Michael Gianforcaro figured his last shot was behind him.
Not because the Princeton senior was a goalie, per se. He had scored in high school and club ball. But an errant shot in last month’s 15-5 defeat of Dartmouth — and the subsequent bailout when teammate Colin Mulshine intercepted a pass on the ensuing ride — left Gianforcaro content not to inch too far across midfield and risk earning coach Matt Madalon’s ire.
“Coach Mads was not happy with me,” Gianforcaro said this week. “After the game, my dad was like, ‘That was a great shot.’ I said, ‘Actually, no, it was not a great shot. I shot it right in his stick.’ He said, ‘You’ll take some more.’ I said, ‘No, I won’t take any more. That’s the last one I’m going to take in college. I won’t make that mistake twice.’”
Or so he thought.
Instead, Gianforcaro scored with 3:46 to go in last week’s 15-10 victory over Penn, squelching any hint of a Quaker comeback after they had closed within three just 30 seconds earlier.
Toss in 15 saves and a couple ground balls — basically, just a normal day at the office for Gianforcaro — and it was a performance that helped save the Tigers’ season.
Princeton (8-4, 3-2 Ivy) had not had a goalie score since Alex Hewit’s goal against Brown in 2008.
“It was a really special play, and it was a really tight game, too,” said Madalon, himself a goalie in his playing days at Roanoke College and Major League Lacrosse. “We’re obviously very fortunate it worked out. I didn’t cross the midline much. I think one time, my head college coach, Bill Pilat, was not thrilled with the outcome. Gio is a heck of a lot more athletic than I was, and he was moving pretty fast and he made a heck of a play.”
Difference-making plays are business as usual for Gianforcaro. Princeton didn’t play his freshman year because the Ivy League permitted only limited competition in 2021, and he then logged less than 19 minutes as a sophomore.
He emerged as a full-time starter a month into his junior year after operating in a timeshare as the Tigers navigated non-conference play and had nearly twice as many saves (32) as goals allowed (17) in Princeton’s Ivy League tournament run.
That earned him MVP honors of the tournament and got the Tigers into their second consecutive NCAA tournament. And after finishing second nationally in save percentage in 2023, his .565 mark this year ranks eighth in Division I entering Princeton’s visit to Yale (11-2, 4-1).