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VIRGINIA SCHEDULE/RESULTS Date Opponent Time/Result TV Feb. 13 No. 14 LOYOLA L, 4-11 Feb. 20 at Drexel W, 14-7 Feb. 23 HIGH POINT L, 11-12 (OT) Feb. 28 PENN W, 15-10 March 4 No. 3 SYRACUSE* L, 13-14 ESPNU March 8 SAINT JOSEPH’S W, 9-7 March 12 at Cornell L, 10-14 March 19 at No. 2 Notre Dame* L, 7-8 (OT) ESPNU March 27 No. 8 JOHNS HOPKINS W, 13-12 (OT) ESPNU March 29 VMI W, 19-4 April 2 at Richmond W, 9-0 CSNMA April 10 at No. 11 North Carolina* L, 8-16 ESPNU April 17 No. 13 DUKE* L, 8-14 ESPN2 April 23 at Georgetown W, 8-7 CBSSN April 30 vs. No. 2 Brown ! 7 p.m. May 14-15 NCAA First Round TBA ESPNU May 21-22 NCAA Quarterfinals $ TBA ESPN2 or ESPNU May 28 NCAA Semifinals & TBA ESPN or ESPN2 May 30 NCAA Finals & TBA ESPN or ESPN2 All Times Eastern; *ACC game; ! Third Bank Stadium (Ken- nesaw, Ga.), $ Ohio State or Brown, & Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia, Pa.) FIVE THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW • Virginia is playing in the state of Georgia for the first time in program history. • Virginia and Brown are meeting for the 13th time in a series that began in 1968. • UVA head coach Dom Starsia is a Brown alum and went 101-46 as its head coach from 1983-92. He was the college coach of Brown alum and current Bears head coach Lars Tiffany. The duo both appeared in the 2012 movie Crooked Arrows, playing themselves. • Starsia’s first game as a collegiate head coach was at Brown and was a 10-6 loss to Virginia at Hofstra, locat- ed only miles from his hometown of Valley Stream, N.Y. • Virginia is No. 2 in the NCAA with 35.79 ground ball per game. Brown is No. 1 in the nation. GAME OVERVIEW Virginia returns to the road on Saturday to play Brown at a neutral location. Faceoff is set for 7 p.m. at Fifth Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw, Ga. The Cavaliers are receiving votes in both the USILA coaches and Cascade/Maverik media polls. Brown is ranked No. 2 in both polls. THE SERIES VS. THE BEARS Virginia and Brown are meeting for the 13th time in a series that was first played in 1968. Virginia head coach Dom Starsia is facing his alma mater for only the third time since coming to UVA, and for the first time since 1996. Starsia spent 10 years as the head coach of the Brown Bears, recording a 101-46 record. Starsia is 2-0 at UVA against Brown. He also faced UVA seven times as Brown’s head coach, going 1-6 against the Cavaliers. UVA leads the all-time series against Brown, 11-1. Nine of the 12 games in the series have been played at a neutral location. Brown head coach Lars Tiffany was a two-time captain for the Bears under Starsia. His Bears just won the Ivy League regular season championship on Wednesday. GAME DETAILS Venue: ............................... Fifth Third Bank Stadium Capacity: ........................... 8,318 Playing Surface:............... FieldTurf Series vs. BU: .................... UVA leads, 11-1 at neutral location ............. UVA leads, 8-1 Last Meeting..................... 1996 (UVA, 16-15, ot) Live Stats: ......................... VirginiaSports.com School Websites: ............. VirginiaSports.com ......................................... BrownBears.com ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATIONS Men’s Lacrosse Contact: Vincent Briedis O: (434) 982-5533 • [email protected] ON THE WEB: VirginiaSports.com ON TWITTER: @VincentBriedis, @UVAMensLacrosse GAME 15 APRIL 30, 2016 BROWN VS. VIRGINIA • FIFTH THIRD BANK STADIUM (8,318) KENNESAW, GA. • ACC/BROWN SHOWCASE • 5 NCAA NATIONAL TITLES • 17 ACC TITLES • 12 LACROSSE HALL OF FAMERS • 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS • 350 USILA ALL-AMERICANS VIRGINIA CAVALIERS BROWN BEARS Record: 7-7, 0-4 ACC HEAD COACH: Dom Starsia, 24th season UVA Record: 274-102 • Career Record: 375-148 • Record vs. BU: 2-0 HEAD COACH: Lars Tiffany, 10th season BU Record: 92-54 • Career Record: 110-67 • Record vs. UVA: 0-1 Record: 13-1, 6-0 Ivy VIRGINIA’S PROBABLE LINEUP Attack Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 5 Ryan Lukacovic Jr. 19-14-33 24 GBs Appeared in 15 games in 2014 with one start 10 Mike D’Amario So. 16-4-20 24 GBs Appeared in six games as a freshman 32 James Pannell Sr. 29-11-40 26 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (third-team) First Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 1 Greg Coholan Sr. 14-13-27 15 GBs 6th overall pick (Boston) in 2016 MLL Draft 35 AJ Fish Jr. 13-7-20 17 GBs Appeared in all 15 games on 2nd midfield in 2015 36 Zed Williams Jr. 20-4-24 50 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) Second Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 3 Phil Poquie Fr. 2-0-2 2 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 46 recruit in the country 4 Matt Emery So. 7-4-11 5 GBs Appeared in 13 games on 2nd midfield in 2015 22 Ryan Conrad Fr. 8-2-10 11 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 1 recruit in the country Face-off Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 36 Zed Williams Jr. 20-4-24 50 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 16 Michael Howard Jr. 1-1-2 49 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 46 Jason Murphy So. 1-1-2 123x197 FOs Played in all 15 games in 2015 Close Defense Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 6 Tanner Scales Jr. 0-0-0 15 CTs Missed 2015 with injury 25 Scott Hooper So. 0-0-0 23 CTs Started 13 games in 2015 as a true freshman 45 Zach Ambrosino Fr. 0-0-0 16 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 29 recruit in the country Goalie Yr. GAA/Sv% Rec. Notes 9 Matt Barrett Jr. 10.17/.485 7-7 27-18 career record Rankings: UVA Brown Cascade/Maverik Media RV 2 USILA Coaches RV 2
Transcript
  • VIRGINIASCHEDULE/RESULTSDate Opponent Time/Result TVFeb. 13 No. 14 LOYOLA L, 4-11Feb. 20 at Drexel W, 14-7Feb. 23 HIGH POINT L, 11-12 (OT)Feb. 28 PENN W, 15-10March 4 No. 3 SYRACUSE* L, 13-14 ESPNUMarch 8 SAINT JOSEPH’S W, 9-7March 12 at Cornell L, 10-14March 19 at No. 2 Notre Dame* L, 7-8 (OT) ESPNUMarch 27 No. 8 JOHNS HOPKINS W, 13-12 (OT) ESPNUMarch 29 VMI W, 19-4April 2 at Richmond W, 9-0 CSNMAApril 10 at No. 11 North Carolina* L, 8-16 ESPNUApril 17 No. 13 DUKE* L, 8-14 ESPN2April 23 at Georgetown W, 8-7 CBSSNApril 30 vs. No. 2 Brown ! 7 p.m. May 14-15 NCAA First Round TBA ESPNUMay 21-22 NCAA Quarterfinals $ TBA ESPN2 or ESPNUMay 28 NCAA Semifinals & TBA ESPN or ESPN2May 30 NCAA Finals & TBA ESPN or ESPN2 All Times Eastern; *ACC game; ! Third Bank Stadium (Ken-nesaw, Ga.), $ Ohio State or Brown, & Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia, Pa.)

    FIVE THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW• Virginia is playing in the state of Georgia for the first time in program history.• Virginia and Brown are meeting for the 13th time in a series that began in 1968.• UVA head coach Dom Starsia is a Brown alum and went 101-46 as its head coach from 1983-92. He was the college coach of Brown alum and current Bears head coach Lars Tiffany. The duo both appeared in the 2012 movie Crooked Arrows, playing themselves.• Starsia’s first game as a collegiate head coach was at Brown and was a 10-6 loss to Virginia at Hofstra, locat-ed only miles from his hometown of Valley Stream, N.Y. • Virginia is No. 2 in the NCAA with 35.79 ground ball per game. Brown is No. 1 in the nation.

    GAME OVERVIEW Virginia returns to the road on Saturday to play Brown at a neutral location. Faceoff is set for 7 p.m. at Fifth Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw, Ga. The Cavaliers are receiving votes in both the USILA coaches and Cascade/Maverik media polls. Brown is ranked No. 2 in both polls. THE SERIES VS. THE BEARS Virginia and Brown are meeting for the 13th time in a series that was first played in 1968. Virginia head coach Dom Starsia is facing his alma mater for only the third time since coming to UVA, and for the first time since 1996. Starsia spent 10 years as the head coach of the Brown Bears, recording a 101-46 record. Starsia is 2-0 at UVA against Brown. He also faced UVA seven times as Brown’s head coach, going 1-6 against the Cavaliers. UVA leads the all-time series against Brown, 11-1. Nine of the 12 games in the series have been played at a neutral location. Brown head coach Lars Tiffany was a two-time captain for the Bears under Starsia. His Bears just won the Ivy League regular season championship on Wednesday.

    GAME DETAILSVenue: ............................... Fifth Third Bank StadiumCapacity: ........................... 8,318Playing Surface:............... FieldTurfSeries vs. BU: .................... UVA leads, 11-1 at neutral location ............. UVA leads, 8-1 Last Meeting ..................... 1996 (UVA, 16-15, ot)Live Stats: ......................... VirginiaSports.comSchool Websites: ............. VirginiaSports.com

    ......................................... BrownBears.com

    ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATIONS

    Men’s Lacrosse Contact: Vincent BriedisO: (434) 982-5533 • [email protected]

    ON THE WEB: VirginiaSports.comON TWITTER: @VincentBriedis, @UVAMensLacrosse

    GAME 15 • APRIL 30, 2016 • BROWN VS. VIRGINIA • FIFTH THIRD BANK STADIUM (8,318) • KENNESAW, GA. • ACC/BROWN SHOWCASE

    • 5 NCAA NATIONAL TITLES • 17 ACC TITLES • 12 LACROSSE HALL OF FAMERS • 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS • 350 USILA ALL-AMERICANS

    VIRGINIACAVALIERS

    BROWN BEARS

    Record: 7-7, 0-4 ACCHEAD COACH: Dom Starsia, 24th seasonUVA Record: 274-102 • Career Record: 375-148 • Record vs. BU: 2-0

    HEAD COACH: Lars Tiffany, 10th seasonBU Record: 92-54 • Career Record: 110-67 • Record vs. UVA: 0-1

    Record: 13-1, 6-0 Ivy

    VIRGINIA’S PROBABLE LINEUPAttack Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 5 Ryan Lukacovic Jr. 19-14-33 24 GBs Appeared in 15 games in 2014 with one start 10 Mike D’Amario So. 16-4-20 24 GBs Appeared in six games as a freshman 32 James Pannell Sr. 29-11-40 26 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (third-team)First Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 1 Greg Coholan Sr. 14-13-27 15 GBs 6th overall pick (Boston) in 2016 MLL Draft 35 AJ Fish Jr. 13-7-20 17 GBs Appeared in all 15 games on 2nd midfield in 2015 36 Zed Williams Jr. 20-4-24 50 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team)Second Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 3 Phil Poquie Fr. 2-0-2 2 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 46 recruit in the country 4 Matt Emery So. 7-4-11 5 GBs Appeared in 13 games on 2nd midfield in 2015 22 Ryan Conrad Fr. 8-2-10 11 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 1 recruit in the countryFace-off Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 36 Zed Williams Jr. 20-4-24 50 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 16 Michael Howard Jr. 1-1-2 49 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 46 Jason Murphy So. 1-1-2 123x197 FOs Played in all 15 games in 2015 Close Defense Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 6 Tanner Scales Jr. 0-0-0 15 CTs Missed 2015 with injury 25 Scott Hooper So. 0-0-0 23 CTs Started 13 games in 2015 as a true freshman 45 Zach Ambrosino Fr. 0-0-0 16 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 29 recruit in the countryGoalie Yr. GAA/Sv% Rec. Notes 9 Matt Barrett Jr. 10.17/.485 7-7 27-18 career record

