FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The season-long search for the best team in Division I has bounded from candidate to candidate since early February, never settling for long on a single program.
Maybe it’s appropriate, then, the season’s two most consistent teams find themselves as the last ones standing entering Monday’s national title game.
Third-seeded Yale suffered two of its three losses in overtime. Fourth-seeded Duke has led in the fourth quarter in each of its three setbacks.
In a year devoid of dominance, reliability is the next best option — and no one’s been more reliable than the Bulldogs and Blue Devils.
That’s the start of the similarities between a pair of programs without much common history. Monday marks the first meeting between the teams since 2009 and their first postseason encounter ever.
“We’re very similar in how we approach our coaching styles in terms of trying to be fundamental and trying to be process-oriented and worry about ourselves,” Yale coach Andy Shay said. “On the field it looks like they’re an extremely, extremely athletic team. I’d like to think we’re pretty athletic, but they look pretty impressive on film, so that’s a little scary.”
Indeed, the title game is unlikely to be decided by finesse. Throughout Shay’s 15-year run in New Haven, he’s constructed the Bulldogs (16-3) into a program defined by its physicality. It’s helped Yale evolve from an Ivy League afterthought to a postseason regular, even if this is the program’s first trip to the title game.
It’s personified by three-time Tewaaraton finalist Ben Reeves, a 6-foot-2 attackman who has piled up 61 goals and 50 assists in his senior year and owns Yale’s career records for goals and assists.
This year’s Tewaaraton could very well be decided Monday, as Reeves and the Bulldogs look to get the better of Duke (16-3) and senior attackman Justin Guterding, the Blue Devils’ career goals leader who sits just five points behind current assistant Matt Danowski on Duke’s all-time points list. He added to his NCAA-record goal total on Saturday, moving him to 210 for his career.
“Ben is an incredible player,” Guterding said. “He’s incredibly athletic. I certainly think he’s the best attackman in the country. He’s just big, he’s strong and he’s fast. He can play with both hands. He’s certainly something special.”