Kern saves Navy’s season
Coming off an NCAA quarterfinal appearance, Navy struggled in the first half of the season and sunk to 2-6 with an ugly 18-7 loss at Loyola on March 18.
It was still possible for the Midshipmen to see their season end in mid-April when Patriot League leader Army arrived in Annapolis on Saturday. But with freshman goalie Ryan Kern making 10 of his 17 stops in the fourth quarter, Navy (6-7, 4-4) secured a place in the Patriot League tournament with a 10-7 victory.
“I was just locked in,” Kern said. “[Defensive midfielder] D.J. Plumer, before the fourth quarter, came up to me and said ‘No more goals. I don’t care what you have to do.’”
The Midshipmen are an intriguing possibility for next week’s conference tournament. They’ll be rested after a bye weekend and will play at home in the first round so long as either Army or Boston University wins on Friday.
The rest should help Kern, who has dealt with a foot injury since getting hurt in the season opener against Johns Hopkins. That, though, didn’t stop him from posting the most saves for a Navy goalie against Army since Mickey Jarboe stopped 19 shots in his final college game in 2000.
“You guys haven’t seen the best of him,” Navy coach Rick Sowell said. “He’s just getting going.”
Army far from finished
The loss at Navy left Army with its first conference loss of the season. But the deep Black Knights (10-2, 6-1 Patriot), who dealt Syracuse its lone setback of the year in February, still have as ideal a setup as they could ask for as they attempt to secure their first NCAA tournament berth since 2010.
Army plays host to Loyola (7-5, 5-2) on Friday in a de facto Patriot League regular season title game. The winner will host the conference tournament in a year when the automatic bid is especially valuable. The only Patriot League team with a plausible path to an at-large bid is Army.
“One of our goals to be a conference champion, and to be a conference champion in an eight-game season? That would speak very well of our guys,” Army coach Joe Alberici said.
As an added bonus, an Army victory would lock Navy into the No. 4 seed, with the Midshipmen needing a Patriot quarterfinal victory to set up a rematch. In both of the last two years, Navy won the regular-season meeting but lost to the Black Knights less than two weeks later in the Patriot tournament.
New England’s NCAA haul
While it’s tempting to look at what region didn’t land any NCAA quarterfinals and championship weekends when the latest cycle of event hosts was revealed this week (namely, Maryland), what is much more interesting is the heavy presence in New England in the coming years.
There are two quarterfinals (2019 to East Hartford, Conn., and 2020 to Providence, R.I.) and a pair of championship weekends (2021 and 2022 in East Hartford) headed to the northeastern corner of the country. Toss in Memorial Day weekends in Foxborough, Mass., in 2017 and 2018, and there will be at least 16 Division I tournament games in New England over the next six years.
It’s a sharp turn for an area with only occasional glimpses of postseason lacrosse this century until five games were played there last year. Between 2000 and 2015, there were just 15 NCAA tournament games in New England, with Foxborough’s three championship weekends (2008-09 and 2012) accounting for more than half of them.