in the third quarter. Syracuse won, 11–6, and extended its postseason streak against Maryland to five.[32]

Ivy League rivals Cornell and Princeton then had their 70th meeting, but first in the NCAA tournament.[33] Earlier in the postseason, the Big Red defeated the Tigers to split the Ivy League championship.[34] Three Princeton shots hit the post in the first half of the second quarter, and Cornell entered halftime with a 5–1 advantage. In the third quarter, Tigers attackman Tommy Davis ended their 27:58 scoring drought with a 15-yard shot. Princeton quickly tallied again with 28 seconds in the period. In the final quarter, the Big Red withstood two penalties to win, 6–4.[35]

The second day of the quarterfinals took place at Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland. The first game featured top-ranked Virginia and Johns Hopkins.[36] The Cavaliers dominated the Blue Jays, 19–8, in their worst postseason defeat in school history.[37] Shamel Bratton of Virginia scored a career-high five goals. The victory marked the 300th of head coach Dom Starsia's career, and he became the third coach in Division I lacrosse history to win as many games. Virginia advanced to their fourth Final Four appearance in five seasons.[36] With the quarterfinals elimination of both Maryland and Johns Hopkins, 2009 became only the third time since the NCAA tournament began that no team from the state participated in the Final Four.[38]

The final game of the round featured intrastate rivals Duke and North Carolina in their third meeting of the season.[39] In the first quarter, the Blue Devils jumped out to an early lead and survived a two-man-down penalty, but the Tar Heels scored four unanswered goals to briefly take the lead in the second quarter. Late in the final period, North Carolina rallied from a four-point deficit to trail by one goal, 12–11. As time expired, a shot by Sean Delaney missed high over the goal, and Duke defeated North Carolina for the third time of the year. The Blue Devils' Zach Howell scored a career-high three goals and Tewaaraton Trophy finalist Ned Crotty tallied twice and had six assists.[40] The Duke defense held Carolina's leading scorer, Billy Bitter, to just two assists.[41]

Semifinals edit

Syracuse vs. Duke edit

1 2 3 4 Total
Syracuse 4 4 6 3 17
Duke 2 2 2 1 7

Syracuse met Duke for the first game at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, which was attended by 36,594 fans, a decrease from the previous year's 48,224.[42] Nine Orange players scored in a rout of the Blue Devils, 17–7, which demonstrated the depth of the Syracuse offense.[43] It was the most goals allowed by Duke all season.[42] Seniors Kenny Nims and Patrick Perritt led the Orange with four goals each. Freshman Tim Desko, son of head coach John Desko, and heralded transfer Cody Jamieson each tallied twice. The Orange dominated the faceoff circle and won 18 of 28 draws. To open the third quarter, senior Jake Moulton won the opening faceoff and scored nine seconds into the half.[44] With the victory, the Orange advanced to the championship game for the seventh time since 1999.[45]

Cornell vs. Virginia edit

1 2 3 4 Total
Cornell 4 4 3 4 15
Virginia 1 1 2 2 6

In the second game of the day, fifth-seeded Cornell upset first-ranked Virginia. The Big Red upset the Cavaliers decisively, 15–6, and advanced to the championship game for the first time in over two decades.[46] Cornell controlled the game from the start, and accounted for the game's first three tallies and entered halftime with an 8–2 advantage.[46] Big Red freshman Rob Pannell, junior Ryan Hurley, and senior Chris Finn each scored three times. The Cornell defense created 18 turnovers and stymied Virginia's high-powered attack.[47] Commenting on the upset, Cornell head coach Jeff Tambroni said, "We knew we weren't going to have a whole lot of believers out there. We needed to play hard first and believe second."[42]

