NETANYA, Israel — Ryan Brown poured in 25 goals, the second most ever for a United States player in a Federation of International Lacrosse Men's World Championship. In the championship game, he had a hat trick, including the game-tying goal with less than three minutes to play.
Tom Schreiber, the two-time reigning Major League Lacrosse Most Valuable Player, scored 21 points (13 goals and eight assists) and came up huge when it mattered most. He had a hat trick in the championship game, including the gold-medal winning goal with just one second remaining in the contest.
They sound like pretty strong tournament most valuable player candidates, right?
Maybe, but both of them gave the wholehearted support to Michael Ehrhardt, the longstick midfielder who became the first defender to earn MVP honors since Hall of Famer Dave Pietramala in 1990.
"He one-hundred percent deserves it," Brown said. "He was our best player, our most valuable player."
"By a mile…or a kilometer. I don’t think it was close," Schreiber said. "Mike Ehrhardt covered me in high school and was always a very tough matchup. How much he’s elevated his game in the last year, and then elevated it again in this tournament, with all the pressure and in the biggest game of our careers, Mike excelled."
A former first team All-American at Maryland, Ehrhardt, a member of the Charlotte Hounds, is the leading scorer among defensive players in the MLL, but that wasn't his role on this team, even though he did have a pair of goals in the semifinal win over Australia.
He was a lock down defensive player, helping the U.S. allow just 5.3 goals per game in its seven victories, and he was a huge factor playing off the wing on faceoffs. Ehrhardt was second on the U.S. team with 26 ground balls, trailing only Greg Gurenlian's 27, and helped the U.S. lead the tournament with a 69 percent winning percentage on faceoffs.