The significance of a defenseman scoring the game-winner Sunday was not lost on the Big Red. After they had time to settle down from the euphoria of the last-second win, it settled in how perfect it was.
“Certainly, a defenseman being ready for the moment and being prepared from everything that he’s done up to that moment to finish it, certainly we had someone special looking down on us and looking out for us,” Buczek said. “Across the board — the ride and the way it finished — in so many facets, that was a George-like effort by a lot of guys on our team.”
The win put the Big Red back on track after a lopsided loss at Penn State and helped them to start the Ivy League schedule with a road win. The Big Red hosts Yale on Saturday before a trip to Penn on March 30. The narrow win at Princeton echoed that of the 12-11 overtime win at Princeton in 2004, barely a month after Boiardi’s passing. Four of Cornell’s five Ivy wins in 2004 came by a single goal.
“After the game, I was talking to a former teammate of his, and he actually sent me the video of that OT win,” Dooley said. “It says a lot about the culture and tradition surrounding George and of Cornell lacrosse. It was an awesome moment.”
One that Dooley wasn’t expecting. He estimates maybe scoring a half-dozen times in high school, but he hadn’t even taken a shot in college. But after a Princeton timeout with 33 seconds left, Cornell defensive coordinator Jordan Stevens switched to a zone. Luke Gilmartin caused a turnover on a pass that Smith, a high school teammate of Dooley’s, scooped and flipped to him.
“I knew he was picking that thing up,” Dooley said. “I knew there were 10 seconds on the clock and to get up the field. He gave me the ball, and as I was running down — we run through those drills all the time in practice — so I was waiting for the point defenseman to draw him and for him to come to me and then dish it off to Mikey (Long) on the wing. I took a glance, he wasn’t moving and then I saw open space. I was like, ‘I’ve got to take this shot.’ I went for it.”
Dooley wouldn’t have been surprised if Cornell had called timeout before he had the chance to shoot. Buczek had discussed that option in the prior timeout along with what eventually played out.
“That was an instinctive play by those guys to get up the field and push the rush, and obviously stay onsides with Dooley being a close defenseman,” Buczek said. “It was just a well-executed change of possession getting out and up and reading the situation and making the right play.”
After shooting, Dooley fell to the turf and didn’t know the shot had gone in until teammates piled on him. He made the most of a rare moment to shoot.
Dooley finished with as many goals as CJ Kirst, who was limited by the Princeton defense. Hugh Kelleher had a hat trick, and Spencer Wertheim assisted on four goals, but the team’s leading scorer Saturday was Ryan Goldstein. The freshman son of Hall of Fame Cornell attackman Tim Goldstein made his debut with three goals and two assists off the bench to help bring the Big Red back to a 14-14 tie with 5:20 left.
“He’s a great lacrosse player,” Buczek said. “He brings a lot to the table. For us, he’s been a little banged up in practice and so he’s missed a couple weeks, but really has done a great job for being a young guy of stepping in in a big moment and making the most of his opportunity.”
But in the end, it wasn’t an offensive player that won the game. Dooley, an unsung defenseman who continues to develop in his first year starting, couldn’t have picked a more appropriate time to come up with his first career goal.
“That was really the motivation for the day, to just go out there and play with George Boiardi-like effort, with energy and enthusiasm, toughness, competitiveness,” Dooley said. “We’re really input focused, so if we take care of the inputs, then we know it’s all going to work out in the end. That’s really all we can control. He was in the back of all our minds throughout the game.”