ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Nothing — not a pending downpour and most certainly not Navy — was going to stop Army from singing second Saturday.
The Black Knights smothered their academy rivals 11-6 before 7,014 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, earning their first victory in the series since 2019 and clinching at least a share of the Patriot League regular season title.
Reese Burek had four goals and one assist, AJ Pilate caused three turnovers and Knox Dent stopped 10 shots for Army (10-2, 7-0 Patriot), which has remained a postseason contender even after a significant graduation hit after last season that included Tewaaraton Award finalist Brendan Nichtern.
“It’s definitely special, especially getting it here at their place,” Burek said. “Coming off last year’s overtime loss, it definitely hurt. My heart was out for that senior class, and we knew we had a job to finish here.”
Xavier Arline scored twice for the Midshipmen (7-7, 4-3), whose four-game winning streak ended. Navy had won six of the last seven regular-season games between the teams.
It didn’t take long for it to become clear this game would be different.
Army opened the game, which was moved up six hours because of a dour forecast, with three goals in a little more than four minutes. And while Navy got one back in the middle of the quarter on Dane Swanson’s score late in the shot clock, this hardly felt like a typical Army-Navy game.
Usually, the first five minutes or so are a complete free-for-all, a borderline melee that Army coach Joe Alberici half-jokingly described as “catching the ball is optional and swinging your stick isn’t.” There was none of that from the Black Knights, who played composed throughout.
“We wanted to not make the game bigger than it was,” Dent said. “Coach and the captains just focused on the process and the little things that are going to take us to success. And obviously we tried showcasing that today, staying composed and relying on our fundamentals. Every Army-Navy game is going to be hectic.”
Except this one really wasn’t, in part because Navy sputtered to find answers. The Mids trailed 9-2 at halftime, and even though they had only six turnovers before the break, their offense was largely overwhelmed by a physical Army defense led by Pilate, who didn’t just strip the ball from Navy but also his opponents’ sticks more than once.
The tone wasn’t any different when Army had the ball. The Black Knights shot 37.5 percent in the first 30 minutes, carving up a Mids defense that seemed a step slow when the game was still close.
“It was like there was no juice to the game,” Navy coach Joe Amplo said. “I just thought they out-executed us. There was just something missing today. They played better lacrosse than we did. I didn’t feel this overwhelming sense of intensity from the event, and that’s on us, because we needed to bring that to the game field early on.”