PHILADELPHIA — It was certainly the shot Yale wanted, and it was most definitely by the player Yale wanted.
Leo Johnson passed from the endline, hitting Matt Brandau on his right side. It was a good angle in front of Penn goalie Emmet Carroll. Brandau ripped it high, but Penn’s first-year starter moved quickly, punching the ball up in the air and well out of harm’s way.
It was a fitting finish to a back-and-forth, up-and-down track meet — fitting for historic Franklin Field, home of the Penn Relays — as Penn outlasted the Bulldogs 17-16 in front of 1,327. Carroll made 12 saves, and Penn scored the final three goals in the last 3:33 to come back and win.
“They do a really good job of setting picks on the crease and curling into them to get their best guys shots,” Carroll said. “They got Matt Brandau a good shot … and it worked out.”
Brendan Lavelle, Carroll’s teammate since childhood, kept Brandau off balance for much of the game. Yale’s star still managed three goals, but he had to work for it on 11 shots. Instead it was Johnson who led the Bulldogs with four goals and two assists.
Johnson put the ball in an optimal place for Brandau to shoot it on that final play. Lavelle dived in an attempt to block the shot, and BJ Farrare also got his body in the way. But Carroll said he still saw it all the way. Lavelle never doubted his fellow Rye, N.Y., native for a second.
“He’s a beast,” Lavelle said. “I knew he was going to be everything that he’s talked up to be. We’ve played together since we were 3 or 4, and he’s just an animal. He’s done that to offenses forever, as long as I can remember. He just takes the will out of the shooters, which is awesome. It’s pretty crazy to see.”
Penn (4-4, 2-1 Ivy) entered struggling on the offensive end. The Quakers showed signs of life last weekend in an 18-12 loss to Cornell, but ever since Dylan Gergar went down on March 8 with a season-ending injury, Penn had been searching for answers.
A suddenly defensively challenged team in Yale, which was coming off a 20-10 loss to Cornell and a 23-10 loss to Princeton, helped unlock some latent potential.
Tynan Walsh, thrust into a starting role after Gergar’s injury, had yet to capitalize on his new role. In his first two starts, he took just two shots and produced one assist. In his last two starts, he has six goals, including a pivotal four against Yale. He kickstarted the scoring for Penn, which jumped out to a 4-0 lead after Walsh finished a feed from Ben Smith with 7:422 left in the first quarter.
“He’s one of the best players I’ve ever played with,” Walsh said of Gergar. “It’s really tough to have him not on the field. Someone has to step up and play, and I think today we showed that we can play.”