TOWSON, Md. — One of them was going to finally reach the mountaintop. The other’s extended final four agony was going to continue.
Boston College finally broke through in its fourth consecutive NCAA championship game, defeating Syracuse 16-10. For the Orange, it was another chapter in their legacy of championship weekend defeats.
“We did everything we could,” Syracuse coach Gary Gait said. “They were a really good offense that can put the ball in the back of the net. … I think our offense kind of sputtered when we went down a player, and that really made a difference.”
Perhaps no two teams understand each other the way these two teams do. While the Eagles, led by coach Acacia Walker-Weinstein, finally pulled it off, the Orange are still seeking that elusive first title.
Syracuse fell to 0-3 in NCAA finals, having finished as runner-up in 2012 and 2014. Gait has led the Orange to the final four eight times since taking over the program in 2008.
“They did an amazing job, and I love what she’s done with the program,” Gait said. “She’s an amazing young coach. I congratulated her and wished her the best and thanked her for being such an important person in the game of lacrosse.”
Without Megan Carney and Emily Hawryschuk, Syracuse’s depth was challenged entering the postseason.
The Orange had answered that call every time they had to. In their NCAA semifinal win over Northwestern on Friday, Meaghan and Emma Tyrrell’s performances in particular rose up the Syracuse offense.
It wasn’t so simple Sunday.
Emma Tyrrell barely had a chance to get action before she was out of the game, with two yellow cards just over halfway into the opening stanza.
“We led with a couple of freshmen,” Gait said. “We needed a righty, and they had been playing pretty well so they try to step in and fill that role. Emma, with the way she’s been playing, she’s tough to replace. Too much to replace, obviously."
The yellow cards seemed to shift the energy in a way the Orange couldn’t recover from.
“We couldn’t catch many breaks, and we didn’t, especially in the second half,” Gait said. “It just provided opportunities the other way. There’s a lot of what-ifs, if we got more calls or whatever it was, but you can’t talk about that, because that’s not what happened.”