    Rankings: UVA BrownCascade/Maverik Media RV 2USILA Coaches RV 2

  • VIRGINIA HEAD COACH DOM STARSIA/COVERING THE CAVALIERS PAGE 2

    Widely regarded as one of the best teachers, motivators and tacticians in the game, Dom Starsia is in his 24th season at the helm of the Virginia men’s lacrosse program. Under Starsia’s guidance, his Cavalier squads have won four NCAA titles and reached the

    final four 13 times. He has won more games than any coach in Atlantic Coast Conference and Virginia history, sporting a 274-102 (.730) record since coming to Charlottesville in 1993. In his 24th season with Virginia, Starsia has coached 376 games, fittingly his 300th game at Virginia was the 2011 NCAA title game against Maryland at Baltimore’s M&T Bank Stadium. HALL OF FAMER STARSIA TOPS NCAA DI WINS LIST• Virginia head coach Dom Starsia is one of the most accomplished coaches in the history of the college game coaching at Brown (1983-92) and Virginia (1993-pres-ent)• He passed Jack Emmer for most career wins by a head coach while coaching at a NCAA Division I school with UVA’s quarterfinal win over Cornell in 2011• He becomes the second UVA head coach to hold the record as Jim Adams retired with 284 career victories after the 1992 season, giving way to Starsia to take the Cavalier program over in 1993 - Adams retired as the record holder• He was inducted into the Lacrosse Hall of Fame in November 2008• He has led UVA to four national championships (‘99, ‘03, ‘06, ‘11)• His teams have made 26 NCAA Tournament appearanc-es, the most by any Division I coach in history• His Cavalier squads have advanced to the final four 13 times• One of four coaches in college lacrosse history to win 100+ games at two schools (along with Jack Emmer, Dave Urick and John Danowski who joined the group in 2013)• Only Division I coach to win 200+ games at one Division I school while winning 100+ at another Division I institution • He is a three-time national coach of the year (‘85, ‘91, ‘11)• ACC Coach of the Year a record eight times

    VIRGINIA (274-102) ALL ACC FINISH POSTSEASON1993 10-5 3-0 1st (NCAA Quarterfinals)1994 13-4 2-1 1st (NCAA Finals)1995 12-3 3-0 1st (NCAA Semifinals)1996 12-4 1-2 t-3rd (NCAA Finals)1997 11-3 3-0 1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Quarterfinals)1998 8-5 2-1 2nd (NCAA Quarterfinals)1999 13-3 2-1 t-1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Champions)2000 13-2 3-0 1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Semifinals)2001 7-7 1-2 t-3rd (NCAA First Round)2002 11-4 3-0 1st (NCAA Semifinals)2003 15-2 2-1 t-1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Champions)2004 5-8 1-2 3rd2005 11-4 2-1 2nd (NCAA Semifinals)2006 17-0 2-0 1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Champions)2007 12-4 2-1 2nd (NCAA First Round)2008 14-4 1-2 3rd (NCAA Semifinals)2009 15-3 2-1 t-1st (NCAA Semifinals)2010 16-2 2-1 t-1st (ACC Champions, NCAA Semifinals)2011 13-5 1-2 t-2nd (NCAA Champions)2012 12-4 2-1 t-1st (NCAA Quarterfinals)2013 7-8 0-3 4th2014 10-6 1-4 6th (NCAA First Round)2015 10-5 0-4 5th (NCAA First Round)2016 7-7 0-4 5thTotals 274-102 41-34 21 NCAA AppearancesCareer 375-148 83-52 26 NCAA Appearances

    USILA POLLS vs. Top 20 vs. Top 5 vs. No. 1 When No. 1 When Top 5 167-95 55-57 11-10 47-11 188-47

    CAREER USILA POLLS vs. Top 20 vs. Top 5 vs. No. 1 When No. 1 When Top 5 186-99 60-72 11-12 47-11 205-59

    BROWN (101-46) ALL IVY FINISH POSTSEASON1983 9-5 4-2 2nd1984 9-5 4-2 2nd1985 12-3 6-0 1st (Ivy League Champions, NCAA Tournament)1986 8-6 4-2 2nd1987 10-5 4-2 2nd (NCAA Tournament)1988 8-6 3-3 4th1989 9-6 4-2 2nd1990 11-5 3-3 3rd (NCAA Quarterfinals)1991 13-1 6-0 1st (Ivy League Champions, NCAA Quarterfinals1992 12-4 4-2 3rd (NCAA Quarterfinals)Totals 101-46 42-18 5 NCAA Appearances

    USILA POLLS vs. Top 20 vs. Top 5 vs. No. 1 When No. 1 When Top 5 19-9 5-15 0-2 N/A 17-7

    THE STARSIA RECORD

    ALL-TIME WINS BY A COACH AT A D-I SCHOOL

    Years Won Lost Tied Pct.1. Dom Starsia 34th 375 148 0 .7170 (Brown • Virginia) * 2. John Danowski 33rd 368 183 0 .6679(C.W. Post • Hofstra • Duke) * 3. Bill Tierney 29th 334 111 0 .7506(Princeton • Denver)* 4. Jack Emmer 36 326 184 0 .6392(Cortland St. • Wash. & Lee • Army) 5. Dick Garber 36 300 141 3 .6791(Massachusetts)

    * - denotes active coach

    UNIQUELY UVAThe University of Virginia is an institution rich with history and tradition. Here is some of the terminology that contributes to UVA’s culture.

    Grounds: The term used by students, faculty and alumni to refer to the University dating as far back as Thomas Jefferson. “Campus” is never used.

    First Year, Second Year, Third Year, Fourth Year: Instead of freshman, sophomore, junior, senior. Why you may ask? To be a “senior” implies that a person has reached the final phase of learning, a feat that Thomas Jefferson believed to be impossible, arguing instead that education is a life-long process.

    Commonwealth: Virginia is one of four constituent states of the United States of America that officially uses the name “Commonwealth” instead of the word state in all references. The other three commonwealths are Kentucky, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania. CREDENTIALSAdmission to the press box is by official credential only and is strictly limited to members of the working press, radio and television personnel. Please allow ample time for the mailing of credentials or they will be left at the Will Call window at Klöckner Stadium. Special requests should be made in advance. Parking is always available on an unreserved basis at University Hall. Normal pregame and postgame information is supplied.

    PHOTOGRAPHERSRequests for photo passes must be made in advance through the Athletics Media Relations Office. Photographers must observe the field markings for lacrosse. No tri-pod equipment may be used on the field level, for the safety of the players and photographers. RADIOBroadcasts are made from the radio broadcast facilities in Klöckner Stadium. There is one courtesy line available for use by visiting radio crews. Adequate space is available for the visiting team needs. Arrangement for broadcasts must be validated in advance through the UVA Athletics Media Relations Office.

    INTERVIEWSAll requests for interviews with coaches and players should be made through Vincent Briedis in the Athletics Media Relations Office. Postgame interviews are conducted at field level following the postgame handshake. Locker rooms are closed.

    WHEN COVERING A GAME AT KLÖCKNER STADIUMWhen covering a game at Klöckner Stadium, please include the umlaut above the letter ‘o’ in Klöckner. Mac users can do this by clicking Alt-u or Option-u and then typing the letter o. PC users should make sure their number lock is off and then type Alt 0246.

    COVERING THE CAVALIERS

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 3TEAM/POLLS/SERIES NOTES PAGE 3

    PRONUNCIATION GUIDE1 - Coholan ....................KA-hole-in2 - Milikin ......................Mill-A-kin3 - Poquie ......................Poe-qwee5 - Lukacovic ..................Luke-A-Vic10 - D’Amario .................Duh-Mario13 - Lazare Zoungrana ...La-Czar Zun-grah-na14 - Dziama....................Jomma (rhymes with momma)19 - Kratky .....................Krat-key32 - Pannell ...................Pah-NEL41 - Theo Dol ..................Tay-OH Dahl47 - Menninger ..............Men-in-Gur (Gur like in Tiger)HC - Starsia ....................STAR cee uh

    Virginia Week-By-WeekWeek Coaches MediaPreseason 8 7Feb. 15 14 13Feb. 22 11 10Feb. 29 17 14March 7 17 17March 14 RV RVMarch 21 RV RVMarch 28 RV RVApril 4 20 20April 11 NR RVApril 18 RV NRApril 25 RV RV

    USILACoaches Poll (April 18)1. Notre Dame2. Denver3. Brown4. Yale5. Maryland6. Albany7. Navy8. Syracuse9. Loyola10. Towson11. Johns Hopkins12. Air Force13. Duke14. Stony Brook15. Marquette16. North Carolina17. Penn State18. Villanova19. Rutgers20. Army ORV: Saint Joseph’s, Bucknell, Cornell, Penn, Bryant, High Point, Richmond, Virginia, Fairfield

    Cascade/MaverikMedia Poll (April 18)1. Notre Dame2. Denver3. Brown4. Yale5. Maryland6. Albany7. Navy8. Syracuse9. Air Force10. Johns Hopkins11. Loyola12. Towson13. North Carolina14. Stony Brook15. Marquette16. Duke17. Penn State18. Villanova19. Rutgers20. Army

    ORV: Saint Joseph’s, Cornell, Richmond, Bucknell, Penn, Delaware, Bryant, Hofstra

    Current PollsTHE SERIES VS. THE BEARS• Virginia leads the all-time series by an 11-1 margin.• UVA and Brown last met during the 1996 season, a 16-15 overtime win by the Cavaliers in a game played at Hofstra.• Nine of the 12 games in the series have been played at a neutral site, while the other three were played in Charlottesville. These teams have never met at Brown.

    STARSIA HAS HISTORY WITH BROWN • UVA head coach Dom Starsia is a 1974 graduate of Brown University. • An outstanding high school football player, Starsia had never seen a lacrosse game before entering Brown as a stu-dent in 1970. Showing natural talent for the game, however, he became one of the best defensemen in school histo-ry. He was a third-team All-American in 1973 and 1974, earning first-team All-Ivy and All-New England both years. He captained the Bears in 1974 and played in one NCAA playoff game as well as the annual North-South game.• Starsia also captained the freshman football team and played wide receiver on the varsity for two seasons. He was inducted into the Brown University Athletic Hall of Fame in 1981 and the New England Lacrosse Hall of Fame (Newton, Mass.) in 1996. • He received the Frank Lanning Award for lifetime achievement of overall contribution to the Rhode Island sports community from the Rhode Island Organization of Sportswriters and Sportscasters in 1992. • In 2000, Starsia was chosen one of Brown’s “Top 100 Athletes of the Twentieth Century” and to the Brown men’s lacrosse “Team of the Millennium.”• Upon graduation, he joined the Brown athletic staff as a full-time assistant to the legendary men’s soccer and lacrosse coach Cliff Stevenson. Starsia coached the women’s soccer team from 1974 to 1976 and succeeded Stevenson as head lacrosse coach in 1982.• Starsia became Brown’s head lacrosse coach in 1982 and compiled a 10-year record of 101-46, while establishing himself as one of the top young coaches in the game. • His teams boasted the best Ivy League record and the best overall record for any Ivy League school over that 10-year span. • While at Brown-where he remains second on the school’s list for most wins-he developed five first-team All-Americans, 20 Ivy League first-team players, four Ivy League Players of the Year, and three Ivy League Rookies of the Year.• He took the Bears to the NCAA playoffs in five of his last six years, including the last three. • The Bears won two Ivy League titles (1985 and 1991) and advanced to the NCAA quarterfinals three consecutive seasons (1990-92). • Starsia led them to their finest season in 1991 with their first-ever undefeated regular season (13-0). They also won the Ivy League title and the New England Championship, and finished with a No. 2 national ranking. • Starsia received his first two Morris Touchstone Award as the Division I Coach of the Year in 1985 and 1991 while at Brown. Starsia won his third Morris Touchstone Award in 2011 at UVA.

    YEAR UVA BU SITE1968 (ot) 11 7 UVA1969 10 5 UVA1973 16 7 UMBC1983 10 6 Hofstra1984 13 3 Loyola1985 8 7 Hofstra1986 10 4 Hofstra1987 6 13 Loyola1988 (ot) 12 11 Loyola1989 10 8 Loyola

    YEAR UVA BU SITE1995# 16 13 UVA1996 (ot) 16 15 Hofstra# - NCAA

    UVA goals: 138Brown goals: 99UVA at home: 3-0UVA at Brown: 0-0UVA at neutral sites: 8-1

    THE SERIES VS. BROWN (UVA LEADS, 11-1)

    UVA BUGoals-Shot Attempts 148-564 237-635Goals Scored Average 10.57 16.93Shot Pct. .262 .373Assists 75 163Ground Balls 501 548Turnovers 165 235Caused Turnovers 110 126Total Goals 148 237Man-up Goals 18 22

    UVA BUMan-down Goals 1 2Overtime 1 0Man-up Opp. 18-37 22-54Faceoffs 184-of-322 261-of-392Faceoff W-L Pct. .571 .667Clears 195-of-228 268-of-304Clear Pct. .855 .882Penalties 38 64Penalty Min. 31:00 52:00

    TEAM COMPARISONS

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 4TEAM NOTES PAGE 4

    STARSIA AND TIFFANY CONNECTION• Brown head coach Lars Tiffany played for Dom Starsia at Brown. Tiffany was a two-time captain and a 1990 graduate. • The two coaches both appeared in the 2012 movie Crooked Arrows and played themselves.

