But Drexel had momentum early in the third quarter, netting two of the first three goals and going ahead 5-3 when Marano found Bridget Finley in front at 9:41 of the third quarter.
Even still, the Seawolves remained unrattled, buoyed by a battle-tested schedule that previously included a loss to Johns Hopkins in which Madison Doucette made 14 saves.
“Those are scars,” Spallina said. “We generally go as my mood goes, so I have to stay as even-keeled as possible, even though maybe it’s not always that way. We’ve been in every situation. That’s the mark of a good team.”
And then Stony Brook turned it on, showing just how good it can be.
It started when Masera bounced a free position shot by Cuocco at 6:45 to bring the Seawolves within 5-4.
“[In the first half], I was seeing [Cuocco] instead of the net,” Masera said. “That was an adjustment we had to make at halftime. ‘We’ve got to see the net. We can’t see just her, so I think that was huge for us in letting them fall.”
Cuocco remained poised, turning back an Alex Finn shot at 6:40. But Jaden Hampel scooped the ground ball, and Kailyn Hart split the defense and scored from the top of the crease to even the score at 5-all.
Stony Brook won the ensuing draw, but Cuocco stuffed Verhulst. Yet it was a save by SBU’s Aaliyah Jones on a Bednarik shot at 4:51 that gave the Seawolves a second chance at taking the lead — and they took it. Morgan Mitchell dodged twice and found Verhulst, who this time got past Cuocco to go in front for the first time, 6-5, with 3:23 left in the third quarter.
The Seawolves extended the lead to two when Hampel hit Masera for a goal 34 seconds into the fourth quarter. Verhulst corralled her seventh draw of the afternoon and Stony Brook quickly capitalized when Erin MacQuarrie scored with 13:24 to play, widening the gap to 8-5.
Stony Brook again won the draw — this time Levy doing the honors — eventually leading to a Mitchell free position that capped a 6-0 run to put the Seawolves up 9-5 with 11:58 left. The Seawolves won 7 of 11 second-half draws.
“If you don’t have the ball, you can’t score,” Drexel head coach Kate O’Donnell said.“If you can’t score, you can’t win. It was a problem in our first game. We tried to make some adjustments. I think we had it more of a 3-v-3 game than we did a couple of weeks ago, but it’s something we have to continue to clean up. Their draw unit is arguably some of the best parts of the team.”
The Dragons did score when Allison Drake buried a shot from the 8-meter at 9:05, the Dragons’ first since 9:41 of the third quarter and the last for either team. The Seawolves went two players down on the next possession, with Masera and Mitchell receiving green cards. But a Drake shot went wide at 8:12, and Verhulst stripped Bea Buckley with 7:45 to play.
In the 12 seasons since Spallina’s first with Stony Brook in 2012, the Seawolves have not won a conference tournament crown in only the most extreme circumstances — Spallina’s first year in 2012 (a loss to Albany in the America East final); the 2020 pandemic season when there was no postseason; and 2022 when the Seawolves were ineligible for the America East tournament pending their move to the CAA.
“We don’t really talk about winning the conference, and that’s not a knock on the conference,” Spallina said. “For me, I want the bar as high as possible. Our goal is to win a national championship. Our goal is to get to the Final Four. Charlotte and the rest of the fifth years came back because they wanted to chase a dream. It’s the same for me.”
The Final Four has long been a dream but one Stony Brook has fallen short of in each of its previous trips to the NCAA tournament. A national seed is far from guaranteed with losses to Denver and Johns Hopkins earlier in the season and an RPI outside of the top 10, but in a season in which no team has been unbeatable, Stony Brook has seen everything and feels up for anything.
“If you look back at our [2018] team that was undefeated through the whole year, and we lost in Boston College [in overtime in the quarterfinals], I don’t think that team was ever in any of those,” Spallina said. “It was kind of smooth sailing most of the year, but I think these guys are battle tested.”
Stony Brook will learn its opponent for the NCAA tournament in the Selection Show Sunday at 9 p.m. on ESPN2. Despite the loss, Drexel isn’t out, either. The Dragons have a shot at an at-large bid with wins over Navy and Penn State.
“I love our resume, from our wins to the quality of our losses, too,” O’Donnell said. “That’s something people don’t always want to talk about, the quality of losses. They’re to ranked opponents. We held Stony Brook to under 10 goals today. That is also making a case for ourselves. That’s a credit to the 32 individuals who put on a jersey today for making a case for ourselves every day.”