Championship edit

Syracuse vs. Cornell edit

1 2 3 4OT Total
Syracuse 2 2 1 41 10
Cornell 3 3 1 20 9

The final game was also held at Gillette Stadium on Memorial Day May 25. Cornell controlled the game for the first 56 minutes and frustrated Syracuse with a tough defense. With just over five minutes to go in the fourth quarter, the Big Red led, 9–6, before Syracuse's Stephen Keogh and Cody Jamieson narrowed the deficit to one goal with 2:46 remaining. Keogh attempted another shot but missed and Cornell took possession with 27.6 seconds left to play. Kenny Nims dislodged the ball from Matt Moyer and Keogh recovered the ball, making a wild pass, which was caught by Syracuse's Matt Abbott. As he was flattened by Cornell defenders, Abbott got off a desperation pass to Nims, who had run from midfield to the very edge of the crease. The pass was tipped by Cornell’s Roy Lang, but Nims was able to gather in the tipped pass and connect with his shot on goal with four seconds left, sending the game into overtime.[48] Cornell won the overtime faceoff, but Syracuse defenseman Sid Smith stripped Ryan Hurley to create a turnover. Dan Hardy feigned a shot before passing to Jamieson, positioned just beyond the crease, who scored the game-winner.[48][49][50]

Post-tournament honors edit

After the championship, Cornell midfielder Max Seibald was honored with the Tewaaraton Trophy for the most outstanding Division I men's lacrosse player.[51] Syracuse attackman Kenny Nims was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[52] The NCAA named its "All-Tournament Team" following the championship game, which consisted of five players each from Syracuse and Cornell. The following individuals made up that team:[53]

Player Position School Class
Matt Abbott Midfielder Syracuse Senior
John Glynn Midfielder Cornell Senior
Ryan Hurley Attackman Cornell Junior
Cody Jamieson Attackman Syracuse Junior
Matt Moyer Defenseman Cornell Senior
Kenny Nims Attackman Syracuse Senior
Rob Pannell Attackman Cornell Freshman
Pat Perritt Midfielder Syracuse Senior
Max Seibald Midfielder Cornell Senior
Joel White Longstick Midfielder Syracuse Sophomore

Record by conference edit

Conference
Bids
Record
Win %
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Champions
Atlantic Coast Conference 4 6–4 .600 4 2
Ivy League 3 4–3 .571 2 1 1
Independent 2 5–1 .833 2 1 1 1
Colonial Athletic Association 2 0–2 .000
America East Conference 1 0–1 .000
Eastern College Athletic Conference 1 0–1 .000
Great Western Lacrosse League 1 0–1 .000
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 1 0–1 .000
Patriot League 1 0–1 .000