    OPPONENT GOALIES HAVING SEASON/CAREER GAMES VS. UVA• In UVA’s 14 games in 2016 there have been seven goalies that have set a season high in saves against the Cavaliers. Five of those goalies also set a career high in the same game. • Saint Joseph’s (10 saves), High Point (15 saves), Johns Hopkins (9) , VMI (10), Duke (13) and Georgetown (15) are the only games where the opponent’s goalie did not have a season high in saves. - Loyola, 14 saves - Drexel, 17 saves (career high) - Penn, 16 saves (career high) - Syracuse, 13 saves (career high) - Cornell, 16 saves (career high) - Notre Dame, 14 saves (season high) - North Carolina, 14 saves (career high) RYAN CONRAD POISED FOR A SPECIAL FRESHMAN SEASON• Freshman midfielder Ryan Conrad has eight goals and 10 total points through his first 11 games of his Virginia career.• Conrad is already No. 8 all-time among Starsia freshman goal scorers for a sea-son playing strictly midfield.• Below is the list of top freshmen midfield performers under Dom Starsia, listed in order of most goals: Player (season) G-A-P 1. Shamel Bratton (2008) 14-4-18 2. Rob Emery (2011) 13-7-20 3. Ryan Tucker (2012) 13-2-15 4. Brian Carroll (2007) 11-1-12 5. Chris LaPierre (2010) 10-9-19 Rhamel Bratton (2008) 10-6-16 7. Kyle Dixon (2003) 9-8-17 8. Ryan Conrad (2016) 8-2-10 9. Matt Poskey (2003) 7-1-8 Chris Rotelli (2000) 7-1-8 11. Zed Williams (2014) 6-9-15

    VIRGINIA IS A GROUND BALL MACHINE• Accoriding to UVA head coach Dom Starsia - “If there’s any single statistic that speaks to your effort overall, then it’s that one (ground balls).” • UVA has led the nation in ground balls three of the last five years. • Since the NCAA started including ground balls per game in their national rank-ings in 2009, UVA has never finished a season lower than No. 3 in ground balls per game. • UVA is the only school in the nation to finish in the Top-5 nationally in ground balls per game over the last six seasons. • Duke is the closest team to UVA, finishing in the Top-5 three during the same span. • Below is how UVA has fared over the last eight seasons in ground balls: Virginia’s NCAA Ranking for Ground Balls Per Game

    Year NCAA Rank Ground Balls Teams Ahead of UVA (Rank) 2009 2 40.78 per game North Carolina (1) 2010 1 37.17 per game N/A 2011 3 36.83 per game VMI (1), Jacksonville (2) 2012 3 35.25 per game Bryant (1), Robert Morris (2) 2013 1 39.93 per game N/A 2014 1 37.75 per game N/A 2015 12 32.13 per game 11 other teams 2016 2 35.79 per game Brown (1)

    Name, Pos. Streak ‘16 Goals Career Goals Streak StartedJames Pannell, A 3 29 86 April 10, 2016Matt Emery, M 1 7 9 April 23, 2016Michael Howard, LSM 1 1 1 April 23, 2016Zed Williams, M 1 20 46 April 23, 2016Will Sipperly, M 1 1 1 March 29, 2016

    CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A GOAL

    Name, Pos. ’12 ‘13 ‘14 ‘15 ‘16 Career StreakGreg Coholan, M * 2 16 15 14 47 45Matt Barrett, G * * 16 15 14 45 45James Pannell, A * 6 15 6 13 40 12Tanner Scales, D * 9 16 * 13 38 7Zed Williams, M * * 1 15 14 30 29Ryan Lukacovic, A * * 1 15 12 28 11Scott Hooper, D * * * 13 14 27 16Logan Greco, D * * * 13 7 20 -Mike D’Amario, A * * * 0 14 14 14AJ Fish, M * * 0 0 13 13 3Zach Ambrosino, D * * * * 8 8 8Dan Marino, G * 6 0 0 0 6 -Michael Howard, LSM * * 0 3 0 3 -Ryan Conrad, M * * * * 2 2 -Matt Emery, M * * * 0 1 1 -Joe French, A * * 0 0 1 1 -* did not play Note: Some starts may be at positions other than the ones listed.

    CAREER STARTS

    Name, Pos. Streak ‘16 Points Career Points Streak StartedRyan Lukacovic, A 28 19-14-33 51-49-100 Feb. 7, 2015James Pannell, A 18 29-11-40 86-27-113 Feb. 14, 2015AJ Fish, M 6 13-7-20 19-12-31 March 27, 2016Greg Coholan, M 4 14-13-27 71-43-114 April 2, 2016Matt Emery, M 2 7-4-11 9-5-14 April 17, 2016Michael Howard, LSM 1 1-1-1 1-1-1 April 23, 2016Zed Williams, M 1 20-4-24 46-30-76 April 23, 2016Will Sipperly, M 1 1-0-1 1-0-1 March 29, 2016

    CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A POINT

    Opponent Attack Midfield Defense GoalieLoyola D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettDrexel Coholan, D’Amario, French Conrad, Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettHigh Point Coholan, D’Amario, Pannell Conrad, Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettPenn D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettPenn D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettSyracuse D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettSaint Joseph’s D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Greco, Hooper, Scales BarrettCornell D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Greco, Hooper BarrettNotre Dame D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettJohns Hopkins D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettVMI D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettRichmond D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Emery, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettNorth Carolina D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettDuke D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales BarrettGeorgetown D’Amario, Lukacovic, Pannell Coholan,Fish, Williams Ambrosino, Hooper, Scales Barrett

    GAME-BY-GAME STARTERS

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 5TEAM NOTES PAGE 5

    FRESHMEN GETTING A RUN• Inside Lacrosse ranked this year’s current UVA freshmen as the No. 3 recruiting class in the nation behind the No. 1 recruit in the nation, midfielder Ryan Conrad. • Four offensive freshmen for UVA have scored goals in their collegiate debuts. • Conrad (Loyola), Mikey Herring (Drexel), Ryan Lamb (Drexel) and Phil Poquie (Saint Joseph’s) all scored a goal in their first-ever game in a Cavalier uniform. • On a defensive side of things, Zach Ambrosino (LSM) and Matt Dziama (SSDM) are seeing a good amount of playing time in their first year on Grounds. • Ambrosino made his first collegiate start at Cornell for the injured Tanner Scales. CAN’T SCORE UNLESS YOU CLEAR THE BALL• Virginia registered a .918 percent success rate on clears in 2013, giving the Cavaliers four seasons in a row clearing the ball above .900 percent.• No other team in the nation has ever been able to boast such a streak.• UVA cleared at a .907 rate in 2012, a .900 rate in 2011 and a .922 rate in 2010.• During that time UVA twice ranked No. 3 in the nation in scoring offense, scoring 13.44 goals per game in 2010 and 12.56 goals per game in 2011UVA ranked No. 11 in 2012 with 11.5 goals per game.• The streak snapped in 2014 when UVA only cleared at a .851 rate.• According to research in collaboration with all NCAA DI men’s lacrosse SIDs, only 21 teams have cleared at over .900 in a season, five times its been done by UVA, dating back to 1971 - the first year lacrosse was an NCAA Championship sport.• UVA records on clearing date back to 1971 - some schools like Syracuse (1983), only go back to a certain year in regards to clearing stats. Below is the current list of all-time .900+ clearing schools in a season: Clearing All-Time Top Seasons

    1. Loyola (2013) .9552. Virginia (2010) .922 Marist (2014) .9224. Bellarmine (2014) .9215. Richmond (2015) .9206. Virginia (2013) .918 Syracuse (2013) .918 Ohio State (2014) .918 Loyola (2014) .91810. Syracuse (2011) .91811. Loyola (2012) .91612. High Point (2015) .91313. Virginia (2012) .907 14. Binghamton (2012) .90615. North Carolina (1988) .905 Syracuse (2015) .90517. Virginia (2015) .903 Hofstra (2011) .90319. North Carolina (2012) .90220. Marist (2013) .90121. Virginia (2011) .900 VIRGINIA IN THE POLLS• Virginia has been ranked in the top five of the USILA Coaches poll 280 weeks • UVA has been ranked in the Top 10 in 411 polls • The USILA Poll began in 1973 VIRGINIA IN OVERTIME UNDER DOM STARSIA• UVA is 25-18 all-time in overtime under Dom Starsia. Seven of those losses came in NCAA Tournament action. UVA is 3-7 in OT games in the NCAA Tournament under Starsia. • Since the start of the 2007 season, UVA is 15-6 in overtime games under Starsia. • The six losses since 2007 came at Duke (2007), Syracuse in the NCAA semifinal in 2008, Johns Hopkins (2012) in a regular season matchup, at Syracuse (2013), home against High Point (2016) and at Notre Dame (2016). • Virginia is 15-3 all-time in OT games at Klöckner Stadium, which doubles as the record under Starsia at UVA’s home edifice. • The first loss was the 2000 meeting with Syracuse, the second was the 2012 Hopkins game and the third was the 2016 High Point game. • Starsia is 15-4 all-time at home in OT games while at UVA - the 1998 Syracuse game was played at the Field Hockey Turf Field, resulting in a loss.

    Name Years Games Goals Goals Per Game 1. Doug Knight 1994-97 60 165 2.752. Michael Watson 1994-97 62 142 2.293. Matt Ward 2003-06 62 139 2.244. Kevin Pehlke 1990-93 55 138 2.515. Chris Bocklet 2009-12 63 137 2.176. Ben Rubeor 2005-08 61 136 2.237. Steele Stanwick 2009-12 69 126 1.838. Garrett Billings 2006-09 69 125 1.81 Mark Cockerton 2011-14 63 125 1.9810. Danny Glading 2006-09 69 119 1.7211. Chase Monroe 1985-88 53 116 2.1912. Jay Jalbert 1997-00 58 112 1.9313. Tom Duquette 1970-73 51 107 2.1014. Tucker Radebaugh 1996-99 59 106 1.8015. Jeff Nicklas 1982-86 52 104 2.00

    All-TIME UVA CAREER 100 GOAL SCORERS

    Name Years GlS1. Eldredge, Pete 1969-72 94 Carroll, Brian 2007-10 943. Bratton, Shamel 2008-11 89 4. Poskay, Matt 2003-06 885. Rotelli, Chris 2000-03 85 6. Traynor, Greg 1992-95 827. Jalbert, Jay* 1997-00 78 8. Tucker, Ryan 2012-15 779. Kraus, Andy 87-89, 91 7510. Emery, Rob 2011-14 73 Holman, Tom 1976-79 7012. Giusto, Rick 1979-82 69 Jones, David 1992-95 6914. Cooper, Doug 1971-74 66 Kroll, Rich 1974-77 6616. Colin Briggs 2009-12 6317. Shannon, A.J.* 2000-03 59 Bratton, Rhamel 2008-11 5919. Curry, David* 1996-97 55 Dixon, Kyle 2003-06 55

    Approaching Top 20 Coholan, Greg* 2013-pres. 54

    * - career goals as a midfielder

    UVA ALL-TIME MIDFIELDER CAREER GOAL LEADERS

  • TEAM NOTES PAGE 6

    2016 CAPTAINS NAMED• Midfielders Greg Coholan and defenseman Tanner Scales have been selected by their peers as the captains of the 2016 men’s lacrosse team. VIRGINIA ALUMNI IN MAJOR LEAGUE LACROSSE• Virginia seniors Greg Coholan, James Pannell and reshirt junior Michael Howard were selected in the 2016 MLL Draft. Coholan was the No. 6 overall selection to Boston. Pannell was taken by New York in the third round (24th overall). Pannell will get the chance to play with his brother, James, in New York. Howard was taken in the seventh round (55th) overall to the Chesapeake Bayhawks. • Here is where UVA ranks all-time with alums in the MLL:

    All-Time First Round Draft Picks

    1. Virginia 192. Syracuse 183. Duke 134. Johns Hopkins 9 Maryland 9

    Alumni Drafted

    1. Syracuse 572. Virginia 493. Maryland 474. Johns Hopkins 445. Duke 346. North Carolina 31 Towson 318. UMass 269. Hofstra 2510. Cornell 23 Georgetown 2312. Loyola 20

    DOUBLE DIGIT GOAL/ASSIST SCORING• Since Dom Starsia started at UVA in 1993, the Cavaliers have had at least five different players every season, including 2015, to amass double digit goals in a season. • Coming into 2016 - a Dom Starsia-led UVA team averages 7.65 different players a season with at least 10 goals.

    • Currently has six players in double figures in goal scoring. James Pannell (26), Ryan Lukacovic (19), Zed Williams (17), Mike D’Amario (16), Greg Coholan (14) and AJ Fish (13) have reached double figures. Ryan Conrad (8), Joe French (7) and Matt Emery (6) are on the verge.• Ryan Lukacovic (12), Greg Coholan (12) and James Pannell (11) are the only players thus far in 2016 with double-digit assists. • In 2015 UVA had seven players in double digits in goals scored and five in dou-ble digits in assists. • 1994 and 2010 were the best seasons under Starsia as each team had 10 differ-ent players have at least 10 goals. • 2001 and 2004 are tied for the lowest total in a year at 5 different players. • UVA had seven different double digit goal scorers in 2012.• Under Starsia, UVA has averaged 4.22 different players a year with at least 10 assists.• In 2012 UVA only had three players (Stanwick, Briggs, White ) with at least 10 assists.• In 2013 six Cavaliers had double digits in goals and three did so in assists.• In 2014 eight Cavaliers had double digits in goals and three did so in assists.

