The Irish closed within 11-10 when Chris Kavanagh took a crisp pinpoint pass on the crease from Eric Dobson (four goals, one assist) just 14 seconds after a timeout. Will Lynch — who was 13 of 22 on faceoffs against Virginia fifth-year Petey LaSalla — won the next faceoff, and Dobson chugged through three defenders before beating Nunes for the tying goal with 2:07 remaining.
Virginia wasn’t finished. For much of the day, it seemed Shellenberger would carry the Cavaliers much as he did in the final four two years ago. This time, he set up behind the cage and found midfielder Thomas McConvey to put Virginia up 12-11 with 52.5 seconds left.
Ten seconds later, Notre Dame called timeout after another Lynch faceoff win. Ten seconds after that, it was Jake Taylor celebrating after canning an open 10-yard shot off a Tevlin feed to tie it again.
“When two of the best teams in the country are competing at a high level, you can’t ever take your foot off the gas,” Nunes said. “They kept their foot on the gas, and if that was 10 seconds or 60 seconds into a possession, you always felt their pressure.”
Lynch came up huge once more to start overtime, and then Tevlin — a man with Final Four experience at Yale before choosing to spend a graduate season at Notre Dame — did as well. He figured he would look to Dobson when he took the ball off the restart, but his fellow midfielder was shut off.
Instead, that helped open a lane for him to get inside of Virginia’s Grayson Sallade and secure a clear look a couple yards from the crease for the winner.
“We preach dodging to the cage,” Tevlin said. “You don’t create offense if you’re dodging looking to pass. You create offense if you’re dodging for your own and then making a read off of that. We have a lot of trust in our guys, and we have a lot of trust in a lot of different guys.”
It closed out a riveting day that featured the first pair of semifinals to result in one-goal games since 2017, and it left this year’s tournament with two teams that were left smarting from unexpected postseason exclusions a year ago.
On this afternoon, Duke played from ahead nearly all day, then won on the only shot in overtime. Notre Dame never led by more than one and trailed for much of the fourth quarter, only to generate a late flurry.
Like the Blue Devils, they took the only shot of overtime to earn one last game.
“The second half, honestly, it’s kind of a dream still,” Dobson said. “I think I’m going to watch it and figure out a lot things I didn’t know actually happened.”
What he does know is Notre Dame will play on the final day of the season. That’s no secret, just like the Irish’s aims all season.