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-13.
  2. ^ "DIVISION I MEN'S LACROSSE CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK" (PDF). NCAA.org. NCAA. Retrieved 5 July 2023.
  3. ^ Syracuse 10, Cornell 9 (OT), Syracuse University, May 25, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  4. ^ 2009 lacrosse finals to be played at Gillette Stadium, ESPN, January 18, 2008.
  5. ^ a b The Roads To Foxborough Begin[permanent dead link], National Collegiate Athletic Association, May 3, 2009.
  6. ^ Siena Wins the 2009 MAAC Men’s Lacrosse Championship 2008-05-17 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 3, 2009.
  7. ^ Villanova, Hofstra To Represent CAA In 2009 NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championships, Colonial Athletic Association, May 3, 2009.
  8. ^ Navy Men's Lacrosse Will Open 2009 NCAA Tournament At Third-Seeded Duke, Patriot League, May 3, 2009.
  9. ^ Men's Lacrosse: Notre Dame Wins GWLL Title 2009-05-06 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 3, 2009.
  10. ^ UMBC Repeats as Men's Lacrosse Champions, America East Conference, May 2, 2009.
  11. ^ No. 15 UMass Captures ECAC Crown, NCAA Tourney Berth In 11–10 OT Win At Rutgers 2011-07-10 at the Wayback Machine, Eastern College Athletic Conference, May 2, 2009.
  12. ^ a b Ivy Men's Lax Earn Three NCAA Bids[permanent dead link], Ivy League, May 4, 2009.
  13. ^ Duke Captures Third Straight ACC Men's Lacrosse Crown 2011-01-01 at the Wayback Machine, Atlantic Coast Conference, April 26, 2009.
  14. ^ a b All Four ACC Teams Earn Bids to the 2009 NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship 2012-03-22 at the Wayback Machine, Atlantic Coast Conference, May 3, 2009.
  15. ^ John Driscoll, Terps look to continue surprising season in ACC tournament, ESPN, April 25, 2008.
  16. ^ a b c 2009 Division I Men's Lacrosse Bracket (PDF), National Collegiate Athletic Association, May 4, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. Archived 2009-08-01.
  17. ^ A weekend for the bluebloods 2012-10-13 at the Wayback Machine, The Washington Times, May 10, 2009.
  18. ^ ACC leads lacrosse conference call, The Washington Times, May 14, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  19. ^ Warrior May Madness: In-Game Blog - Brown at No. 8 Johns Hopkins, Inside Lacrosse, May 9, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  20. ^ Warrior May Madness: NCAA First Round In-Game Blog – UMBC at No. 6 North Carolina 2009-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 9, 2009.
  21. ^ Warrior May Madness: NCAA First Round In-Game Final – Cornell 11, Hofstra 8, Inside Lacrosse, May 9, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  22. ^ Warrior May Madness: NCAA First Round In-Game Blog: Navy at No. 3 Duke 2009-05-12 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 9, 2009.
  23. ^ Maryland moves along, The Washington Times, May 10, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  24. ^ Warrior May Madness: Superlatives from the first round of the NCAA lacrosse tournament, Inside Lacrosse, May 11, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  25. ^ Warrior May Madness: NCAA First Round In-Game Blog: Maryland 7, Notre Dame 3 2009-05-14 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 10, 2009.
  26. ^ Maryland's defense dominates Notre Dame in 7–3 win 2007-12-14 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 10, 2009.
  27. ^ Virginia routs Villanova, 18–6 2009-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 10, 2009.
  28. ^ Syracuse stifles Siena, 11–4 2009-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 11, 2009.
  29. ^ Kovler leads Princeton past Massachusetts, 10–7 2009-05-15 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 10, 2009.
  30. ^ Quarters for your thoughts, The Washington Times, May 18, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  31. ^ Postscript from Maryland vs. Syracuse, The Baltimore Sun, May 17, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  32. ^ Syracuse Advances to Semifinals With 11–6 Victory Over Maryland 2009-06-04 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 16, 2009.
  33. ^ "New wrinkle in the Cornell Princeton lacrosse rivalry", The Ithaca Journal[permanent dead link]], May 16, 2009.
  34. ^ Cornell men defeat Princeton, head to NCAA final four, The Baltimore Sun, May 17, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  35. ^ Cornell Wins Defensive Struggle Against Princeton, Advances to Final Four 2007-12-14 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 16, 2009.
  36. ^ a b Virginia beats Johns Hopkins 19–8 in NCAA Quarterfinals 2009-05-21 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 17, 2009.
  37. ^ Final: Virginia 19, Hopkins 8, The Washington Times, May 17, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  38. ^ Where art thou, Maryland?, The Baltimore Sun, May 18, 2009.
  39. ^ ACC Insider: Duke-UNC rivalry hardly lax during basketball offseason, The Wilmington Star-News, May 15, 2009.
  40. ^ Duke lacrosse ousts UNC, The News & Observer, May 18, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  41. ^ Duke edges North Carolina to return to Final Four 2009-05-21 at the Wayback Machine, Inside Lacrosse, May 17, 2009.
  42. ^ a b c Big Upset Makes It an Upstate New York Final, The New York Times, May 23, 2009.
  43. ^ A Traditional Power, Syracuse Adds a New Twist, The New York Times, May 24, 2009.
  44. ^ No. 1 Syracuse Cruises Past No. 3 Duke in NCAA Semifinal 2012-02-26 at the Wayback Machine, Lax Power, May 23, 2009.
  45. ^ Syracuse routs Duke to reach championship game, The Baltimore Sun, May 24, 2009.
  46. ^ a b Big Red stuns Cavs[permanent dead link], The Baltimore Sun, May 24, 2009.
  47. ^ #7 Cornell Upends Top-Seeded Virginia to Reach Title Game, Lax Power, May 23, 2009.
  48. ^ a b Syracuse title has storybook ending, ESPN, May 25, 2009.
  49. ^ Warrior May Madness: In-Game Blog – NCAA Championship Game, Syracuse vs Cornell, Inside Lacrosse, May 25, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  50. ^ With a Late Rally, Syracuse Defends Its Title, The New York Times, May 26, 2009.
  51. ^ Cornell's Seibald wins the Tewaaraton, The Baltimore Sun, May 29, 2009. Accessed 2009-06-07. 2009-08-01.
  52. ^ Experiencing the lacrosse championship, ESPN, May 25, 2009.
  53. ^ NCAA All-Tournament Team for men’s lacrosse Archived 2009-05-28 at archive.today, Inside Lacrosse, May 25, 2009.