    VIRGINIA ON THE GREEN GRASS OF KLÖCKNER• Virginia owns a 126-32 (.7975) all-time record at Klöckner Stadium, includ-ing a 4-3 mark in 2016. UVA also is 11-3 all-time at Klöckner Stadium in the NCAA Tournament. • Klöckner Stadium first hosted lacrosse in 1993, the first season Dom Starsia was the head coach of the Cavaliers.

    ALL-ACC• Michael Howard, LSM ACC DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK• Matt Barrett (GK) • April 4 TEWAARTON TROPHY WATCH LIST• Matt Barrett (GK) • Greg Coholan (M) • James Pannell (A) • Tanner Scales (D) • Zed Williams (M) IL FACE-OFF YEARBOOK PRESEASON ALL-AMERICANS• Matt Barrett (GK), second-team• Greg Coholan (M), second-team• Michael Howard (LSM), second-team• Zed Williams (M), second-team• James Pannell (A), third-team• Carlson Milikin (M), honorable mention

    LACROSSE MAGAZINE PRESEASON ALL-AMERICANS• Greg Coholan (M)

    2016 HONORS

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 7TEAM NOTES PAGE 7

    MULTIPLE GOAL GAMES 2016 CAREER CAREER 3+ GOALSPannell 10 27 15Williams 7 13 5D’Amario 6 7 1Lukacovic 6 16 6Fish 5 6 1Coholan 4 20 11Breen 1 1 1Conrad 1 1 0Emery 1 1 0French 1 3 3Lamb 1 1 0Poquie 1 1 0Wood, Z. 0 1 1

    MULTIPLE ASSIST GAMES 2016 CAREER CAREER 3+ ASSISTSLukacovic 3 11 5Coholan 2 8 1Pannell 2 4 1Emery 2 2 0Brown 1 1 1D’Amario 1 1 0Herring 1 1 1Lamb 1 1 0Wood, Z. 1 1 1Williams 0 7 1French 0 1 0

    GOALS TOTAL PCT. Freshmen 16 10.8Sophomores 27 18.2Juniors 62 41.9Seniors 43 29.1Totals 148

    ASSISTS TOTAL PCT. Freshmen 12 16.0Sophomores 9 12.0Juniors 27 36.0Seniors 27 36.0Totals 75

    POINTS TOTAL PCT. Freshmen 28 12.6Sophomores 36 16.1Juniors 89 39.9Seniors 70 31.4Totals 223

    2016 SCORING DROUGHTS FOR OPPONENTSBelow are the longest scoring droughts for OPPOSING teams against Virginia this season (min. 10 minutes): Opp. Time Drought (Quarter) DateRichmond 60:00 15:00 (1st) to 0:00 (4th) 4/2VMI 27:00 12:12 (2nd) to 0:12 (3rd) 3/29High Point 22:10 10:51 (3rd) to 4:41 (4th) 2/23Saint Joseph’s 20:10 15:00 (1st) to 9:50 (2nd) 3/8Penn 18:34 8:15 (2nd) to 4:41 (3rd) 2/28Johns Hopkins 15:22 3:15 (1st) to 2:53 (3rd) 3/27VMI 15:12 0:12 (3rd) to 0:00 (4th) 3/29Notre Dame 13:59 1:26 (3rd) to 2:27 (4th) 3/19Georgetown 13:48 11:21 (2nd) to 12:33 (3rd) 4/23Drexel 12:42 0:10 (2nd) to 2:28 (3rd) 2/20Saint Joseph’s 12:34 12:34 (4th) to 0:00 (4th) 3/8Notre Dame 12:31 7:34 (1st) to 10:03 (2nd) 3/19Notre Dame 12:04 10:03 (2nd) to 12:59 (3rd) 3/19

    Miscellaneous StatsVirginia’s 2016 Record When:

    Played at home ....................................................................4-4Played on Road ....................................................................3-3Played on Neutral field .........................................................0-0When playing a ranked team ...............................................1-5When playing a higher ranked team ....................................1-4When playing a team ranked in top 5 ..................................0-2When playing a lower/non ranked team ..............................5-3When playing a team with a .500+ record ..........................5-5When playing a team with a below .500 record ...................2-2When UVA scores first ..........................................................5-2When Opponent scores first .................................................2-5When UVA has more assists ..................................................3-1When Opponent has more assists ........................................3-6When assists are the same ...................................................1-0When UVA outshoots Opponent ...........................................7-5When Opponent outshoots UVA ...........................................0-2When UVA has more ground balls ........................................6-4When Opponent has more ground balls ...............................1-3When ground balls are the same..........................................0-0When UVA has more turnovers .............................................1-1When Opponent has more turnovers ...................................6-5When turnovers are the same ..............................................0-1When UVA wins more faceoffs .............................................6-4When Opponent wins more faceoffs ....................................1-3When faceoffs are the same .................................................0-0When UVA has more saves ...................................................1-0When Opponent has more saves ..........................................5-7When saves are the same .....................................................1-0When wearing blue helmets ................................................2-5 When wearing white helmets ..............................................1-1When wearing orange helmets ............................................4-1When wearing white jersey and orange shorts ....................1-1When wearing white jersey and blue shorts ........................2-1When wearing white jersey and shorts ................................1-2When wearing orange jersey and shorts ..............................0-1When wearing orange jersey and blue shorts ......................0-1When wearing orange jersey and white shorts ....................0-0When wearing blue jersey and shorts ..................................3-0When wearing blue jersey and orange shorts ......................0-1When wearing blue jersey and white shorts ........................0-1February games ...................................................................2-2 March games ........................................................................3-3April games ..........................................................................2-2May games ...........................................................................0-0Monday ................................................................................0-0Tuesday ................................................................................2-1Thursday...............................................................................0-0Friday ...................................................................................0-1Saturday ...............................................................................3-3Sunday .................................................................................2-2When playing on TV .............................................................3-4

  • VIRGINIA GAME RECAPS PAGE 8

    Game 1Loyola 11, Virginia 4Feb. 13 • Charlottesville, Va.

    The No. 14 Loyola Greyhounds (1-0) used a 5-0 run to help jump-start an 11-4 triumph over the No. 8 home-standing Virginia Cavaliers (0-1) inside Klöckner Stadium. Loyola used a 5-0 run and held UVA scoreless in the first quarter to take command-ing control of the game. Brian Sherlock capped the run for the Greyhounds at the 5:39 mark in the second quarter. UVA’s Greg Coholan put a stop to the Loyola streak with an unassisted goal at 4:22. Freshman Ryan Conrad scored his first collegiate goal for the Cavaliers at 1:20 on an assist from Mike D’Amario to finish the first half scoring for both teams. The Greyhounds used a 3-1 run to start the third quarter, capped by a Zach Herreweyers goal on a Sherlock helper at 6:39, giving Loyola an 8-3 lead. Ryan Lukacovic scored for UVA on a James Pannell helper with 1:13 left in the third quarter to get something started for the Cavaliers. However, after win-ning the ensuing faceoff UVA turned the ball over and Loyola deposited another Herreweyers goal in transition with two sec-onds left in the period. Virginia was shutout again in the fourth as Loyola added two more to close the scor-ing. The loss for Virginia snapped a nine-game winning streak in season openers. UVA last lost a season opener against Drexel in 2007 when the Cavaliers were ranked No. 1. That loss was at UVA’s UHall Turf Field. Virginia won the battle of shots (40-33), ground balls (39-32) and faceoffs (10-7), while Loyola had more saves (14-10) and turnovers (15-13). UVA’s Zed Williams led all players with 10 ground balls.

    Loyola 4-1-4-2-11Virginia 0-2-2-0-4Att-1275

    Scoring (G-A) – L: Tyler Albrecht 3-0, Pat Spencer 2-2, Brian Sherlock 2-2, Zach Herreweyers 2-0, Zach Sirico 1-1, Ryan Fournier 1-0, Johnny Giuffreda 0-1, Grant Limone 0-1 V: Greg Coholan 1-0, Ryan Lukacovic 1-0, Ryan Conrad 1-0, AJ Fish 1-0, Mike D’Amario 0-1, James Pannell 0-1.

    Goalie Summary -- L: Grant Limone 60:00 mins. 14 saves 4 goals against. V: Matt Barrett 60:00 mins. 10 saves 11 goals allowed.

    Shots: L-33, V-40Ground Balls: L-32, V-39Clearing: L-22x26, V-14x17Faceoffs: L-7, V-10Penalties: L-1-1:00, V-2-2:00EMO: L-0x2, V-0x1

    Game 2Virginia 14, Drexel 7Feb. 20 • Philadelphia, Pa.

    Greg Coholan and AJ Fish each recorded a hat trick for No. 14 Virginia (1-1) as the Cavaliers went on the road and cruised to a 14-7 triumph over the Drexel Dragons (0-1) at Vidas Field. Zed Williams opened the game’s scoring with an unassisted goal at 12:55. After a Cole Shafer score at 8:05 tied the game, 1-1, Greg Coholan gave UVA the lead back on an unas-sisted goal at 2:03 to finish the scoring in the first quarter. Robert Frazee brought Drexel even, 2-2, at 13:34 in the second quarter. Freshman Mikey Herring, making his collegiate debut, dished out back-to-back assists to start a 4-2 Cavalier run to end the half. The first helper went to AJ Fish, the second to Mike D’Amario. Ryan Lamb scored his first collegiate goal at 2:09 to cap UVA’s second-quarter scoring. Hank Brown scored a transition goal with 10 seconds left after a Ryan Conrad turnover brought the Drexel deficit to two goals, 6-4, at the intermission. Virginia streaked out to a 10-4 lead in the third quarter, via a 4-0 run. The scoring started when Fish intercepted a clear from the Drexel goalie, Jimmy Joe Granito, and shot it roughly 30 yards out into the open net at 11:12. Coholan scored back-to-back unassisted goals to continue the streak. D’Amario scored seven seconds later to cap the run at 5:23 after Jason Murphy won the faceoff and sprinted toward the Drexel goal. Murphy recorded the assist.

    Drexel used goals by Jules Raucci and Marshal King to pull within four goals, 10-6, with 1:35 left in the third quarter. Williams found paydirt again at 11:23 in the fourth quarter to start a 4-1 UVA run to close the game. Joe French, Fish and Herring all scored during the run. Virginia dominated the battle of shots (51-29), ground balls (46-25) and faceoffs (16-9), while holding possession for the most of the game in the Cavaliers’ offensive side of the field. Drexel had more saves (17-9) and turn-overs (15-9). Murphy set the table for UVA, winning 14-of-18 at the faceoff X.

    Virginia 2-4-4-4-14Drexel 1-3-2-1-7Att-1361

    Scoring (G-A) - V: Greg Coholan 3-2, Mikey Herring 1-3, AJ Fish 3-1, Zed Williams 2-0, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Joe French 1-0, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Ryan Lamb 1-0, Jason Murphy 0-1. D: Cole Shafer 2-0, Julian Espina 1-1, Marshal King 1-1, Jules Raucci 1-0, Pat Root 1-0, Jacob O’Donnell 1-0, Ryan Dunleavy 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 58:57 mins. 9 saves 7 goals allowed; Will Railey 1:03 mins 0 saves 0 goals allowed D: Jimmy Joe Granito 60 mins. 17 saves 14 goals allowed.

    Shots: V-51, D-29Ground Balls: V-46, D-25Clearing: V-16x16,D-16x20Faceoffs: V-16, D-9Penalties: V- 1-0:30, D-4-3:00EMO: V-2x4, D-1x1

    Game 3High Point 12, Virginia 11 - OTFeb. 23 • Charlottesville, Va.

    Dan Lomas’ overtime goal lifted the High Point Panthers (1-3) to a 12-11 win over the No. 11 Virginia Cavaliers (1-2) inside Klöckner Stadium. High Point led by as many as five goals, 10-5, late in the third quarter. Zed Williams put the Cavaliers on his back and forced overtime. Williams’ first goal of the game came at the 5:10 mark in the third quarter, which started a run were the junior midfielder scored five of UVA’s next six goals in the midst of a 6-1 run by the Cavaliers. At the 9:04 mark in the fourth quarter, James Pannell scored on an AJ Fish helper to bring the deficit to one goal, 10-9. Pannell had a chance to tie it after UVA won the ensuing faceoff, but his shot hit the High Point goalie in the chest. The Panthers ran some clock and Matt Thistle scored at 4:41 after the 30-second shot clock had been instituted, giving High Point an 11-9 lead. After High Point turned the ball over with about a minute left due to a 30-second shot clock violation, Williams scored his fourth goal to bring UVA back within one, 11-10, with 45 seconds left. On the ensuing faceoff, High Point was tagged for its third faceoff violation of the second half, setting up an extra-man sit-uation. Pannell found Williams to tie the game, 11-11, with 24 seconds left. UVA won the ensuing faceoff, but couldn’t sink a shot, sending the game to overtime. Alex Woodall won the overtime faceoff and High Point immediately called timeout. Sean Harrison found Lomas for the game-win-ning score at the 3:33 mark in the overtime period. The loss for UVA snaps a 36-game win-ning streak in mid-week games. The last time UVA lost a mid-week game was an 11-8 set-back to Notre Dame on March 14, 2001. Virginia won the battle of shots (38-28), ground balls (41-29), faceoffs (14-11), while High Point had more saves (15-6) and turn-overs (24-14).

