BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Shooters shoot. Even if they aren’t falling, a shooter can only get back into a rhythm by staying the course and taking what’s given.
Justin Guterding had been going through the motions of a rare shooting slump at The World Games. In three Group A contests, Guterding tallied four goals on 21 shots — an unsightly mark of 19 percent.
The best way to shake off a case of the yips is to keep going. Guterding didn’t shy away from firing when given time and room, and his persistence paid off Monday. The Duke alum scored four goals on five shots in a 17-12 win over Japan in a men’s Sixes semifinal at PNC Field, doubling his tournament goals total and raising that shooting percentage in the process.
The U.S. men play Canada for the gold medal on Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. Central. Canada advanced by dispatching Great Britain 22-11.
“I’ve been struggling a little bit in the shooting department, but I’ve been getting the looks, which is something that’s a little more frustrating,” Guterding said. “Most of those looks that I get and have gotten in the past, I’ve buried.”
Guterding opened the scoring for the U.S., and Tom Schreiber followed for a quick 2-0 lead. Japan, one of the surprises of the tournament after beating the Haudenosaunee on Sunday, quickly erased the deficit.
Skilled, fast and fit, Japan held leads of 3-2, 4-3 and 5-4 before Ryan Conrad (three goals) knotted the score at 5 and Brian Tevlin found Connor Kirst on the doorstep for a 6-5 lead. The U.S. didn’t trail again, but Japan continued to keep it close.
A rocket from Shinya Tateishi (four goals) cut the U.S. lead to 8-7 at the end of the first quarter.
“We talked about punching them in the mouth, and we got punched in the mouth,” coach Andy Shay said about Japan’s hot start.
The U.S. held Japan to just five goals the rest of the way, in large part due to a change in defensive strategy. Liam Byrnes said the first quarter has been a feeling-out process throughout the entire tournament as the U.S. learns how each nation approaches the Sixes discipline.
Without the defensive performance the U.S. put forth in the second quarter, Japan could have hung around even longer. In the eight-minute period, the U.S. forced four shot clock violations and twice forced Japan to run the clock down to one second. Both of those possessions resulted in rushed, errant shots that weren’t even on goal.
“The adjustment after that first quarter was to get more pressure on ball, everyone else shrink in and make it difficult for them to get to the middle,” Byrnes said. “In that first quarter, they were right on top of [goalie Jack Kelly]. Once we shrunk and clogged up the middle, that’s when we started getting the shot clocks.”
The U.S. led 11-8 at halftime and took a 14-10 lead on back-to-back lefty finishes by Colin Heacock (three goals). Tomoki Umehara (four goals) made it 14-11 at the end of the third period.