It’s not like Loyola didn’t see Robertson coming. LeBlanc, who had not played since April 10 due to injury, warned his teammates during an overtime timeout not to leave him on an island.
“Kyle had studied the matchup well enough,” Greyhounds coach Charley Toomey said. “He said, ‘Listen, this kid’s an overtime guy. Don’t look away from my matchup.’”
Duke had also isolated LeBlanc on the first possession of overtime. Sowers beat him underneath, but defensive midfielder Matt Higgins met Sowers on the crease with a body check to dislodge the ball.
Loyola had a chance to win the game, but Blue Devils long pole Tyler Carpenter knocked down an attempted feed from behind by inverted midfielder Adam Poitras. Carpenter, who had an assist earlier in the game, came away with his fifth ground ball and cleared it to set the stage for Robertson’s heroics.
The Greyhounds, left for dead when they fell to 5-5 five weeks ago and then again when they had to pull out of the Patriot League championship game due to a false positive COVID-19 test, led 9-8 with 2:04 remaining in regulation. They scored twice in 48 seconds and went up one when Kevin Lindley caught an Evan James feed on the crease, face-dodged his defender, lunged across face of the goal and got enough on a shot to push it past Duke goalie Mike Adler.
Loyola won the ensuing faceoff, but Blue Devils defenseman Kenny Brower released from the box and knocked the ball out of Greyhounds long pole Scott Middleton’s stick. Duke’s Jake Caputo got the ground ball and sent a long pass to Sowers, who got hooked around the neck by Loyola’s Cam Wyers to prevent the goal on the doorstep.
The Blue Devils cashed in anyway, with Sowers finding Brennan O’Neill in the right alley for a sidearm lefty laser and man-up goal to knot it at 9 with 1:09 left.
It was the seventh tie of the game, one in which neither team ever led by more than two goals and each endured scoring droughts of longer than 20 minutes.
Loyola lingered within striking distance thanks largely to the play of goalie Sam Shafer, who made six saves each in the third and fourth quarter a week after preserving the Greyhounds’ first-round upset of Denver with a last-second stop. Shafer finished with 17 saves.
“The quarterfinal is the toughest game to win in the tournament,” Duke coach John Danowski said, “because of what’s on the other side.”
Danowski should know. The Blue Devils are playing in the final four for the 11th time since he took over the program in 2007. They’ll meet the winner of Sunday’s quarterfinal between Notre Dame and Maryland in the NCAA semifinals next week in East Hartford, Conn.
The attack accounted for nearly all of Duke’s offensive production. O’Neill was superb. The ACC Freshman of the Year scored a team-high four goals (on 4-for-4 shooting) and added an assist.
Robertson (three goals, one assist) and Sowers (one goal, three assists) added four points apiece, with Sowers moving past Loyola’s Pat Spencer for the No. 2 spot among the NCAA’s all-time leading scorers. His 381 career points are second only to Albany’s Lyle Thompson (400).
James led the Greyhounds with four goals and an assist.