External links edit

  • Tournament statistics via NCAA

2009, ncaa, division, lacrosse, tournament, 2009, ncaa, division, lacrosse, tournament, 39th, annual, tournament, hosted, national, collegiate, athletic, association, determine, team, champion, college, lacrosse, among, division, programs, held, 2009, ncaa, di. The 2009 NCAA Division I lacrosse tournament was the 39th annual tournament hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the team champion of men s college lacrosse among its Division I programs held at the end of the 2009 NCAA Division I men s lacrosse season 2 The tournament was played from May 9 25 2009 2009 NCAA Division I men slacrosse tournamentDatesMay 9 25 2009Teams16Finals siteGillette Stadium Foxborough MassachusettsChampionsSyracuse 11th title Runner upCornell 7th title game SemifinalistsDuke 5th Final Four Virginia 20th Final Four Winning coachJohn Desko 5th title MOPKenny Nims SyracuseAttendance 1 36 594 semi finals41 935 finals78 529 totalTop scorerRob Pannell Cornell 16 goals NCAA Division I men s tournaments 2008 2010 Syracuse defeated Cornell in the final 10 9 in overtime 3 The championship game was played at Gillette Stadium the home of the NFL s New England Patriots in Foxborough Massachusetts with 41 935 fans in attendance The first round of the tournament was played on May 9 10 at the home fields of the seeded teams The quarterfinals were held on May 16 17 on neutral site fields at Hofstra University James M Shuart Stadium and the United States Naval Academy Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium The tournament culminated with the semifinals and final held on Memorial Day weekend 4 Contents 1 Qualifying teams 2 Tournament bracket 3 Game summaries 3 1 First round 3 2 Quarterfinals 3 3 Semifinals 3 3 1 Syracuse vs Duke 3 3 2 Cornell vs Virginia 3 4 Championship 3 4 1 Syracuse vs Cornell 4 Post tournament honors 5 Record by conference 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksQualifying teams editMain article 2009 NCAA Division I men s lacrosse season Sixteen NCAA Division I college men s lacrosse teams met after having played their way through a regular season and for some a conference tournament to play in the NCAA Tournament The NCAA Division I Men s Lacrosse Committee selected the participating teams for the championship tournament The committee announced the qualifying teams and the seeding order on Sunday May 3 2009 Seven conferences received automatic bids for their top team The remaining nine teams were selected by the committee as at large bids 5 Five conferences held tournament championships which also determined their NCAA bids Siena earned an automatic bid by winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference MAAC championship for both their first conference title and first NCAA tournament appearance 6 Villanova earned an automatic bid by winning Colonial Athletic Association CAA championship and also made its NCAA tournament debut 7 Navy earned an automatic bid by winning its fifth Patriot League championship in six years 8 Both Notre Dame and UMBC repeated as conference champions by winning the Great Western Lacrosse League GWLL and America East Conference respectively 9 10 Two conferences awarded their bids based on regular season performance UMass earned the Eastern College Athletic Conference ECAC championship and its automatic with a 6 1 conference record 11 The Ivy League awarded its automatic bid to Cornell Princeton and Cornell possessed identical conference records and were named co champions The head to head regular season game which Cornell had won acted as the tie breaking criterion 12 The remaining nine berths were awarded to at large teams Duke won the Atlantic Coast Conference ACC tournament for the third straight season 13 but the league does not receive an automatic bid because it does not have at least six members 14 15 Nevertheless all four ACC teams received at large bids Duke Maryland North Carolina and Virginia 14 Additionally the NCAA Selection Committee awarded at large bids to independents Johns Hopkins and Syracuse Brown and Princeton of the Ivy League and Hofstra of the CAA 5 12 Tournament bracket editFirst RoundMay 9 10 16 QuarterfinalsMay 16 17 16 SemifinalsMay 23FinalMay 25 1Virginia18 Villanova61Virginia198Johns Hopkins8 Brown118Johns Hopkins12 1Virginia65Cornell155Cornell11 Hofstra85Cornell64Princeton4 Massachusetts74Princeton105Cornell92Syracuse10 3Duke14 