If accountability and love carried the Irish to Memorial Day, trust got them over the top. Namely on defense, where they were slow to slide and content to let NCAA championship MVP Liam Entenmann gobble up low-percentage shots.
Except for the 12-minute stretch in the third quarter during which Duke rallied from a 6-1 deficit to tie the game at 7, Notre Dame’s defense proved impenetrable.
For the second time this season, second-team All-American defenseman Chris Fake neutralized Tewaaraton Award finalist and USILA Player of the Year Brennan O’Neill. The hulking lefty managed just one man-up goal on 1-for-9 shooting against Fake, who gave O’Neill very little runway with the ball in his stick.
“He showed up on the biggest stage in the biggest game of our lives and held an unbelievable player to a relatively quiet game,” Entenmann said.
Fake had similar success guarding O’Neill during the teams’ regular-season matchup, a 17-12 Irish win April 8 in South Bend. O’Neill’s only goal in that game also came on an extra-man opportunity. He had five turnovers that day, two caused by Fake. In two games against Notre Dame he shot a combined 2-for-14 with seven turnovers.
Both Entenmann and midfielder Brian Tevlin, who transferred with Fake from Yale as graduate students and roommates, said they thought Fake should have been a first-team All-American. He earned second-team honors from USA Lacrosse and the USILA and a third-team nod from Inside Lacrosse.
“He doesn’t get the respect I think he deserves,” said Tevlin, who scored the overtime winner to beat Virginia in the semifinals and had the go-ahead goal late in the third quarter after Duke had rallied to tie the game 34 seconds earlier. “He’s as focused and dedicated to his craft as you could be.”
Fake credited scout team attackman Jeremy Hopsicker for helping to prepare him for O’Neill and said Entenmann deserves just as much recognition for twice stifling one of the most dominant players in the college game.