    High Point 5-2-3-1-1-12Virginia 4-1-1-5-0-11Att-789

    Scoring (G-A) – H: Dan Lomas 4-0, Matt Thistle 3-1, Michael LeClair 2-1, Keegan O’Connor 2-0, Dallas Bridle 1-0, Nick Bittner 0-1, Quin Eissler 0-1, Sean Harrison 0-1 V: Zed Williams 5-1, James Pannell 2-2, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Ryan Conrad 1-1, Ryan Lamb 1-0, AJ Fish 0-1, Ryan Lukacovic 0-1, Greg Coholan 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - H: Tim Troutner 60:27 mins. 15 saves 11 goals allowed V: Matt Barrett 60:06 mins. 6 saves 12 goals allowed, Will Railey 00:21 mins. 0 saves 0 goals allowed.

    Shots: H-28, V-38Ground Balls: H-29, V-41Clearing: H-13x19, V-16-18Faceoffs: H-11, V-14Penalties: H-5-6:00, V-3-2:30EMO: H-2x3, V-3x4

  • VIRGINIA GAME RECAPS PAGE 9

    Game 4Virginia 15, Penn 10Feb. 28 • Charlottesville, Va.

    James Pannell led No. 11 Virginia (2-2) with three goals and two assists as the Cavaliers outlasted the visiting Penn Quakers (1-1), 15-10, inside Klöckner Stadium. Virginia controlled the first quarter of play as they peppered 16 shots at Penn goalie Reed Junkin. Behind Junkin’s nine first-quarter saves, the game was knotted at 3-3. Pannell and Ryan Conrad scored first for Virginia, giv-ing the Cavaliers a 2-0 lead with 6:23 left in the first quarter. The Quakers came back with a goal by Kevin McGeary and an extra-man goal by Alex Roesner at 4:03. Pannell scored again with 22 seconds left in the period, but the UVA defense couldn’t hold serve, allowing Connor Keating to find nylon with six seconds left in the period. UVA held a 3-2 advantage over the sec-ond period to head into the intermission with a 6-5 lead in the game. During the second period the Cavaliers received goals from Mike D’Amario, Ryan Lukacovic and Matt Emery. The Cavaliers started the third quarter on a 5-0 run, which spelled the difference in the game. The UVA run was in the midst of a peri-od of 18:34 where the Cavalier defense held Penn scoreless. The UVA third-quarter streak started when Lukacovic found the net on a nifty pass from Pannell at 12:02. AJ Fish and Conrad scored easily off of dodges at 11:30 and 10:17, respectively. Conrad found Zed Williams near the crease at 8:17 and Fish capped the run with an unassisted goal with 7:18 left in the third period. Penn managed two goals to close out the third quarter, cutting its deficit to four goals, 11-7. D’Amario and Lukacovic scored back-to-back goals to open the fourth quarter, pushing the Cavalier lead to six goals, 13-7. Penn responded with a 3-1 spurt, capped by a man-up goal by Alex Roesner with 1:47 left in the game, bringing the Penn deficit to four goals, 14-10. Pannell put the final stamp on the game with the game’s final goal with 58 sec-onds left. It came after UVA was assessed a 30-second shot clock.

    UVA won the battle of the shots (48-35), where 31 of its shots were on goal. UVA also won the battle of the ground balls (34-25), faceoffs (19-8), while Penn had more saves (16-12) and turnovers (14-11).

    Penn 3-2-2-3-10Virginia 3-3-5-4-15 Att-1530

    Scoring (G-A) -P: Reilly Hupfeldt 2-1, Kevin McGeary 2-1, Alex Roesner 2-0,Nick Doktor 1-2, Simon Mathias 1-1, Connor Keating 1-0, Joe Licciardi 1-0, Austin Kreinz 0-2. V: James Pannell 3-2, Ryan Lukacovic 3-1, Ryan Conrad 2-1, AJ Fish 2-1, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Zed Williams 2-0, Matt Emery 1-0, Greg Coholan 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - P: Reed Junkin 60:00 mins 16 saves 15 goals allowed. V: Matt Barrett 60:00 mins. 12 saves 10 goals allowed.

    Shots: P-35, V-48Ground Balls: P-25, V-34Clearing: P-11-17, V-11-13Faceoffs: P-8, V-19Penalties: P-5-4:00, V-6-6:00EMO: P-3x5, V-0x3

    Game 5Syracuse 14, Virginia 13March 4 • Charlottesville, Va.

    No. 17 Virginia (2-3, 0-1 ACC) closed the game on a 5-1 run, but it wasn’t enough as the No. 3 Syracuse Orange (4-0, 1-0 ACC) won the ACC opener for both teams, 14-13, inside Klöckner Stadium. Syracuse jumped out to an early 3-0 lead on the back of two Derek DeJoe scores and one by Dylan Donahue. DeJoe capped the run at 6:24. Ryan Conrad put UVA on the board at 5:24 in the first quarter when he took a clear and went coast-to-coast with the score. Conrad’s goal started a 5-1 UVA run that gave the Cavaliers a 6-5 lead with 7:12 left in the first half. James Pannell scored twice dur-ing the run, while Mike D’Amario and Zed Williams also added scores. The Orange closed the second quarter on a 3-1 run to take an 8-7 lead into the intermis-sion. Pannell scored with 54 seconds left in the first half on a Greg Coholan helper to bring the UVA deficit to one goal, 8-7. Syracuse won 4-of-5 faceoffs in the third quarter to set the tone for a 5-1 run, giving the Orange a commanding 13-8 lead. Nick Mariano capped the run on a Sergio Salcido helper with 14:09 left in the game. Virginia wasn’t finished, scoring four straight goals to cut its deficit back to one goal, 13-12, with 8:39 left. Coholan scored on a Pannell assist to start the spurt. Ryan Lukacovic and AJ Fish scored unassisted goals to continue the run. Coholan finished what he started with an unassisted goal with 8:39 left in the game. After a Matt Barrett save, Will McNamara picked up the ground ball and tried to race out of danger, however he was collapsed on and lost the ball. Mariano was there to pounce on the ball for Syracuse in front of the crease and deposited it in the net for the deciding goal with 6:12 left. Virginia made it interesting, as Pannell scored his fourth goal of the game unassisted with 37 seconds left, making it a one-goal game again. Michael Howard lost the ensuing faceoff on a violation by Virginia and Syracuse ran out the clock and secured the victory.

    Syracuse 4-4-3-3-14Virginia 3-4-1-5-13Att-1983

    Scoring (G-A) – S: Tim Barber 3-2, Derek DeJoe 3-1, Nick Mariano 3-0, Dylan Donahue 2-3, Sergio Salcedo 2-2, Jordan Evans 1-1 V: James Pannell 4-1, Greg Coholan 2-1, AJ Fish 2-0, Ryan Lukacovic 1-4, Zed Williams 1-0, Mike D’Amario 1-0, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Matt Emery 1-0

    Goalie Summary - S: Warren Hill 60:00 mins. 13 saves 13 goals allowed V: Matt Barrett 58:52 mins. 7 saves 14 goals allowed, Will Railey 01:08 mins. 0 saves 0 goals allowed

    Shots: S-31, V-38Ground Balls: S-29, V-43Clearing: S-14x16, V-13x16Faceoffs: S-18, V-11Penalties: S-7-6:00, V-4-3:30EMO: S-3x4, V-4x6

    Game 6Virginia 9, Saint Joseph’s 7March 8 • Charlottesville, Va.

    No. 17 Virginia used a 6-1 run over the last 16:17 as the Cavaliers (3-3) closed out the Saint Joseph’s Hawks (3-2) , 9-7, inside Klöckner Stadium. It appeared the game would be con-trolled by the Virginia offense as they took 19 shots in the first quarter compared to the Hawks’ two. UVA owned an early 2-0 lead through the first frame as the Cavaliers held Saint Joseph’s scoreless for the game’s first 20:10 of play. Matt Emery and Ryan Lukacovic each scored goals in the first quarter for Virginia. Saint Joseph’s found nylon for the first time at 9:50 in the second quarter when Kevin Forster scored unassisted. The goal jumpstart-ed a 6-1 Saint Joseph’s run, as the Hawks owned control and a 6-3 lead with 3:16 left in the third quarter. UVA’s lone goal during the streak was by Mike D’Amario after the sopho-more attackman picked up a ground ball, via a AJ Fish shot that caromed off the goalie, and in one fluid motion shot the ball behind his head as he moved from right to left in front of the cage. It was UVA’s lone goal in the second quarter. The Hawks scored the first two goals of the third quarter to cap the run, as Hayes Mcginley and Kevin Reidinger tallied scores. Ryan Conrad halted the Saint Joseph’s run with 1:17 left in the third quarter when Greg Coholan found the freshman midfielder, cut-ting the UVA deficit to two goals, 6-4. Davis Stoner was charged with a pushing penalty to close the third quarter, giving UVA a man-up opportunity to start the fourth quar-ter. Joe French didn’t waste time as he cut toward the crease for his second goal of the season. Lukacovic earned the assist on the extra-man goal, cutting the UVA deficit to one goal, 6-5. Pat Swanick gave the Hawks a little breathing room when he scored on a Kyle Cain pass with 12:34 left in the game, giving SJU a 7-5 lead. The Hawks never found nylon again as UVA closed the game on a 4-0 run. D’Amario scored his second goal of the game at 9:36 to bring UVA within one goal, 7-6. Phil Poquie, making his collegiate debut, scored back-to-back goals at 8:47 and 7:55 to give UVA the lead for good, 8-7. James Pannell scored on an empty net at 1:17 to ice the game.

    Saint Joseph’s 0-4-2-1-7Virginia 2-1-1-5-9Att-979

    Scoring (G-A) – SJ: Kevin Forster 2-0, Kevin Reidinger 1-0, Hayes Mcginley 1-0, Anthony Joaquim 1-0, Evan Wolf 1-0, Pat Swanick 1-0, Chris Blewitt 1-0, Kyle Cain 1-0, T.J. Jones 1-0, Mike Rastivo 1-0. V: Mike D’Amario 2-0, Phil Poquie 2-0, Ryan Lukacovic 1-1, Ryan Conrad 1-0, James Pannell 1-0, Matt Emery 1-0, Joe French 1-0, Greg Coholan 0-1, Zed Williams 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - SJ: T.J. Jones 60:00 mins. 10 saves 9 goals allowed V: Matt Barrett 60:00 mins. 8 saves 7 goals allowed.

    Shots: SJ-32, V-45Ground Balls: SJ-27, V-35Clearing: SJ-15x19, V-14x15Faceoffs: SJ-6, V-12Penalties: SJ-3-3:00, V-3-1:30EMO: SJ-0x3, V-1x2

  • VIRGINIA GAME RECAPS PAGE 10

    Game 7Cornell 14, Virginia 10March 12 • Ithaca, N.Y.

    The Cornell Big Red (2-2) used a 5-0 run in the fourth quarter to outlast No. 17 Virginia (3-4), 14-10, at Schoellkopf Field. Virginia jumped out early to a 3-1 lead in the first quarter via goals from Joe French, Zed Williams and Mike D’Amario. The unassisted goal by D’Amario at 3:48 capped the Cavalier run. Cornell retaliated with a 6-0 run, taking a commanding 7-3 lead. Emmy Poccia finished the run at 6:34 in the second period for the Big Red on an assist by Jordan Dowiak. On the play Carlson Milikin was charged with a cross-check, putting UVA a man-down heading into the ensuing faceoff. Jeff Kratky won the man-down faceoff for Virginia after Michael Howard fought for the ground ball in a scrum. Howard found Will McNamara streaking in the middle of the field. McNamara deposited the man-down goal at 6:01 in the second quarter off the Howard assist, halting the Cornell spurt. McNamara’s goal started a 4-1 Virginia run to end the first half. James Pannell and Ryan Lukacovic scored before Williams capped the quarter with an unassisted goal as time expired, cutting UVA’s deficit to one goal, 8-7, at the break. Greg Coholan assisted Pannell’s goal, the 100th point of the fifth-year’s career. The Cavaliers used the third quarter to even the game, 9-9, after goals from Lukacovic and Pannell, who scored at 3:01 to cap the scoring. The fourth quarter belonged to the Big Red, who went on a 5-0 spurt to ice the game. John Edmonds started the run when he scored with the 30-second timer on with 12:38 left in the game. Colton Rupp capped the run with the Big Red’s final score with 5:11 left. Lukacovic scored on a man-up opportunity with 37 seconds left to finish the game’s scor-ing.

