The Tewaaraton Award ceremony is Thursday night in Washington, D.C. Four of the five men’s finalists — announced May 9 — played an integral role in the NCAA tournament, with two of them advancing to Memorial Day Weekend.
Michael Sowers (Princeton) has a resume that speaks for itself, finishing the season a program-record 90 points on 37 goals and 53 assists. In doing so, he set the school’s all-time points record with 255.
As for the other contenders, how did Grant Ament (Penn State), Jared Bernhardt (Maryland), TD Ierlan (Yale) and Pat Spencer (Loyola) fare in the NCAA tournament? Let’s take a look at how each may have helped their Tewaaraton case.
Grant Ament
Penn State
Ament, the redshirt junior who set the NCAA’s single-season assist record with 96 in 2019, continued his momentum into the NCAA tournament. Ament opened with three goals and five assists in a 25-10 throttling of UMBC in the first round — Penn State’s first NCAA tournament win in program history. But he didn’t stop there, dropping a goal and eight assists in battle with fellow Tewaaraton candidate Pat Spencer and Loyola. The Nittany Lions won that game 21-14 and advanced to their first final four. Ament took his talents to the biggest stage in lacrosse, tallying another three-goal, five-assist performance in a 21-17 loss to Yale in the national semifinals. His season ended two wins short of a national title, but he matched the NCAA tournament record with 25 points in the three games. Along the way, he set both Big Ten and Penn State records for career assists.
Jared Bernhardt
Maryland
The latest of Maryland’s No. 1s to be named a Tewaaraton finalist, Bernhardt was at his best for a Terps’ team that started the NCAA tournament unseeded. Maryland faced the challenge of traveling to former rival Towson in the first round, and trailed for most of the game. But Bernhardt stepped up in the fourth quarter. With the game tied at 10-10 with six minutes left, Bernhardt charged toward the crease and launched himself in the air for a highlight-reel diving goal. Minutes later, Towson had taken the 13-12 lead and bled almost the entire clock down. Maryland was seconds away from being eliminated until it rushed up the field and Kyle Long found a cutting Bernhardt, who finished a miraculous game-tying goal with three seconds left. Maryland later won in overtime on a Louis Dubick goal. In the quarterfinals against eventual champion Virginia, Bernhardt dropped four goals and an assist — a game in which Maryland would eventually let a 12-7 lead slip away and fall in overtime.