Players knew what was coming from Army’s attack. Slides would come late, or maybe not at all, and they’d be forced to play “on an island,” as Trimboli said. Syracuse just wasn’t used to that type of defense.
“We have a lot of belief of who we are in our man [defense],” Alberici said.
Coming out of the break trailing by three goals, Phaup — like he had done all first half — bullied Army’s Stevie Grabher for the faceoff. The ball quickly shuffled around to midfielder Brendan Curry, who got it out to Trimboli for his second goal of the game. Two possessions later, the same combination led to another score. Then came a third straight goal came from the stick of Trimboli, who finished with a career-high five goals.
When the ball came back to Army off missed shots and turnovers, Porter did what he had all game. He recorded 18 saves, eclipsing his previous career-high of 16, which came against Army in 2019. It’s the most saves from a Syracuse goalie since John Galloway 10 years ago.
“When a goalie is playing like that, it makes players on the offensive team think about their shots,” Desko said.
Tied at 5 late in the third quarter, Army scored twice, one to end the third and one to start the fourth. Alberici described his team’s possessions in the second half as “sparse.”
Down 7-5, Syracuse went back to Desko’s halftime switches. Tucker Dordevic maneuvered space off a question mark dodge behind the net and ripped the ball top shelf. Less than a minute later, David Lipka scored an almost identical goal that hit nylon up high, tying the score at 7.
The midfielders wouldn’t stop. Trimboli sliced through the middle for his fifth of the day, giving Syracuse the lead at 8-7 with 5:46 remaining. Curry then made it four unanswered goals, putting Syracuse ahead 9-7 with 4:55 to play. Similar to Syracuse in the first half, Army’s offense was flat in the final 30 minutes.
“In the second half, we realized they weren’t going to come to us,” Trimboli said. “It was up to us to beat our guy one-on-one."
Syracuse isn’t new to game-saving fourth quarter explosions like Sunday’s, which featured 18 Orange shots in the period. Sunday might provide a blueprint for the Orange, showing Desko and his team that they can not only improve on the fly, but also that they don’t just need their attack to do all the scoring.
“Fortunately, we came out and had those goals early in the third quarter,” Desko said. “I think they all starting believing again.”