    Virginia 3-4-2-1-10Cornell 3-5-1-5-14Att-2608

    Scoring (G-A) – V: Ryan Lukacovic 3-1, James Pannell 2-1, Zed Williams 2-0, Greg Coholan 0-2, Mike D’Amario 1-0, Will McNamara 1-0, Joe French 1-0, Michael Howard 0-1. C: Colton Rupp 4-0, John Edmonds 1-3, Ryan Bray 1-2, Clarke Petterson 2-0, Ryan Matthews 2-0, Jordan Dowiak 1-1, Jack Bolen 1-1, Emmy Poccia 1-0, Andrew Keith 1-0, Charlie Estill 0-1, Kason Tarbell 0-1, Anthony Teixeira 0-1, Zach Ward 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 57:34 mins. 7 saves 14 goals allowed, Will Railey 2:26 mins. 0 saves 0 goals allowed. C: Brennan Donville 60:00 mins. 16 saves 10 goals allowed.

    Shots: V-42, C-34Ground Balls: V-32, C-34Clearing: V-14x18, C-16x20Faceoffs: V-12, C-15Penalties: V-2-1:30, C-4-4:00

    Game 8Notre Dame 8, Virginia 7 - OTMarch 19 • Notre Dame, Ind.

    The Virginia Cavaliers (3-5, 0-2 ACC) dropped a heartbreaker in overtime, 8-7, against the No. 2 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (5-1, 1-0 ACC) inside Arlotta Stadium. Sergio Perkovic tied the game for Notre Dame in regulation and 29 seconds into the overtime period his unassisted score won it for the Irish. Virginia broke a 5-5 tie with 9:59 left in the game when James Pannell scored his second goal of the season, giving UVA a 6-5 lead. Eddy Lubowicki brought Notre Dame even again, 6-6, with 2:27 left. At the 1:24 mark Pannell shot again and Irish goalie Shane Doss made a tremendous save, but the ball caromed off his leg right toward Ryan Lukacovic, who kicked the ball in, giving UVA a 7-6 lead. Notre Dame won the ensuing faceoff and with 23 seconds left in regulation Perkovic tied the game. Virginia won the ensuing faceoff and called time out with 16 seconds left. UVA was unable to get a shot off, sending the game into overtime and the eventual Notre Dame win. It was the second overtime game this sea-son for both teams. Notre Dame started the game with a nar-row 2-0 lead, shutting UVA out until the 7:40 mark in the second period. Greg Coholan found nylon to put UVA on the board. Pannell scored his first goal with 1:13 left in the first half, sending the game into the intermission at a 2-2 tie. Lukacovic scored his first goal in the third and Zed Williams tallied two scores giving UVA a 5-4 lead with 6:54 left in the third quarter. Notre Dame from that point finished regula-tion on a 3-2 run to force bonus lacrosse. Notre Dame won the battle of shots (38-30) and saves (14-11). Virginia won the battle of ground balls (38-33) and faceoffs (14-4).

    Virginia 0-2-3-2-0-7Notre Dame 1-1-3-2-1-8Att-2608

    Scoring (G-A) – V: James Pannell 2-1, Zed Williams 2-0, Ryan Lukacovic 2-0, Greg Coholan 1-1. ND: Sergio Perkovic 3-1, Matt Kavanagh 2-0, Eddy Lubowicki 1-1, Mikey Wynne 1-0, Ben Pridemore 1-0, Trevor Brosco 0-1, Pierre Byrne 0-1, Ryder Garnsey 0-1, Drew Schantz 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 60:29 mins. 11 saves 8 goals allowed. ND: Shane Doss 60:29 mins. 14 saves 7 goals allowed.

    Shots: V-30, ND-38Ground Balls: V-38, ND-33Clearing: V-12x19, ND-15x17Faceoffs: V-14, ND-4Penalties: V-0-0:00, ND-2-1:30

    Game 9Virginia 13, Johns Hopkins 12 - OTMarch 27 • Charlottesville, Va.

    Nineteen seconds into overtime Mike D’Amario streaked toward the crease in an unsettled situation to score the game-winning goal, lifting Virginia (4-5) to a 13-12 triumph over No. 8 Johns Hopkins (4-3) inside Klöckner Stadium. Johns Hopkins owned the first quarter, scoring four straight goals to start the game. The Blue Jays received two goals from Wilkins Dismuke, and one from Ryan Brown. Holden Cattoni capped the run with 3:15 left in the first quarter, giving Hopkins the early 4-0 lead. Greg Coholan found James Pannell with 2:24 left in the first quarter to put UVA on the board. Pannell’s first of three goals on the afternoon jumpstarted a 6-0 Virginia run that was capped at 5:00 in the second quarter on a Jason Murphy goal. Murphy won the faceoff after a Zed Williams goal at 5:12 and scored 12 seconds later after picking up his own ground ball and rushing toward the cage in an unset-tled situation. John Crawley scored unassisted for Hopkins at 2:53 in the second quarter, cutting the UVA lead to a goal, 6-5, heading into the intermission. The Blue Jays owned the third quarter, outscoring UVA 4-2 in the frame and taking a 9-8 lead into the final period. Matt Emery evened UVA at 9-9 only 58 seconds into the fourth period. Emery’s goal started a tradeoff of goals by UVA and Johns Hopkins for the remainder of the period. A Cody Radziewicz goal with 2:41 left to play put Hopkins up by one goal, 12-11. The Blue Jays never scored again. After UVA called its final timeout with 52 seconds left, AJ Fish found Coholan after the 30-second shot clock had been initiated. Coholan, who scored overtime winners against Johns Hopkins in 2014 and 2015, tied the game with 20 seconds left, 12-12. Virginia almost won the game in regula-tion after Murphy won the ensuing faceoff and a streaking Will McNamara had an open look at the cage, but his shot went wide left. In overtime Hopkins’ Craig Madarasz went early, giving UVA the faceoff win via vio-lation. In an unsettled situation off the restart and a Hopkins penalty ready to be enforced when play stopped, D’Amario crashed toward the crease to score the sudden-death goal.

    Scoring (G-A) – JH: Shack Stanwick 2-2, Wilkins Dismuke 2-1, Holden Cattoni 2-0, Drew Supinski 1-1, Cody Radziewicz 1-0, Ryan Brown 1-0, John Crowley 1-0, Craig Madarasz 1-0, Patrick Foley 1-0, Robert Kuhn 0-1. V: Greg Coholan 3-1, James Pannell 3-0, Zed Williams 2-0, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Ryan Lukacovic 1-1, Matt Emery 1-0, Jason Murphy 1-0, AJ Fish 0-1.

    Goalie Summary – JH: Brock Turnbaugh 60:19 mins. 9 saves 13 goals allowed V: Matt Barrett 60:19 mins. 7 saves 12 goals allowed.

    Shots: JH- 35, V- 39Ground Balls: JH-24, V-46Clearing: JH-10x11, V-12x12Faceoffs: JH-10, V-18Penalties: JH- 0-0:00, V-2-2:00EMO: JH-0x2, V-0x0

  • VIRGINIA GAME RECAPS PAGE 11

    Game 10Virginia 19, VMI 4March 29 • Charlottesville, Va.

    Sixteen different Cavaliers scored at least one point as Virginia (5-5) cruises to a home victory over the VMI Keydets (1-10) on Tuesday evening, 19-4, inside Klöckner Stadium. Six Cavaliers made their collegiate debut against the Keydets, including Theo Dol, Tyler Kellogg, Ryan Montgomery Will Sipperly, Nick Wood and Lazare Zoungrana. Tyler Breen and Sipperly each scored their first career goals, while Matt Dziama and Townsend Brown scored their first career points off of assists. VMI owned an early 3-1 lead after goals from Tom Nofi, Brad Nardella and Cody Sheetz scored to start the game. Sheetz capped the run on a Nofi helper with 12:12 left in the sec-ond quarter. Virginia then closed out the game on an 18-1 run to cruise to the victory. The final UVA run including a span of 12 straight Virginia goals during a 27 minute scoring drought from VMI, lasting between the second and third quarters. Virginia scored nine goals in the second quarter behind three scores from James Pannell, who led UVA with four on the night. During the second quarter Pannell tallied his 100th career point with his second goal of the game. Mike D’Amario scored two goals during the second quarter as well. VMI’s lone second half goal came with 12 seconds left in the third quarter when Wesley Sanders found nylon. Virginia outscored VMI 6-0 in the fourth quarter behind three goals from Breen and three assists from Zach Wood. Sipperly and Ryan Lamb also scored in the fourth frame. Virginia won the battle of shots (48-20), ground balls (50-25) and faceoffs (19-7). Saves were equal (10-10) and VMI had more turn-overs (16-15). Jason Murphy was a perfect 8-of-8 on faceoffs for UVA, while Dave Smith was 5-of-7 and Jeff Kratky was 6-of-11.

    VMI 2-1-1-0-4Virginia 1-9-3-6-19Att-1195

    Scoring (G-A) – VMI: Tom Nofi 1-1, Wesley Sanders 1-0, Cody Sheetz 1-0, Brad Nardella 1-0 V: James Pannell 4-1, Joe French 3-0, Tyler Breen 3-0, Ryan Lamb 2-2, Ryan Lukacovic 2-2, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Jacob Dean 1-0, Will Sipperly 1-0, Townsend Brown 0-3, Zach Wood 0-3, Matt Emery 0-2, Matt Dziama 0-1, AJ Fish 0-1, Mikey Herring 0-1, Will McNamara 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - VMI: Joe Riccadonna 30:00 mins. 3 saves 10 goals allowed, Logan Moore 30:00 mins. 7 saves 9 goals allowed V: Matt Barrett 30:00 mins. 4 saves 3 goals allowed, Will Railey 24:48 mins. 5 saves 1 goal allowed, Ryan Montgomery 05:12 mins. 1 save 0 goals allowed.

    Shots: VMI-20, V-48Ground Balls: VMI-25, V-50Clearing: VMI-17x23, V-20x21Faceoffs: VMI-7, V-19Penalties: VMI-0-0:00, V-0-0:00EMO: VMI-0x0, V-0x0

    Game 11Virginia 9, Richmond 0April 2 • Richmond, Va.

    Behind 12 saves from goalie Matt Barrett, the Virginia Cavaliers (6-5) shut out the Richmond Spiders (7-3), 9-0, inside Robins Stadium. It was UVA’s eighth all-time shutout and first since 2007 when the Cavaliers beat VMI 20-0. Virginia scored quickly, finding nylon 56 seconds into the game via an unassisted goal by Ryan Lukacovic. Richmond won the open-ing draw and a quick save by Barrett started a UVA clear. Lukacovic took the ball behind the cage and immediately dodged right and scored once he passed goal-line extended. Richmond won the ensuing faceoff, but the Spiders’ Mitch Goldberg turned the ball over on a caused turnover by Zach Ambrosino. Goldberg, without contact, went down with an injury that knocked the star Spider out for the remainder of the game. With 2:31 left in the first quarter a Greg Coholan shot was saved, but Mike D’Amario was in front of the crease to pick up the carom and deposited the ball for the score. UVA took a 4-0 lead into the intermission after an unassisted goal by Matt Emery at the 7:09 mark in the second quarter, followed by a Coholan goal on a D’Amario helper. The Cavaliers had their most productive offensive quarter in the third, scoring three times. James Pannell found Zed Williams with 11:11 left in the third quarter to start the streak. AJ Fish also scored at 10:10 and Lukacovic capped the scoring in the frame with an unassisted goal with 22 seconds left. Fish started the fourth quarter scoring with his second goal of the day. Emery capped the game’s scoring with his second goal of the game with 2:46 left in the game, securing UVA’s third win in a seven-day span. Virginia won the battle of shots (29-27), ground balls (31-27) and saves (13-10). Richmond had more faceoffs (7-6) and turn-overs (22-17). The Cavaliers had two goals each from Emery, Fish and Lukacovic.

    Virginia 2-2-3-2-9Richmond 0-0-0-0-0Att-4037

    Scoring (G-A) – V: AJ Fish 2-0, Matt Emery 2-0, Ryan Lukacovic 2-0, Mike D’Amario 1-1, Greg Coholan 1-0, Zed Williams 1-0, James Pannell 0-1. R: None.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 55:08 mins. 12 saves 0 goals allowed, Will Railey 4:23 mins. 1 save 0 goals allowed, Ryan Montgomery 0:20 mins. 0 saves, 0 goals allowed R: Henry Buonagurio 57:37 mins. 9 saves 9 goals allowed, Eric Buhle 2:23 mins. 1 save 0 goals allowed.

