The Seawolves answered the bell after Kristin O’Neill made it 5-3 with 3:30 left before halftime. And they didn’t waste time doing so.
“We can’t panic. You can’t get in your own head,” said Hart, who had three goals on seven shots. “That’s when the wheels start turning and you lose control of the game. I think we have very good composure on this team.”
Masera (three goals, one assist) won the draw following O’Neill’s goal, chasing it down to Stony Brook’s restraining line. She turned on the jets. Masera didn’t break stride for 50-plus yards, and she didn’t need to dump the ball off to a teammate. She bobbed, weaved, shot and celebrated, getting Stony Brook within one at 5-4.
That ignited Stony Brook’s next three-goal run, with goals from Morgan Mitchell (assisted by Jolie Creo) and Jaden Hampel (assisted by Masera) putting Stony Brook up 6-5 at halftime.
Faceguarded for much of the game by Penn State’s Ellie Hollin, Masera was constantly in motion trying to shake her shadow. Coming off the draw is one way to get the ball, keep the ball and bury the ball past the goalie.
“She’s going to wear you out,” Spallina said. “The nice thing about Ellie is that she’s going to score in different ways. She scored that one in transition. She scored one dodging from X. She scored one dodging off the elbow. You’ve got to be a chameleon when you’ve got a bullseye on you.”
Meghan Murray opened the scoring in the second half, knotting the score at 6 for Penn State. Hampel then scored the go-ahead goal, and Stony Brook wouldn’t cough up the lead again. Penn State threatened, nearly tying the score at 8 on a free-position shot by Murray, but she was called for a crease violation to keep the Seawolves ahead 8-7.
They promptly scored 25 seconds later when Hart unleashed a free-position goal of her own. That began the 4-0 run that ultimately sealed the win for Stony Brook, which is 0-2 all-time against second-round opponent Loyola. But those games came in 2009 and 2010 — Jen Adams’ first two years as coach of the Greyhounds and several years before Spallina was hired at Stony Brook.
“They’re a great team,” Spallina said of Loyola. “I’m not sure they’ve played a lot of zones similar to ours. We played them in the fall, but that was a long time ago.”
That fall scrimmage? It was on the road, of course.
“We’ve had a lot of long trips, too. California, Northwestern, Syracuse to Elon — a lot of lengthy trips,” Hart said. “We’re in a hotel room together, and it’s not much room, not much to do. It makes us get closer.”