Albany Press Release:
Albany, N.Y. - Merrick Thomson scored five goals and added one assist in
leading UAlbany to a 19-10 victory over Loyola in the first round of the
NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship before a record-crowd of 2,953 on
Sunday afternoon at John Fallon Field. The Great Danes posted their
first NCAA win in the program's history and advanced to face Cornell in
the quarterfinals on Saturday, May 19 at Princeton Stadium.
UAlbany (15-2) leaped to a 3-0 lead in the opening four
minutes of play. Derek Dale finished off a crossing pass from Jordan
Levine following a Loyola miscue. Mike Ammann, a junior midfielder,
then scored back-to-back goals. He drove from the left and placed a
hard shot inside the far post, before advancing from the right side
where he went one-on-one with goalkeeper Alex Peaty.
The Great Danes, who were hosting a NCAA Tournament game for
the first time as the championship's No. 5 seed, moved out to an 8-2
lead with 4:32 left in the second period. Matthew Green scored
unassisted when drove in from the left point and ripped a shot into the
top right corner to fuel a three-goal run. Goalkeeper Brett Queener,
who made eight saves, stopped two shots that led to a pair of fastbreak
opportunities. Dale cleaned up on a left-to-right crossing pass from
Thomson, before Levine went all the way from the midfield line and
switched to his left hand for a six-goal margin.
UAlbany increased its advantage in the third quarter to 13-4
with another three-goal outburst. Thomson, a senior attacker, started
that stretch by scoring in transition after a turnover. Levine, who
tied a career-best with five points, then split two defenders en route
to the cage. Thomson, who had five-plus points for the 25th time in his
career, used a two-man advantage situation to find the net from right of
the crease.
Loyola (7-6) ended the third stanza by ripping off three
unanswered in a 46-second span. Greg Leonard scored an extra-man goal
before his team won the following face-off. Shane Koppens, who had a
pair of goals, finished off that possession to slice the deficit to
13-7. But the Great Danes put the game away in the final quarter by
netting six of the game's next seven goals. Thomson scored twice in
that stretch, and Frank Resetarits and Eric Wolf combined on two other
scoring plays.
"We were very prepared," said UAlbany coach Scott Marr,
whose program had lost their previous three NCAA opening-round games.
"We've been waiting a long time for this after missing the playoffs last
year. We go into every game anticipating Frank (Resetarits) and Merrick
(Thomson) will be shut off, or some special defense will be on them.
That's what happened today. When Frank and Merrick don't get their
looks, it just opens things up for everyone else."
UAlbany showed its balance with eleven players reaching the
scoring column. Resetarits, a Tewaaraton Trophy finalist, finished with
two goals and two assists, while Corey Small and Wolf each scored twice
and had an assist. Paul Richards and Andrew Spack had two goals apiece
for the Greyhounds, who made the NCAA field for the first time since
2001.
"I really felt like we had to match their energy," explained
Loyola coach Charlie Toomey, whose team finished second in the ECAC
standings behind Georgetown. "They didn't let us back in, they stayed
on top of us today. They had an answer for everything. Albany got some
good looks at the goal; they proved they can score with their weak
hands."
Albany vs. Loyola
| Scoring | |
|---|
| Merrick Thomson | (5, 1) |
|
| Jordan Levine | (2, 3) |
|
| Frank Resetarits | (2, 2) |
|
| Corey Small | (2, 1) |
|
| Eric Wolf | (2, 1) |
|
| John Alpizar | (0, 2) |
|
| Derek Dale | (2, 0) |
|
| Mike Ammann | (2, 0) |
|
| Brett Queener | (0, 1) |
|
| Matthew Green | (1, 0) |
|
| Steve Ammann | (1, 0) |
|
| Scoring | |
|---|
| Patrick Kennedy | (1, 2) |
|
| Paul Richards | (2, 0) |
|
| Shane Koppens | (2, 0) |
|
| Dan Bauers | (1, 1) |
|
| Andrew Spack | (2, 0) |
|
| Joe Landry | (1, 0) |
|
| Greg Leonard | (1, 0) |
|
| Steven Hess | (0, 1) |
|
| Dan Kallaugher | (0, 1) |
|
| Ryan Rabidou | (0, 1) |
|