    Shots: V-29, R-27Ground Balls: V-31, R-27Clearing: V-22x24, R-18x19Faceoffs: V-6, R-7Penalties: V-6-3:30, R-2-2:00EMO: V-0x1, R-0x5

    Game 12North Carolina 16, Virginia 8April 10 • Chapel Hill, N.C.

    The No. 20 Virginia Cavaliers (6-6, 0-3 ACC) dropped a league game at No. 11 North Carolina (7-4, 2-0 ACC), 16-8, inside Kenan Stadium. UNC took an early 1-0 lead 29 seconds into the game when Michael Tagliaferri scored unassisted after curling around from behind the cage and deposited a jump shot in the upper corner. AJ Fish answered for Virginia at the 10:15 mark in the first quarter with an unassisted shot, tying the game at 1-1. Virginia did not score again for the next 21:46 as the Tar Heels reeled off a 9-0 run to take a 10-1 lead. Steve Pontrello capped the run for UNC with an unassisted goal at 5:59 in the second quarter. UVA retorted with a 3-0 run, led by two goals from James Pannell and one from Fish. Pannell’s second of the game at 9:50 in the third quarter capped the run, cutting the UNC lead to 10-4. North Carolina retaliated with a 4-0 lead, taking a 14-4 lead. Patrick Kelly capped the run at 12:24 in the fourth quarter. After Greg Coholan scored with 9:41 left in the game, the Cavaliers and Tar Heels traded goals until UNC’s Luke Goldstock scored with 6:27 left in the game, capping North Carolina’s scoring for the game. Ryan Lukacovic and Pannell scored UVA’s final two goals of the game, capping the eight-goal win by North Carolina. UNC won the battle of shots (56-33), ground balls (31-17), faceoffs (17-10), saves (15-12) and had more turnovers (8-6). Pannell led UVA with three goals, while Fish had two scores and one assist. Lukacovic added two goals and one assist as well.

    Virginia 1-1-2-4-8North Carolina 4-6-2-4-16Att-4037

    Scoring (G-A) – V: James Pannell 3-0, AJ Fish 2-1, Ryan Lukacovic 2-1, Greg Coholan 1-1, Zed Williams 0-1. N: Timmy Kelly 1-3, Steve Pontrello 2-1, Patrick Kelly 2-0, Luke Goldstock 2-0, Michael Tagliaferri 2-0, Brian Cannon 2-0, William McBride 2-0, Chris Cloutier 1-1, Shane Simpson 1-0, Tate Jozokos 1-0, Stephen Kelly 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 60:00 mins. 12 saves 16 goals allowed. N: Brian Balkam 56:02 mins. 14 saves 7 goals allowed, Colin Reder 3:58 mins. 1 save 1 goals allowed.

    Shots: V-33, N-56Ground Balls: V-17, N-31Clearing: V-11x13, N-12x14Faceoffs: V-10, N-17Penalties: V-3-3:00, N-1-1:00EMO: V-0x1, N-2x2

  • VIRGINIA GAME RECAPS PAGE 12

    Game 13Duke 14, Virginia 8April 17 • Charlottesville, Va.

    Virginia Cavaliers (6-7, 0-4) dropped its final ACC contest of the season to No. 13 Duke (8-6, 2-2 ACC), 14-8, inside Klöckner Stadium. With the loss Virginia won’t make the ACC Tournament and will face No. 5 Brown in the ACC – Brown Showcase on April 30, which will be played at Third Bank Stadium in Kennesaw, Ga. The first half was a deadlocked affair. Duke took an early 1-0 lead on a Jack Bruckner goal at 11:32 in the first quarter. UVA respond-ed with a 3-1 run, giving the Cavaliers a 3-2 lead after one quarter of play. Ryan Lukacovic, AJ Fish and Greg Coholan all scored during the spurt. Coholan’s goal with 4:00 left in the quar-ter capped the run. Case Matheis scored on a Myles Jones helper with 14:23 left in the second period, tying the game at 3-3. James Pannell scored back-to-back goals for the Cavaliers, giving UVA a 5-3 advantage with 10:02 left in the first half. Duke scored four straight goals and never looked back. Deemer Class scored twice, tying the game at 5-5 heading into the inter-mission. Coming out of halftime Bruckner and Justin Guterding scored to give Duke a 7-5 lead. Mike D’Amario brought UVA within one goal, 7-6, on his man-up goal with 8:49 left in the third quarter, but Virginia never got any closer. Duke finished the game on a 7-2 run, securing a key ACC game. Virginia won the battle of shots (47-36) and faceoffs (14-11), while Duke won the bat-tle of ground balls (30-25), saves (13-11) and had more turnovers (11-9). The Cavaliers return to action on Saturday when UVA travels to Washington, D.C., to face the Georgetown Hoyas. Faceoff is set for 7 p.m. and the game will be televised live on CBS Sports Network.

    Scoring (G-A) – D: Deemer Class 5-0, Jack Bruckner 3-0, Myles Jones 2-4, Justin Guterding 2-2, Case Matheis 2-0, Chad Cohan 0-1, Thomas Zenker 0-1. V: Greg Coholan 2-1, James Pannell 2-1, Mike D’Amario 1-2, Ryan Lukacovic 1-0, AJ Fish 1-0, Joe French 1-0, Matt Emry 0-2.

    Goalie Summary – D: Danny Fowler 59:03 mins. 13 saves 8 goals allowed; Luke Aaron 0:57 mins. 0 saves 0 goals allowed. V: Matt Barrett 55:17 mins. 10 saves 14 goals allowed; Will Railey 4:43 mins. 1 save 0 goals allowed.

    Shots: D- 36, V- 47Ground Balls: D- 30, V- 25Clearing: D-20x21, V-12x12Faceoffs: D-11, V-14Penalties: D- 5-4:30, V-5-4:30EMO: D-3x4, V-3x5

    Game 14Virginia 8, Georgetown 7April 23 • Washington, D.C.

    The Virginia Cavaliers (7-7) earned a road win over the Georgetown Hoyas (2-11), 8-7, at Cooper Field. There wasn’t much action in the first quarter until Zed Williams scored unassisted with 2:17 left in the opening frame. Georgetown equaled the score on a Joe Bucci goal with 22 seconds left in the period, but not to be outdone Michael Howard scored his first collegiate goal on the ensuing faceoff. The slow developing play came with four seconds left in the first quarter. Bucci found nylon again for Georgetown with 11:21 left in the second half, tying the score at 2-2. UVA closed the first half with a 3-0 run, taking a 5-2 lead into the intermission. Ryan Lukacovic found James Pannell on the crease for a goal at 10:39 in the second. Matt Emery scored on an AJ Fish helper at 4:32 to continue the run. After a Georgetown failed clear, Lukacovic found Pannell again with one second left in the half to cap the run. The assist by Lukacovic was the 100th career point of the junior’s UVA career. Georgetown started the second half on a 3-0 run to the tie the score at 5-5, including shutting out UVA entirely in the third quarter. A pair of Bucci goals bookended a Greg Galligan goal that came with 11:29 left in the third period. Bucci capped the run with 12:44 left in the game. Pannell gave UVA the lead back at 11:26, and then Williams scored a man-up goal at 9:48, giving UVA a 7-5 advantage. Bucci scored his fifth goal of the game with 8:05 left to bring the Hoyas within one goal, 7-6. Williams scored again with the 30-second shot clock on with 4:06 left in the game to take an 8-6 lead. Craig Berge scored with five seconds left for Georgetown, but it wasn’t enough as UVA held on for the victory. UVA won the battle of shots (36-35) and faceoffs (9-8), while Georgetown had more ground balls (32-24) and saves (15-12). UVA had more turnovers (14-12). Pannell and Williams each led UVA with three goals apiece.

    Virginia 2-3-0-3-8Georgetown 1-1-2-3-7Att-2819

    Scoring (G-A) – V: James Pannell 3-0, Zed Williams 3-0, Matt Emery 1-0, Michael Howard 1-0, Ryan Lukacovic 0-2, Greg Coholan 0-1, AJ Fish 0-1. G: Joe Bucci 5-0, Craig Berge 1-0, Greg Galligan 1-0, Daniel Bucaro 0-1, Devon Lewis 0-1, Corey Parke 0-1, Eduardo White 0-1.

    Goalie Summary - V: Matt Barrett 60:00 mins. 12 saves 7 goals allowed. G: Nick Marrocco 60:00 mins. 15 saves 8 goals allowed.

    Shots: G-35, V-36Ground Balls: G-32, V-24Clearing: G-14x15, V-8x14Faceoffs: G-8, V-9Penalties: G-4-3:00, V-1-0:30EMO: G-0x1, V-1x4

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 13VIRGINIA IN THE NCAA RANKINGS PAGE 13

    Virginia In The NCAA RankingsNCAA StatisticsVirginia - 2015-16 Men's Lacrosse Ranking Summary thru games 04/24/2016

    Statistic

    National

    Rank

    Conference

    Rank Value National Leader Value

    Conference

    Leader Value

    Assists Per Game (68 ranked) 35 5 5.36 Brown 11.62 Duke 8.47

    Caused Turnovers Per Game (68 ranked) 14 2 7.86 Richmond 10.15 Notre Dame 8.82

    Clearing Percentage (68 ranked) 41 3 0.855 Rutgers 0.931 Syracuse 0.895

    Face-Off Winning Percentage (68 ranked) 15 4 0.571 Hartford 0.713 Syracuse 0.645

    Ground Balls Per Game (68 ranked) 2 1 35.79 Brown 38.31 Virginia 35.79

    Man-Down Defense (67 ranked) 54 4 0.571 Hobart and William Colleges 0.811 North Carolina 0.750

    Man-Up Offense (68 ranked) 7 2 0.486 Marist 0.609 Syracuse 0.533

    Points Per Game (68 ranked) 29 5 15.93 Brown 28.62 Duke 22.47

    Saves Per Game (68 ranked) 54 3 9.64 Jacksonville 13.92 Duke 10.53

    Scoring Defense (68 ranked) 29 4 9.71 Navy 6.77 Notre Dame 7.55

    Scoring Margin (68 ranked) 30 5 0.86 Brown 8.46 Duke 4.53

    Scoring Offense (68 ranked) 24 5 10.57 Brown 17.00 Duke 14.00

    Shot Percentage (68 ranked) 50 5 0.262 Denver 0.399 Duke 0.371

    Turnovers Per Game (68 ranked) 11 1 11.79 Towson 10.54 Virginia 11.79

    Winning Percentage (68 ranked) 34 5 0.500 Brown 0.923 Notre Dame 0.818

    Statistic Player

    National

    Rank

    Conference

    Rank Value National Leader Value

    Conference

    Leader Value

    Assists Per Game (145 ranked) Ryan Lukacovic

    Greg Coholan

    James Pannell

    75

    101

    132

    8

    10

    14

    1.08

    0.93

    0.85

    Dylan Molloy, Brown 3.31 Dylan Donahue, Syracuse 2.25

    Caused Turnovers Per Game (75 ranked) Scott Hooper

    Tanner Scales

    Michael Howard

    17

    66

    69

    2

    5

    6

    1.64

    1.15

    1.14

    Craig Chick, Lehigh 2.57 Brandon Mullins, Syracuse 1.83

    Face-Off Winning Pct (69 ranked) Jason Murphy 10 3 0.624 Dylan Protesto, Hartford 0.729 Ben Williams, Syracuse 0.642

    Goals Per Game (149 ranked) James Pannell

    Ryan Lukacovic

    Zed Williams

    44

    136

    149

    7

    20

    22

    2.23

    1.46

    1.43

    Kylor Bellistri, Brown

    Luke Laszkiewicz, Robert Morris

    3.38

    3.38

    Deemer Class, Duke 2.80

    Goals-Against Average (59 ranked) Matt Barrett 37 5 10.17 John Connors, Navy 6.68 Shane Doss, Notre Dame 7.43

    Ground Balls Per Game (75 ranked) Zed Williams

    Michael Howard

    57

    58

    4

    5

    3.57

    3.50

    Domenic Massimilian, Cornell 9.91 Kyle Rowe, Duke 9.83

    Individual Man-up Goals (46 ranked) James Pannell 22 2 5 Brendan Bomberry, Denver

    Ian MacKay, Vermont

    10

    10

    Deemer Class, Duke 6

    Points Per Game (150 ranked) James Pannell

    Ryan Lukacovic

    59

    109

    9

    16

    3.08

    2.54

    Dylan Molloy, Brown 6.62 Justin Guterding, Duke 4.20

    Save Percentage (59 ranked) Matt Barrett 46 4 0.485 Jack Kelly, Brown 0.621 Shane Doss, Notre Dame 0.568

    Saves Per Game (66 ranked) Matt Barrett 44 3 9.07 Ben Gleichenhaus, Jacksonville 13.83 Shane Doss, Notre Dame 9.55

