Towson's quartet of Canto, Smith, Woodall and Brendan Sunday (four goals) helped lift Towson, which never trailed despite going almost 24 minutes without scoring in the second and third quarters.
For Canto, the biggest game of his career came in just his fourth start. The third-string goalie in 2018 came up with 14 saves to fuel the victory, but none bigger than the one he made with just under 10 minutes remaining.
Trailing 9-7, Loyola had possession and Chase Scanlan found a wide open Kevin Lindley just to the right of the Towson crease. Lindley caught the pass and faked a shot which elicited a dive from Canto to the right. With Canto on the ground, Lindley flicked a shot that seemed destined for the cage, but Canto, still falling away from the goal, stuck his stick out to make a miraculous save.
“Honestly, I don’t even know what was going through the kid’s head,” Smith said. “I slid and I turned around and all of a sudden Canto is on his butt on the ground, shaking his stick around and the kid is throwing a thousand fakes. It goes straight into Canto’s stick and my mind was just blown. I was like ‘Oh crap.’ I had no clue what was going on and I immediately broke up the field and I was like “Oh, I've got to get out of here.’”
“I was just trying to watch his stick the whole time and try to stay with it,” Canto said of the save. “I knew he had to shoot it. I was already on the ground so I just threw my stick out there and I was lucky enough to get it.”
Lindley, who finished with a game-high six goals to continue his breakout sophomore year, said Canto stopped more than one high-percentage shots off his stick.
“In that fourth quarter I had two opportunities that no doubt should have been a goal,” he said. “He made a good save.”
Canto’s efforts stifled a Loyola offense that was pressing to make a comeback late in the fourth quarter. The Greyhounds were limited with their chances thanks to a strong effort from Woodall, who continued his torrid 2019 season winning 20 of 26 faceoffs to help Towson maintain possession.
He won 10 straight faceoffs in the fourth quarter over a Loyola team that came in with a 54.8 faceoff win percentage. Towson’s lead never reached more than three goals, so possession was key as the minutes ticked down.
Smith’s job on Spencer was just as valuable. The Loyola star had five points, but he scored just one goal on eight shots. Smith, a 6-foot, 205-pound sophomore, who transferred from Navy just before the 2018 season, matched up with the physicality of the 6-foot-3, 205-pound Spencer.
It certainly helped that Smith had familiarity with Spencer. On top of the matchup last season, Smith of Loyola (Md.) battled with Spencer of Boys’ Latin (Md.) in high school.
“He’s a good player,” Spencer said of Smith. “They wanted to slide to him a little bit when I was on that island with him. Overall, I felt like they threw a lot of stuff at us and kept us on our toes the whole night. It was a whole defensive effort.”
According to Nadelen, Smith has taken a step forward to help bolster an already solid Tigers defense.
“He’s a kid that has great athleticism,” Nadelen said. “He’s a playmaker as a defender. He’s the right mentality that you want for a No. 1 cover guy.”
Loyola fell for the first time this season, but it will look to regroup quickly ahead of a Saturday matchup with Patriot League rival Holy Cross. Toomey reflected back on 2016 in the postgame press conference, when the Greyhounds topped the Tigers in an NCAA quarterfinal.
“They’re a tough out. They’re a really good team,” he said. “2016, we were fortunate enough to see them again. That’s all I can hope for right now.”