Navy53Duke126North Carolina11 UMBC136North Carolina153Duke72Syracuse177Notre Dame3 Maryland7 Maryland62Syracuse11 Siena42Syracuse11 OvertimeGame summaries editFirst round edit The 1st round of the tournament seven of the eight seeded teams advanced Every past NCAA tournament had been won by seven of the eight teams that advanced to the quarterfinals with Duke being the only one to have never won a national title up to this tournament 17 For the first time all four Atlantic Coast Conference ACC teams advanced to the second round It was just the second time in tournament history that four teams from the same conference advanced The first instance occurred in 1990 with Brown Harvard Princeton and Yale of the Ivy League 18 The tournament began on Saturday May 9 when the Brown Bears traveled to face the eighth seeded Johns Hopkins Blue Jays at Homewood Field in Baltimore The Blue Jays pulled away to three goal leads in the first and final quarters but the Bears equalized both times In the final ten seconds of regulation Brown attackman Kyle Hollingsworth batted in a loose ball to even the score 11 11 In overtime Hopkins won the faceoff and called a timeout before Brian Christopher drove up the right side of the field and made a game winning top corner shot on the run It was the third overtime goal by Christopher in Hopkins past four games 19 UMBC then played at number six seed North Carolina The UMBC Retrievers possessed the most efficient extra man offense EMO and the best rated midfield in the nation Their roster however lacked depth and the first string midfielders were forced to play in the 90 F 32 C heat for almost the entire game At halftime the Retrievers led the Tar Heels 8 6 The lead changed hands several times in the third period before North Carolina took control for the remainder of the game to win 15 13 Tar Heels attackman Billy Bitter who attempted only nine shots matched the school single game record with eight goals 20 Hofstra played at fifth seeded Cornell where the teams were even at halftime 5 5 The third period was the decisive quarter and Cornell won three face offs and outscored Hofstra five to one 21 In Durham third seeded Duke hosted Navy At halftime the Blue Devils led 10 0 and expanded the rout to 13 1 at the start of the final period Duke advanced with a final score of 14 5 22 The second day of the tournament began with the Maryland Terrapins facing the seventh seeded Notre Dame Fighting Irish at home in South Bend Indiana The Fighting Irish entered the game in possession of a perfect 15 0 record but still considered an unknown variable due to their schedule 23 The magazine Inside Lacrosse called the Terrapins a talented team that had underachieved during the regular season 24 The first ranked Notre Dame defense frustrated Maryland but the Terps still managed to gain a 6 1 lead in the third quarter Maryland s defense effectively shut down Notre Dame and the leading Irish scorer Ryan Hoff was unable to make a single shot on goal 25 26 Maryland was the only unseeded team to advance to the quarterfinals 16 Both schools making their inaugural NCAA tournament appearance suffered quick elimination The Villanova Wildcats were trounced by the Virginia Cavaliers 18 6 The Cavaliers were led by Brian Carroll s career high five goal performance 27 The Siena Saints were held scoreless for nearly 42 minutes in their loss to the Syracuse Orange 11 4 Onondaga Community College transfer Cody Jamieson who had just been cleared academically scored three goals in his first start for the Orange 28 At Princeton University the Tigers defeated the visiting UMass Minutemen 10 7 Princeton was led by Mark Kovler s six point effort The game was the final in the collegiate career of Minutemen goalkeeper Doc Schneider who led his team to the 2006 championship game as a freshman His opposite number Princeton s Tyler Fiorito became just the second freshman goalkeeper to start an NCAA tournament game for the Tigers 29 Quarterfinals edit nbsp Duke and North Carolina met twice earlier in 2009 including during the ACC championship pictured The quarterfinals took place over the weekend of May 16 to 17 at two neutral sites The first doubleheader was sponsored on Saturday by Hofstra University followed by games held at the United States Naval Academy on Sunday Despite overcast weather at both locations it was the first time that each NCAA quarterfinals venue attracted in excess of 11 000 spectators 30 The second