    Shot Percentage (74 ranked) Ryan Lukacovic 28 8 0.404 Devin Dwyer, Harvard 0.556 Chris Cloutier, North Carolina 0.462

  • VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE GAME NOTES • DREXEL PAGE 142016 CAVALIER PROFILES PAGE 14

    45—Zach Ambrosino• Made collegiate debut against Loyola • Picked up two ground balls against High Point• Made first collegiate start at Cornell for the injured Tanner Scales• Picked up two ground balls and caused three turnovers in 9-0 win over Richmond

    9—Matt Barrett• Made nine saves in a win over Drexel• Made 12 saves in home win over Penn• Made 11 saves at Notre Dame• Named ACC Defensive Player of the Week on April 4 after shutting out Richmond, 9-0, with 12 saves in addi-tion to a home win over VMI (19-4)

    1—Greg Coholan• One of UVA’s four captains• Preseason second-team All-American by Face-Off Yearbook• Preseason first-team All-American by Lacrosse Magazine• Selected in the first round (6th overall) by the Boston Cannons in the 2016 MLL Draft• Led UVA with three goals and two assists at Drexel• Had two goals and one assist against Syracuse• Scored three goals and dished out one assist in OT win over No. 8 Johns Hopkins, including tying the game with a goal with 20 seconds left in regulation

    22—Ryan Conrad• Named to the 2016 U19 Team USA roster• Inside Lacrosse’s No. 1 recruit• Made collegiate debut against Loyola and scored a goal• Made first collegiate start at Drexel and scored a goal• Scored a goal and dished an assist against High Point• Scored two goals and dished an assist against Penn• Scored once against Syracuse and Saint Joseph’s

    10—Mike D’Amario• First season on starting attack• Scored OT game-winning goal against No. 8 Johns Hopkins• Has tallied two goals in a game five times (Drexel, High Point, Penn, Saint Jospeh’s, Johns Hopkins)

    14—Matt Dziama• Made collegiate debut against Loyola as a SSDM• Picked up a ground ball at Drexel• Grabbed three ground balls against Penn• Picked up six ground balls against Syracuse

    4—Matt Emery• Missed the Drexel and High Point games with an injury• Scored first goal of the season against Penn• Scored once against Syracuse and Saint Joseph’s

    7—Jack Falk• Runs at SSDM• Had a ground ball against Penn• Had a ground ball and one CT against Syracuse

    35—AJ Fish• Scored three goals and dished out one assist at Drexel• Tallied two goals and one assist against Penn• Scored twice against Syracuse

    43—Joe French• Sees time on extra-man• Made first collegiate start at Drexel and scored one goal• Scored an extra-man goal against Saint Joseph’s• Scored once at Cornell

    44—Logan Greco• Caused a turnover at Drexel• Grabbed two ground balls against Penn• Picked up one ground ball and one CT against Syracuse

    8—Cory Harris• Made collegiate debut against Loyola

    42—Mikey Herring• Is 25 percent Native American. His paternal grand-mother hails from the Onondaga tribe in Syracuse, N.Y.• Scored one goal and dished out three assists in his collegiate debut at Drexel

    25—Scott Hooper• Grabbed three ground balls and caused two turnovers against Penn• Had four ground balls and three CTs against Syracuse• Caused five turnovers in 9-0 win at Richmond

    16—Michael Howard• Preseason second-team All-American by Face-Off Yearbook• Selected in the seventh round (55th overall) by the Chesapeake Bayhawks in the 2016 MLL Draft• Runs at LSM• Took first career faceoffs against High Point and won 4-of-5• Snatched seven ground balls against Penn• Had two ground balls and three CTs against Syracuse• Dished one assist at Cornell

    19—Jeff Kratky• Was 5-of-7 on faceoffs against Penn• Was 4-of-5 on faceoffs against Saint Joseph’s 5—Ryan Lukacovic• Missed Drexel game with a lower body injury• Scored three goals and dished out one assist against Penn• Scored once and dished out four assists against Syracuse• Tallied three goals and one assist at Cornell

    18—Dan Marino• Owns six career starts in the goal for Virginia • All career starts came in 2013• Was only the sixth Cavalier to start a season-opening game in cage as a freshman, dating back to 1971 - the first season lacrosse was an NCAA Championship sport• Made 15 saves in 2013 season-opener, the most ever in a UVA debut

    15—Will McNamara• Runs at SSDM• Picked up four ground balls against Syracuse • Scored a man-down goal at Cornell

    47—Nate Menninger• Returns after missing 2015 with a lower extremity injury

    2—Carlson Milikin• Preseason honorable mention All-American by Face-Off Yearbook• Runs at SSDM• Picked up two ground balls and one CT against Syracuse

    46—Jason Murphy• Is a FOGO• Had a career day at Drexel, winning 14-of-18 faceoffs and picking up 12 ground balls• Won 13-of-19 faceoffs against Penn• Won 8-of-13 faceoffs against Saint Joseph’s• Won the first faceoff of the Cornell game before leav-ing for the remainder with an injury• Went 14-of-17 at No. 2 Notre Dame• Won 17-of-26 faceoffs and scored his first collegiate goal in OT win over No. 8 Johns Hopkins

    32—James Pannell • Preseason third-team All-American by Face-Off Yearbook• Selected in the third round (24th overall) by the New York Lizards in the 2016 MLL Draft• Owns 10 career hat tricks• Scored two goals and dished out two assists against High Point• Scored three goals and dished out two assists against Penn• Scored four goals and dished out one assist against Syracuse• Scored two goals and dished out one assist at Cornell• Scored three goals in OT win over No. 8 Johns Hopkins

    3—Phil Poquie• Born in Ivory Coast• Family is from Liberia and they left the country when Phil was two-years old after civil war broke out. Family moved to Philadelphia• Made collegiate debut against Saint Joseph’s and scored two goals, the game-tying score and the game-winning marker in a 9-7 win

    6—Tanner Scales• One of UVA’s two captains• Returns after missing 2015 with a lower extremity injury• Picked up four ground balls and caused two turnovers against Loyola• Picked up three ground balls and caused two turnovers at Drexel• Had six ground balls against Syracuse• Missed the Cornell game with an injury

    28—Dickson Smith• Runs as an LSM• Had a ground ball and caused a turnover against High Point• Had one ground ball against Penn

    36—Zed Williams• Member of the Seneca tribe and has lived his entire life on the Cattaraugus Reservation, which is a part of the Iroquois confederacy that is located just south of Buffalo, N.Y.• Owns the national high school record for career goals (444) and points (729)• Preseason second-team All-American by Face-Off Yearbook• Scored two goals at Drexel• Scored five goal and dished one assist against High Point• Scored two goals against Penn

    34—Zach Wood• Has appeared in 25 career games for the Cavaliers

  • CAREER/2016 SEASON HIGHS PAGE 15

    45 ZACH AMBROSINO • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. Cornell (3/12)CT 3 vs. Richmond (4/2)

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. Cornell (3/16)CT 3 vs. Richmond (4/16)

    9 MATT BARRETT • GSeason HighsSV 12 4x, last vs. Georgetown (4/23)SV% 100% vs. Richmond (4/2)GA 16 vs. North Carolina (4/10)Faced 56 vs. North Carolina (4/10)GB 5 2x, last vs. High Point (2/23)

    Career HighsSV 21 vs. Cornell (3/15)SV% 100% vs. Richmond (4/16)GA 18 vs. Notre Dame (2/14)Faced 58 vs. Cornell (3/7)GB 7 2x, last vs. Notre Dame (3/15)

    11 TYLER BREEN • ASeason HighsG 3 vs. VMI (3/29)A - -Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/29)GB - -CT - -

    Career HighsG 3 vs. VMI (3/16)A 1 vs. VMI (3/15)Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/16)GB - -CT - -

    17 TOWNSEND BROWN • A/MSeason HighsG - -A 3 vs. VMI (3/29)Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/29)GB 1 vs. VMI (3/29)CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A 3 vs. VMI (3/29)Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/29)GB 1 vs. VMI (3/29)CT - - 24 CHASE CAMPBELL • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 1 vs. VMI (3/29)CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. VMI (3/15)CT 1 vs. Richmond (3/15) 1 GREG COHOLAN • MSeason HighsG 3 2x, last vs. Johns Hopkins (3/27)A 2 2x, last vs. Cornell (3/12)Pts. 5 vs. Drexel (2/20)GB 3 2x, last vs. Johns Hopkins (3/27)CT 1 vs. Penn (2/28)

    Career HighsG 4 3x, last vs Penn (4/15)A 4 vs. Penn (4/15)Pts. 8 vs. Penn (4/15)GB 3 2x, last vs. Loyola (2/16)CT 1 3x, last vs. Penn (2/15)

    22 RYAN CONRAD • MSeason HighsG 2 Penn (2/28)A 1 2x, last vs. Penn (2/28)Pts. 3 vs. High Point (2/23)GB 3 vs. Loyola (2/13)CT 1 3x, last vs. Georgetown (4/23)

    Career HighsG 2 Penn (2/16)A 1 2x, last vs. Penn (2/16)Pts. 3 vs. High Point (2/16)GB 3 vs. Loyola (2/16)CT 1 3x, last vs. Georgetown (4/16) 10 MIKE D’ AMARIO • ASeason Highs G 2 6x, last vs. VMI (3/29)A 2 vs. Duke (4/17)Pts. 2 7x, last vs. Richmond (4/2)GB 4 vs. Drexel (2/20)CT 1 4x, last vs. Cornell (3/12)

    Career HighsG 3 vs. VMI (3/15)A 2 vs. Duke (4/16)Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/15)GB 4 vs. Drexel (2/16)CT 1 4x, last vs. Cornell (3/16) 33 JACOB DEAN • MSeason HighsG 1 vs. VMI (3/29)A - -Pts. 1 vs. VMI (3/29)GB 2 vs. VMI (3/29)CT - -

    Career HighsG 1 2x, last vs. VMI (3/16)A - -Pts. 1 2x, last vs. VMI (3/16)GB 2 2x, last vs. VMI (3/16)CT - -

    41 THEO DOL • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -

    14 MATT DZIAMA • MSeason HighsG - -A 1 vs. VMI (3/29)Pts. 1 vs. VMI (3/29)GB 6 vs. Syracuse (3/4)CT 3 vs. VMI (3/29)

    Career HighsG - -A 1 vs. VMI (3/16)Pts. 1 vs. VMI (3/16)GB 6 vs. Syracuse (3/16)CT 3 vs. VMI (3/16)

    4 MATT EMERY • MSeason HighsG 2 vs. Richmond (4/2)A 2 vs. VMI (3/29)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. Richmond (4/2)GB 2 vs. Johns Hopkins (3/27)CT - -

    Career HighsG 2 vs. Richmond (4/2)A 2 vs. VMI (3/16)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. Richmond (4/2)GB 2 vs. Johns Hopkins (3/16)CT - -

    7 JACK FALK • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 1 7x, last vs. Duke (4/17)CT 1 vs. Syracuse (3/4)

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 3x, last vs. Georgetown (4/15)CT 2 vs. Notre Dame (3/15)

    27 COOPER FERSEN • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. VMI (3/29)CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. VMI (3/16)CT 1 2x, last vs. Georgetown (4/15)

    35 AJ FISH • ASeason HighsG 3 vs. Drexel (2/20)A 1 6x, last vs. Georgetown (4/23)Pts. 4 vs. Drexel (2/20)GB 4 vs. Saint Joseph’s (3/8)CT 1 2x, last vs. Drexel (2/20)

    Career HighsG 3 vs. Drexel (2/16)A 1 11x, last vs. Georgetown (4/16)Pts. 4 vs. Drexel (2/16)GB 4 vs. Saint Joseph’s (3/16)CT 1 3x , last vs. Drexel (2/16) 43 JOE FRENCH • ASeason HighsG 3 vs. VMI (3/29)A - -Pts. 3 vs. VMI (3/29)GB 1 3x, last vs. Saint Joseph’s (3/8)CT - -

    Career HighsG 4 vs. VMI (3/14)A 2 vs. VMI (3/14)Pts. 6 vs. VMI (3/14)GB 3 vs. VMI (3/15)CT 1 vs. VMI (3/15)

    38 HARRY GILLESPIE • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 1 vs. VMI (3/15)CT - - 44 LOGAN GRECO • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 2x, last vs. Penn (2/28)CT 1 4x, last vs. Cornell (3/12)

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 vs. Syracuse (3/1)CT 2 vs. Loyola Maryland (2/15)

  • CAREER/2016 SEASON HIGHS PAGE 16

    8 CORY HARRIS • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -

    Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - 42 MIKEY HERRING • ASeason HighsG 1 vs. Drexel (2/20)A 3 vs. Drexel (2/20)Pts. 4 vs. Drexel (2/20)GB 1 2x, last vs. Penn (2/28)CT - -

    Career HighsG 1 vs. Drexel (2/16)A 3 vs. Drexel (2/16)Pts. 4 vs. Drexel (2/16)GB 1 2x, last vs


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