Heading into Sunday’s final, Gaudet was hardly a peripheral player for the Bulldogs. He was Yale’s fourth-leading scorer, one who registered at least a hat trick in five prior games.
But finishing the weekend with 10 goals, and being named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Players? Gaudet didn’t quite dream that up, and Shay wasn’t sure it’d come earlier in the week.
“Matt, he’s had an up-and-down year,” Shay said. “He’s been challenged, and he got challenged before we left for Foxborough. Right before we got on the bus, we had a spicy moment in practice where I told him we needed more out of him. He responded, so I’m really proud of him.”
Gaudet, however, was quick to credit his teammates, especially Reeves. There’s perhaps no better teacher in the Ivy League, as Reeves’ career ends with 316 points. In practices, in games, in the weight room, he watched the three-time Tewaaraton Award finalist go to work.
So when Duke put its top close-range defenseman, JT Giles-Harris, on Reeves, that opened up a window of opportunity. Gaudet seized it.
“I think from day one, Ben really showed me what it’s like to be a Yale lacrosse player,” Gaudet said. “I used to really believe that lacrosse was just a talent-based game, and Ben showed me the way and showed me it’s all about fundamentals. It’s all about working hard. I can’t even express how much I’m going to miss him next year.”
On a team that featured five All-Americans and 12 All-Ivy League members in 2018, Gaudet never appeared on any postseason award list. But the signs have always been there.
His 32 goals as a freshman set a new record for a Yale rookie, and he was put on the Ivy League All-Tournament team as a sophomore. Plus, he was a three-year standout at New England prep school Salisbury and won Canadian national gold medals for Team Ontario in box and field lacrosse.
It was just a matter of time until Gaudet seized his moment, this one on college lacrosse’s biggest stage. That all left his teammates wondering what could come next in his Yale career.
“He has a really great style that gets everyone going and everyone feeling up about themselves,” said junior midfielder Jack Tigh, who had a hat trick against Duke. “Coach was telling him all week to stay up, stay positive and keep shooting the ball. Every time it touched his stick this weekend, I feel like it went in. He did a great job.”