The Nittany Lions had already become the first team to make the semifinals a year after losing 11 games, a turnaround from 3-11 that just edged 2001 Towson reaching the final weekend after going 3-10 a season earlier. And unlike four years ago, Penn State was never frazzled by the sport’s biggest stage or a faceoff disparity.
“At one point, I just turned to someone and said, ‘This is going to be a 60-minute bar fight,’ and it felt that way,” Danowski said. “It just felt like they were going to take a punch, we were going to take a punch, we were going to have to absorb a couple.”
While Duke flirted with opening things up when it took leads of 7-4 and 9-6, the Nittany Lions never let the Blue Devils get away. And despite some first-half turnovers, Malone doggedly kept the Penn State offense plugging away. His fifth goal pulled the Nittany Lions within 13-12 late in the third quarter.
“We were exactly where we wanted to be,” Malone said. “We knew if we were close in that fourth quarter, they were going to start feeling the pressure, and that’s exactly where we wanted to be, and that’s where we play our best. We just couldn’t get over that edge.”
Yet Duke repeatedly summoned answers on offense from unconventional places. When Jake Morin finally knotted it at 13 with 9:35 to go off a Morin feed, Jadon Kerry delivered his first goal since February 17 less than a minute later. Winkoff’s goal with 6:26 remaining was answered 14 seconds later by Jake Naso, who had two goals and an assist to go with a 22-for-34 outing on faceoffs.
Malone scored the last goal of regulation with 5:07 to go, a finish that was part of Penn State’s brilliant 51.7-percent shooting day.
“I don’t know if it was our best game defensively or if Penn State just played lights out,” Danowski said.
Truth was, it was both a stellar day for the Nittany Lions’ offense and a rocky one for the Blue Devils’ defense. But Duke got the stop it needed most when it denied a shot on a 30-second man-down after Jake Caputo’s pushing penalty with 1:31 remaining. Penn State eventually committed a shot clock violation, handing it over to Duke for a possession that ended with Leadmon shooting wide of the cage as time expired.
Duke won the faceoff to open overtime, and the Blue Devils were content to run their offense rather than call timeout. Leadmon eventually took the ball around the cage, cut sharply to roll inside of short stick Grant Haus and wrapped a shot around Fracyon in what figures to be one of the most replayed goals of the season.
“I can’t imagine the hurt they’re feeling right now relative to our exhilaration,” Danowski said.
It was enough for Penn State to linger on the field a little longer than usual after a semifinal loss — probably a bit dazed, probably a bit angry, probably a bit unbelieving its turnaround season ended so abruptly.
And that maybe sometime down the road, that play would bring on a video review.
In 2023, it’s very clear. The rules don’t permit it.
“It was really tough to see how that ended,” Malone said, “but that’s how it happened.”