ALBANY, N.Y. — Top-seeded Duke endured a harrowing first-round experience in the NCAA tournament.
That one-goal defeat of Delaware was more of an ordeal than a triumph, but it paid off a week later in Saturday’s quarterfinals.
Duke never trailed, as Brennan O’Neill scored six goals in a 15-8 defeat of unseeded Michigan before 4,224 at Casey Stadium, booking passage to the program’s fourth appearance on Memorial Day Weekend since 2018 and its 14th overall.
“We had young guys who had never played [in the tournament] before, sophomores who had never been in a playoff game,” O’Neill said. “I think we were very tense last week. Guys were even saying in the locker room, after you get one under your belt, you feel good and now you know what to expect. … I think there was a little more calm.”
The Blue Devils (15-2), who tied Cornell and North Carolina for the fifth most semifinal appearances, will face either fifth-seeded Penn State (10-4) or unseeded Army (13-3) next Saturday at Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field.
Josh Zawada had two goals and an assist for the Wolverines (10-7), who were making their first NCAA tournament appearance in their 12th season as a varsity program. Michigan was 5-6 in mid-April before ripping off five victories in a row, a stretch that included a Big Ten tournament title and a first-round upset of eighth-seeded Cornell.
Jacob Jackson and Peter Thompson also scored twice for the Wolverines.
“What Team 12 did for Michigan lacrosse far exceeds 15-to-8,” Michigan coach Kevin Conry said. “That’s really what we have to take away from this. We’ve set a new standard in Ann Arbor for men’s lacrosse, and I couldn’t be prouder. Sure, we’d like to win this game, but ultimately, this is a huge step in the right direction for what we’re doing.”
The Wolverines averaged 15.8 goals during their winning streak but summoned few answers against goalie William Helm (14 saves) and the Blue Devil defense. Some of that was on Michigan; it committed 18 turnovers and never seemed to get fully comfortable.
But it was also a stellar day for a Duke defense that started off with the benefit of relatively even possession thanks to faceoff man Jake Naso’s work against Michigan’s tandem of Justin Wietfeldt and Nick Rowlett. Naso was 14 of 27, plenty good enough to avoid the imbalance many of the Wolverines’ recent opponents experienced.