round opened at Hofstra s James M Shuart Stadium with the Maryland Syracuse match up Al Cavalieri filled in as the Orange goalkeeper for long time starter John Galloway who was sick with the flu Syracuse scored three unanswered goals in the first quarter before Maryland goalie Brian Phipps suffered an ACL tear Terrapins midfielder Grant Catalino narrowed the deficit to 5 3 before halftime on an extra man score In the second half Syracuse made defensive adjustments to shut down Maryland s behind the goal attack 31 and the Orange tallied three times in the span of 2 10 to pull away in the third quarter Syracuse won 11 6 and extended its postseason streak against Maryland to five 32 Ivy League rivals Cornell and Princeton then had their 70th meeting but first in the NCAA tournament 33 Earlier in the postseason the Big Red defeated the Tigers to split the Ivy League championship 34 Three Princeton shots hit the post in the first half of the second quarter and Cornell entered halftime with a 5 1 advantage In the third quarter Tigers attackman Tommy Davis ended their 27 58 scoring drought with a 15 yard shot Princeton quickly tallied again with 28 seconds in the period In the final quarter the Big Red withstood two penalties to win 6 4 35 The second day of the quarterfinals took place at Navy Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis Maryland The first game featured top ranked Virginia and Johns Hopkins 36 The Cavaliers dominated the Blue Jays 19 8 in their worst postseason defeat in school history 37 Shamel Bratton of Virginia scored a career high five goals The victory marked the 300th of head coach Dom Starsia s career and he became the third coach in Division I lacrosse history to win as many games Virginia advanced to their fourth Final Four appearance in five seasons 36 With the quarterfinals elimination of both Maryland and Johns Hopkins 2009 became only the third time since the NCAA tournament began that no team from the state participated in the Final Four 38 The final game of the round featured intrastate rivals Duke and North Carolina in their third meeting of the season 39 In the first quarter the Blue Devils jumped out to an early lead and survived a two man down penalty but the Tar Heels scored four unanswered goals to briefly take the lead in the second quarter Late in the final period North Carolina rallied from a four point deficit to trail by one goal 12 11 As time expired a shot by Sean Delaney missed high over the goal and Duke defeated North Carolina for the third time of the year The Blue Devils Zach Howell scored a career high three goals and Tewaaraton Trophy finalist Ned Crotty tallied twice and had six assists 40 The Duke defense held Carolina s leading scorer Billy Bitter to just two assists 41 Semifinals edit Syracuse vs Duke edit 1 2 3 4 Total Syracuse 4 4 6 3 17 Duke 2 2 2 1 7 Syracuse met Duke for the first game at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough Massachusetts which was attended by 36 594 fans a decrease from the previous year s 48 224 42 Nine Orange players scored in a rout of the Blue Devils 17 7 which demonstrated the depth of the Syracuse offense 43 It was the most goals allowed by Duke all season 42 Seniors Kenny Nims and Patrick Perritt led the Orange with four goals each Freshman Tim Desko son of head coach John Desko and heralded transfer Cody Jamieson each tallied twice The Orange dominated the faceoff circle and won 18 of 28 draws To open the third quarter senior Jake Moulton won the opening faceoff and scored nine seconds into the half 44 With the victory the Orange advanced to the championship game for the seventh time since 1999 45 Cornell vs Virginia edit 1 2 3 4 Total Cornell 4 4 3 4 15 Virginia 1 1 2 2 6 In the second game of the day fifth seeded Cornell upset first ranked Virginia The Big Red upset the Cavaliers decisively 15 6 and advanced to the championship game for the first time in over two decades 46 Cornell controlled the game from the start and accounted for the game s first three tallies and entered halftime with an 8 2 advantage 46 Big Red freshman Rob Pannell junior Ryan Hurley and senior Chris Finn each scored three times The Cornell defense created 18 turnovers and stymied Virginia s high powered attack 47 Commenting on the upset Cornell head coach Jeff Tambroni said We knew we weren t going to have a whole lot of believers out there We needed to play hard first and believe second 42 Championship edit