It was Danowski, in fact, who hoisted the walnut and bronze trophy just one year earlier. Duke defeated Denver in the NCAA semifinals before downing Notre Dame, always the bridesmaid, in the championship game at Baltimore’s M&T Bank Stadium.
The 2015 season started with a Denver-Duke rematch in Atlanta. A baby-faced freshman named Trevor Baptiste won 25 of 34 faceoffs and a high-profile transfer named Connor Cannizzaro showed just how dangerous offensive coordinator Matt Brown’s box-field hybrid system could be with a multi-threat attackman orchestrating it from behind the goal.
Making his Denver debut, Cannizzaro, who was the 2014 ACC Freshman of the Year at Maryland but went west to reunite with his brother, Sean, shredded the Blue Devils with three goals and five assists as the Pioneers won a 17-13 shootout.
“It was certainly the coming-out party for Trevor. We knew he was good in the fall, but we didn’t know he was this good,” Tierney said. “And some of the stuff Matt was doing, he had been way ahead of the curve anyway. But having somebody like Connor was really cool.”
Denver’s starting lineup that day was identical to the one it would trot out Memorial Day. It had the look of a team that needed to be very creative in its recruiting. The Pioneers had zero players from Baltimore or Long Island. Their top cover defenseman, Carson Cannon, was from Stillwater, Minnesota. Their rope unit consisted of a long pole from Carlsbad, California (Mike Riis) and a short-stick defensive midfielder from Fishers, Indiana (Garret Holst). Their starting goalie, Ryan LaPlante, was a local kid from Fort Collins, Colorado.
They took their lumps, including a 15-day stretch that included a pair of two-goal losses at North Carolina and Ohio State sandwiched around a comeback overtime win against Notre Dame at home. The loss to the Buckeyes was especially motivating. Denver blew a two-goal lead in the fourth quarter.
“When you win, you’ve got to remember, we could see these guys again,” Tierney said. “When you lose, it’s ‘I hope we see those guys again.’”
Lo and behold, after the Pioneers, who steamrolled through the Big East schedule, vanquished Brown in the first round of the NCAA tournament, Ohio State loomed as their quarterfinal opponent at what was then Sports Authority Field at Mile High in Denver. The de facto home field advantage surely did not seem to help as the Buckeyes came out throwing haymakers.
Ohio State jumped out to a 7-1 lead early in the second quarter when Tierney called timeout. Before he could address the players, senior attackman Wesley Berg beat him to the punch.
“There are three moments that stick out in my existence with Wes Berg,” Tierney said. “Number one was when he was a sophomore and we were losing to North Carolina in the quarterfinals at Indianapolis. We were losing 9-4 at halftime. The coaches were outside the locker room talking about what to say to the team. We walk in there. Wes Berg is a sophomore and he’s standing on a stool just screaming, ‘We are not going to lose this game.’”
They didn’t. Denver came back to beat North Carolina 12-11. Berg led the way with four goals.
“Number two was this quarterfinal game,” Tierney said, recalling the six-goal hole the Pioneers had dug themselves against Ohio State. “Wes took over the huddle. He said, ‘Just get the next one, and we’ll be fine.’”
Berg scored five of his game-high six goals during a nine-goal run that propelled the Pioneers to a 15-13 victory.
Tierney’s third Berg memory came in the final four the following week — a signature moment etched in NCAA championship lore.
Denver had the perfect pre-shot clock blueprint for Memorial Day weekend success. The Pioneers could win faceoffs at will thanks to Baptiste, control possession with a skilled offense that’s not prone to turnovers and capitalize on worn-down defenses with high-percentage shooters like Berg, Zach Miller, Erik Adamson and the Cannizzaros.
But the Pioneers did not have an answer for Notre Dame’s Sergio Perkovic, the 6-foot-4 Adonis who unleashed four goals in the final five minutes of regulation to lead the Fighting Irish back from a 9-5 deficit. Nick Osello scored with nine seconds left to send the game to overtime tied at 10.
Baptiste won the faceoff to start overtime, but Notre Dame long pole John Sexton stripped him. The ball rolled into the Fighting Irish’s offensive end, where Matt Kavanagh briefly came up with it before Cannon dislodged it once more. Riis scooped the ball, Denver cleared and Tierney called timeout.
Twenty-six seconds later, Berg deposited a feed from Tyler Pace to lift the Pioneers to an 11-10 victory.
That wasn’t the moment, though. It was the goal Berg scored in the middle of Notre Dame’s late-game blitz.
“There’s always a little luck involved,” Tierney said. “Tyler Pace throws a pass to Wes Berg in a game where we could’ve just held the ball. A bad pass goes on the ground, Bergey picks it up and puts an around-the-world bouncer beneath the pipe. If that doesn’t happen, we don’t get a chance to go into overtime.”
Comparatively speaking, Denver’s 10-5 win over Maryland two days later was boring, anticlimactic even. Berg scored two goals out of the gate and finished with a game-high five en route to NCAA championship MVP honors. The Pioneers never trailed. Defenseman Christian Burgdorf, a righty and the perfect lockdown complement to the left-handed Cannon, limited Matt Rambo to two goals on 2-for-8 shooting while Cannon blanked Joe LoCascio. Baptiste went 10-for-19 and LaPlante made 13 saves.
“The championship game was extremely boring. That’s just how we wanted it,” Tierney said. “We wanted to see if we could wear them down. We had a smart team that year and we did.”
Asked to define the legacy of the 2015 team, Tierney chose the word hope.
“Whether you’re a young kid right now throwing the ball against a wall in Idaho or you’re a team nobody’s thinking about or you’re a coach that says, ‘I’m going to take a chance because I believe in these kids and I’m going to make my mark,’ it’s hope,” he said. “Maybe it’s hope for a school right now. Maybe there’s someone out there saying, ‘Denver can do it. So can we.’”