While Tambroni guided the Lions to the NCAA tournament in 2013, the program has never won a national postseason tournament game in its 104 seasons of existence. But this year could be different.
“The first few weeks, we saw how everybody played together and we really noticed that we could do something special this year,” said freshman attackman Mac O’Keefe, noting also that the nice start felt great, but “it doesn’t really mean anything until the end.”
O’Keefe, the rare Long Islander with a box lacrosse background, led the NCAA in scoring through Penn State’s first four games, with 24 goals, and now sits second in the nation with 3.78 goals per game. The 6-foot, 180-pound lefty, whose father, Brian, played for the NLL’s New York Saints, showed the same scoring prowess he displayed with the U.S. under-19 team over the summer in Canada. O’Keefe scored eight goals in a 17-12 win over Villanova, his fourth career college game.
Classmate Gerard Arceri (68.8 faceoff win percentage), has given the Nittany Lions stability at his position that they didn’t have last season, when it won just 47 percent as a team. That shortcoming contributed to three straight one-goal losses last April, to Maryland, Johns Hopkins and Rutgers (the first two in overtime). Flip two of those results, and Penn State would have had 10 victories and a strong NCAA tournament case, instead of an 8-7 record.
“Until you don’t have the ball a lot, you don’t really realize how much possession does matter, and I think we realized that last year,” said sophomore attackman Grant Ament, the Lions’ leading scorer in 2016 with 54 points. He leads the team with 39 points.