Lars Tiffany Breaks Down the Final 10 Seconds
As soon as the final buzzer sounded and Lars Tiffany had finished the embrace with his coaching staff, the Virginia coach grabbed the NCAA championship trophy and sprinted across the Rentschler Field.
Tiffany said the act was instinctual — as he’d enjoyed the NCAA championship celebration just two years prior when the Cavaliers won it all in 2019.
"I looked like Forrest Gump," Tiffany said. "I didn't know what I was doing. The guy handed me the trophy. People were probably like 'What is he doing?' This one was about them."
The chaos of the celebration was preceded by a thrilling final 10 seconds in which Maryland’s Luke Wierman won the faceoff, charged through an open lane, and fired a shot that would have tied the national championship game at 17-17. However, Virginia’s Alex Rode used his body to block the bouncer and seal the Cavaliers’ second straight national title.
Tiffany said that his coaching staff had just under a minute to design a play off the faceoff that would prevent Maryland star Jared Bernhardt from getting the ball, but that meant Wierman might have had a lane to the cage. The plan was to have Jared Conners match up with Bernhardt, but the potential Tewaaraton winner was placed on the opposite wing.
“All the noise and excitement, and we break the huddle and Jared Conners is just jogging to where he thinks Bernhardt is going to be,” Tiffany said. “We’re screaming “Jared! Jared!” and we finally get his attention and pull him back.”
With Bernhardt and Kyle Long, Maryland’s two fastest players, covered on the wings (Conners and Gray Sallade), the mission turned to faceoff man Petey LaSalla to halt any progress from the Terps’ Luke Wierman.
LaSalla hoped to push the faceoff toward and Maryland defensive zone and run out the clock. If he failed, Sallade was charged with stopping a break. However, Wierman won the faceoff cleanly and the ball head straight toward the Virginia cage.
“Man, did [John] Tillman draw it up perfectly or what?” Tiffany said. “[Wierman] pops that ball forward and I’m like ‘Oh no, Petey.’ They did it perfect.”
Tiffany knew that by poling Bernhardt and Long, and containing shooter Logan Wisnauskas, Danny Maltz and Anthony DeMaio, he’d leave just one option. Wierman was given an open shot after a slide came in late.
“That was calculated,” the Virginia coach said. “You say ‘Wow you gave him a 10-yard shot.’ I gave them a ton of credit for how they lined up.”
Wierman took the final shot, which was saved by Rode, allowing time to run short on Maryland’s dream comeback and seal the victory. Tiffany knew the finish would be nerve-wracking, but he did not anticipate Maryland getting a good look at the cage.
Luckily, Rode stepped up when it mattered the most.
“I see it pop up and then I see just a bunch of sticks trying grab that rebound,” he said. “With [Rode], I didn’t know if he had the ball, but the way he was running out of that pileup, I was like ‘Oh boy.’”