Syracuse vs Cornell edit 1 2 3 4OT Total Syracuse 2 2 1 41 10 Cornell 3 3 1 20 9 The final game was also held at Gillette Stadium on Memorial Day May 25 Cornell controlled the game for the first 56 minutes and frustrated Syracuse with a tough defense With just over five minutes to go in the fourth quarter the Big Red led 9 6 before Syracuse s Stephen Keogh and Cody Jamieson narrowed the deficit to one goal with 2 46 remaining Keogh attempted another shot but missed and Cornell took possession with 27 6 seconds left to play Kenny Nims dislodged the ball from Matt Moyer and Keogh recovered the ball making a wild pass which was caught by Syracuse s Matt Abbott As he was flattened by Cornell defenders Abbott got off a desperation pass to Nims who had run from midfield to the very edge of the crease The pass was tipped by Cornell s Roy Lang but Nims was able to gather in the tipped pass and connect with his shot on goal with four seconds left sending the game into overtime 48 Cornell won the overtime faceoff but Syracuse defenseman Sid Smith stripped Ryan Hurley to create a turnover Dan Hardy feigned a shot before passing to Jamieson positioned just beyond the crease who scored the game winner 48 49 50 Post tournament honors editAfter the championship Cornell midfielder Max Seibald was honored with the Tewaaraton Trophy for the most outstanding Division I men s lacrosse player 51 Syracuse attackman Kenny Nims was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament 52 The NCAA named its All Tournament Team following the championship game which consisted of five players each from Syracuse and Cornell The following individuals made up that team 53 Player Position School Class Matt Abbott Midfielder Syracuse Senior John Glynn Midfielder Cornell Senior Ryan Hurley Attackman Cornell Junior Cody Jamieson Attackman Syracuse Junior Matt Moyer Defenseman Cornell Senior Kenny Nims Attackman Syracuse Senior Rob Pannell Attackman Cornell Freshman Pat Perritt Midfielder Syracuse Senior Max Seibald Midfielder Cornell Senior Joel White Longstick Midfielder Syracuse SophomoreRecord by conference editConference Bids Record Win Quarterfinals Semifinals Final Champions Atlantic Coast Conference 4 6 4 600 4 2 Ivy League 3 4 3 571 2 1 1 Independent 2 5 1 833 2 1 1 1 Colonial Athletic Association 2 0 2 000 America East Conference 1 0 1 000 Eastern College Athletic Conference 1 0 1 000 Great Western Lacrosse League 1 0 1 000 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference 1 0 1 000 Patriot League 1 0 1 000 See also edit2009 NCAA Division I women s lacrosse tournament 2009 NCAA Division II men s lacrosse tournament 2009 NCAA Division III men s lacrosse tournamentReferences edit LaxPower Mobile Archived from the original on 2014 07 14 Retrieved 2014 07 13 DIVISION I MEN S LACROSSE CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK PDF NCAA org NCAA Retrieved 5 July 2023 Syracuse 10 Cornell 9 OT Syracuse University May 25 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 2009 lacrosse finals to be played at Gillette Stadium ESPN January 18 2008 a b The Roads To Foxborough Begin permanent dead link National Collegiate Athletic Association May 3 2009 Siena Wins the 2009 MAAC Men s Lacrosse Championship Archived 2008 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 3 2009 Villanova Hofstra To Represent CAA In 2009 NCAA Men s Lacrosse Championships Colonial Athletic Association May 3 2009 Navy Men s Lacrosse Will Open 2009 NCAA Tournament At Third Seeded Duke Patriot League May 3 2009 Men s Lacrosse Notre Dame Wins GWLL Title Archived 2009 05 06 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 3 2009 UMBC Repeats as Men s Lacrosse Champions America East Conference May 2 2009 No 15 UMass Captures ECAC Crown NCAA Tourney Berth In 11 10 OT Win At Rutgers Archived 2011 07 10 at the Wayback Machine Eastern College Athletic Conference May 2 2009 a b Ivy Men s Lax Earn Three NCAA Bids permanent dead link Ivy League May 4 2009 Duke Captures Third Straight ACC Men s Lacrosse Crown Archived 2011 01 01 at the Wayback Machine Atlantic Coast Conference April 26 2009 a b All Four ACC Teams Earn Bids to the 2009 NCAA Men s Lacrosse Championship Archived 2012 03 22 at the Wayback Machine Atlantic Coast Conference May 3 2009 John Driscoll Terps look to continue surprising season in ACC tournament ESPN April 25 2008 a b c 2009 Division I Men s Lacrosse Bracket PDF National Collegiate Athletic Association