ARMY VS. (5) PENN STATE
Date: Sunday, May 21
Time: 12 p.m. EDT
Venue: Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium
City: Annapolis, Md.
Tickets: Buy Here
TV: ESPNU
Stream: Watch ESPN
HOW THEY GOT HERE
Army (13-3, 8-2 Patriot League)
Ever the model of consistency, the Black Knights shrugged off the graduation of all-time leading scorer Brendan Nichtern and the transfer (to Ohio State) of All-American defenseman Marcus Hudgins to put together a quietly superb season. They sure got everyone’s attention last Saturday, knocking out fourth-seeded Maryland 16-15 in a first-round nightcap in College Park.
Co-captain Jacob Morin coined the phrase, “Keep the change,” after Patriot League coaches picked Army to finish fourth in the conference.
“It’s just that mentality that we’re underdogs,” Morin said, according to the team’s website. “We take that personal.”
“Even after some of our big wins this year, keep the change,” co-captain Andrew Kelly added. “Whatever the media wants to say let them say it. We know what we have in this room and in this family. We just need to focus on us and keep it rolling.”
The Black Knights have been strong up the middle, getting excellent returns from goalie Knox Dent (53.9 percent, 9.47 goals against average) and faceoff specialist Will Coletti (61 percent), the latter of whom successfully kept Luke Wierman from tilting the field.
Offensively, the Black Knights are getting contributions from a host of players, including five with at least 20 goals.
All-American AJ Pilate anchors the typically disciplined Army defense.
“Keep the change, we don’t want to hear it,” Dent said. “You didn’t believe in us at the beginning. So don’t believe in us now.”
Army, which won eight national championships in the pre-NCAA era, has not been to the final four since 1984.
(5) Penn State (10-4, 4-1 Big Ten)
It was easy to overlook Penn State coming into the season. Between the pandemic cutting short the Nittany Lions’ encore to their 2019 breakthrough and injuries contributing to a combined 7-18 record over the 2021 and 2022 seasons, Jeff Tambroni’s program wasn’t in the spotlight entering this year.
But then Penn State beat Yale. And Penn. And Cornell. And as if mastery of the Ivy League wasn’t enough, the Nittany Lions also claimed back-to-back victories over Ohio State and Johns Hopkins early in Big Ten play.
There is no ignoring Penn State anymore. Yes, largely staying healthy has helped. But the Nittany Lions have also re-established a slick offensive identity featuring graduate student TJ Malone (29 goals, 32 assists) as a do-it-all attackman and brothers Jack and Matt Traynor both figuring to finish with 30-pljus goals.
Another helpful development: Binghamton transfer Kevin Winkoff found his rhythm around the start of Big Ten play. The midfielder delivered one of the team’s biggest moments of the season, a step-down winner against Hopkins in overtime.
With sophomore Jack Fracyon emerging as arguably the best goalie in the Big Ten and surrounded by an improved defense, the Nittany Lions have answers at both ends of the field. And they’re tested after facing six teams that reached last year’s NCAA tournament in the regular season.
This Penn State team isn’t the No. 1 seed that entered the postseason with a mammoth target like its 2019 iteration that fell to Yale in its first final four. But it is just as much a threat as that team to reach Philadelphia and add another accomplishment to this year’s revival.
SERIES HISTORY
Army leads the all-time series 29-3 but Penn State has won the last two matchups, with the most recent one coming in 1999.
WHAT TO WATCH FOR
A low-scoring affair, probably. The sportsbooks have it as the lowest total on the slate, likely a reflection of expected excellent goalie play. Dent was the Patriot League Goalie of the Year. Fracyon was the Big Ten Specialist of the Year.
THE LATEST LINES
Penn State is a two-point favorite on DraftKings and a 2.5-point favorite on FanDuel, with a total of 24.5 on both sites.
THE ROAD AHEAD
The winner plays either Michigan or top-seeded Duke in the NCAA semifinals May 27 at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia.