Make no mistake, it’s an important week for Penn. It visits Villanova on Saturday in a renewal of a local rivalry.
It just isn’t quite as hectic as what the Quakers experienced the week before.
Penn (3-2) is coming off a split in the Research Triangle, beating Duke 14-12 on Friday and falling 13-9 two days later at North Carolina. And that was the tail end of a five-games-in-16-days stretch to open the season.
“It’s a noticeable difference having one game in a week instead of two,” Penn coach Mike Murphy said. “It’s a little shorter prep from Sunday to Saturday, but still much better than what we’ve been doing.”
The benefit of an early burst of games — especially for an Ivy League program not permitted to play until mid-February — is quickly getting a grasp on a team’s strengths and weaknesses. And for Penn, which annually faces a daunting non-conference schedule, the lessons come especially fast.
The Quakers lost their opener to a desperate Georgetown team, then handled Albany and edged Delaware at home before their trip south. Once there, Penn frustrated Duke on a rainy night, as defenseman Brendan Lavelle did fine work as the primary cover guy on reigning Tewaaraton Award winner Brennan O’Neill, who had a goal on eight shots.
Murphy called it “one of the better defensive performances that we’ve had in my 15 years here at Penn” and was quick to credit the rest of the unit and goalie Emmet Carroll for their part as well. He also pointed out Duke still got 12 goals, as other able players capitalized on the attention allocated to O’Neill.
Nonetheless, Penn is holding opponents to 25 percent, with Carroll posting a .575 save percentage.
“I would say our defense has been consistent and our goalie has been very good,” Murphy said. “Hopefully we can continue that. It’s a pretty low number, 25 percent. I wouldn’t count on doing that every game, but for right now, it’s nice and we’ll take it.”
The victory over Duke also made it abundantly clear just how valuable junior attackman Tynan Walsh will be. The San Diego product had 11 goals and 13 assists while making nine starts last season and has already posted four multi-goal games this season.
Walsh shares the Penn lead in goals (10) with Ben Smith and has the outright lead in assists (nine).
“He’s not an overpowering dodger who just picks the ball up off the end line and runs by his guy,” Murphy said. “He’s a point guard and plays within the flow of the offense. Very, very situationally aware. For us to score 14, he had [four] points in that. He has a lot to do with the productivity but also the play. He’s a quarterback, point guard, leader of the offense, very vocal. When we’re playing well, Tynan’s playing well, and when Tynan plays well, our offense is usually clicking.”
The victory over Duke also provided some encouragement on faceoffs, where Chris Arceri won 10 of 17 against Blue Devils star Jake Naso. But the trip also delivered some less enjoyable lessons about dealing with a quick turnaround it hopes it can apply in another Friday-Sunday setup: May’s Ivy League tournament.
“That’s what happens when you play a good schedule,” Murphy said. “You’re going to play teams and you’re going to lose games, and you have to respond and grow from that. Hopefully, that’s what we’re doing this week, and we learn some things and play better against Villanova than we did against North Carolina.”