May 4 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 A weekend for the bluebloods Archived 2012 10 13 at the Wayback Machine The Washington Times May 10 2009 ACC leads lacrosse conference call The Washington Times May 14 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Warrior May Madness In Game Blog Brown at No 8 Johns Hopkins Inside Lacrosse May 9 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Warrior May Madness NCAA First Round In Game Blog UMBC at No 6 North Carolina Archived 2009 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 9 2009 Warrior May Madness NCAA First Round In Game Final Cornell 11 Hofstra 8 Inside Lacrosse May 9 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Warrior May Madness NCAA First Round In Game Blog Navy at No 3 Duke Archived 2009 05 12 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 9 2009 Maryland moves along The Washington Times May 10 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Warrior May Madness Superlatives from the first round of the NCAA lacrosse tournament Inside Lacrosse May 11 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Warrior May Madness NCAA First Round In Game Blog Maryland 7 Notre Dame 3 Archived 2009 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 10 2009 Maryland s defense dominates Notre Dame in 7 3 win Archived 2007 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 10 2009 Virginia routs Villanova 18 6 Archived 2009 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 10 2009 Syracuse stifles Siena 11 4 Archived 2009 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 11 2009 Kovler leads Princeton past Massachusetts 10 7 Archived 2009 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 10 2009 Quarters for your thoughts The Washington Times May 18 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Postscript from Maryland vs Syracuse The Baltimore Sun May 17 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Syracuse Advances to Semifinals With 11 6 Victory Over Maryland Archived 2009 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 16 2009 New wrinkle in the Cornell Princeton lacrosse rivalry The Ithaca Journal permanent dead link May 16 2009 Cornell men defeat Princeton head to NCAA final four The Baltimore Sun May 17 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Cornell Wins Defensive Struggle Against Princeton Advances to Final Four Archived 2007 12 14 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 16 2009 a b Virginia beats Johns Hopkins 19 8 in NCAA Quarterfinals Archived 2009 05 21 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 17 2009 Final Virginia 19 Hopkins 8 The Washington Times May 17 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Where art thou Maryland The Baltimore Sun May 18 2009 ACC Insider Duke UNC rivalry hardly lax during basketball offseason The Wilmington Star News May 15 2009 Duke lacrosse ousts UNC The News amp Observer May 18 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Duke edges North Carolina to return to Final Four Archived 2009 05 21 at the Wayback Machine Inside Lacrosse May 17 2009 a b c Big Upset Makes It an Upstate New York Final The New York Times May 23 2009 A Traditional Power Syracuse Adds a New Twist The New York Times May 24 2009 No 1 Syracuse Cruises Past No 3 Duke in NCAA Semifinal Archived 2012 02 26 at the Wayback Machine Lax Power May 23 2009 Syracuse routs Duke to reach championship game The Baltimore Sun May 24 2009 a b Big Red stuns Cavs permanent dead link The Baltimore Sun May 24 2009 7 Cornell Upends Top Seeded Virginia to Reach Title Game Lax Power May 23 2009 a b Syracuse title has storybook ending ESPN May 25 2009 Warrior May Madness In Game Blog NCAA Championship Game Syracuse vs Cornell Inside Lacrosse May 25 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 With a Late Rally Syracuse Defends Its Title The New York Times May 26 2009 Cornell s Seibald wins the Tewaaraton The Baltimore Sun May 29 2009 Accessed 2009 06 07 Archived 2009 08 01 Experiencing the lacrosse championship ESPN May 25 2009 NCAA All Tournament Team for men s lacrosse Archived 2009 05 28 at archive today Inside Lacrosse May 25 2009 External links editTournament statistics via NCAA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 NCAA Division I men 27s lacrosse tournament amp oldid 1165063097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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