“It was like we were piece-mealing games against these really, really good teams, and it’s just a great learning lesson that you can’t do that,” Stimmel said. “You have to play a full 60 minutes against elite programs. As much as it didn’t look like we were playing our best, we still were taking a lot of good stuff from those games and teaching these young guys that it’s got to be an ability to stop runs and keep yourself in those contests against those great teams.”
Cowan, who has a team-high 25 goals to go with eight assists, has emerged as a long-term centerpiece. But the defense has improved considerably since the early stages of the season. Redshirt-freshman Sean Richard tied a program with 18 saves Saturday, and redshirt-freshman Mason Woodward is an emerging talent at close defense who has collected 47 ground balls, the most of any non-faceoff man in the Big East.
“Our defense played a heck of a game,” Stimmel said. “They’re a group that’s really come along nicely these last handful of games. They deserve a ton of credit. … They were the reason we were in that position.”
Marquette closes the regular season at Villanova on Saturday and at St. John’s in another makeup game April 30. The Golden Eagles needed just one overtime to beat St. John’s 9-8 last week, and played Villanova tight earlier this season in Milwaukee.
Those close games have been typical throughout Marquette’s history as a program, and Stimmel joked this week he might need to rethink leaning on one of his favorite scrimmage plans in practice: Starting with a faceoff and declaring the team that scores first the winner. It’s something the Golden Eagles now have some experience with in games, too.
“I had to remind the guys after the game that it’s OK to win by more than one goal,” Stimmel said. “Maybe it’s my fault doing that pretty consistently in practice. I feel like I’ve been apologizing to everybody for the heart attacks we’ve provided people over the last couple games, but a win’s a win and we will absolutely take it.”
NUMBERS OF NOTE
3
Manhattan defeated Siena 13-12 on Saturday in its third double-overtime game in four weeks. The Jaspers, who earlier edged Monmouth in two overtimes and fell at Quinnipiac in two extra periods, are the first Division I team to play three double-overtime games in a season since 2012. Bryant, Hofstra and Yale each played three games that went at least two overtimes that year.
36
Maryland goalie Logan McNaney’s goal in Sunday’s 18-8 rout of Ohio State is believed to be the first by a Terrapin netminder in 36 years. Jim Beardmore charged downfield and scored on May 4, 1985, against UMBC, which the school believes was the last goal by a goalie prior to McNaney’s 60-yard bouncer to beat the Buckeyes’ 10-man ride.
72
Both midfielder Dox Aitken and long pole Jared Connors have played in 72 career games, a Virginia record. Both Aitken and Connors passed Bray Malphrus (2008-11) for the most in Cavalier history during Saturday’s 18-11 defeat of Utah.
116
Lehigh coach Kevin Cassese earned his 116th victory on Sunday, setting the program record. The 14-11 defeat of Lafayette sent Cassese past John McCloskey for sole possession of first place on the Mountain Hawks’ all-time wins list.