For Yale’s senior class, it was the culmination of a four-year run that was previously steeped in postseason misery. There was the first-round exit at Maryland in 2015, when the Bulldogs squandered a three-goal lead in the fourth quarter but nearly forced overtime on a shot that hit the crossbar in the final 30 seconds.
Then came a first-round upset loss to Navy, followed by a one-goal setback at Syracuse last year.
“We got bounced in the first round quite a bit the last three years,” Warner said. “To get that monkey off our back, we felt like this year we had a special group and that we’d be able to do it. Getting bounced in the first round has been tough, but it’s all worth it now.”
Shay acknowledged there was some bad luck in previous years, and probably a few helpful bounces along the way this month. In truth, Yale didn’t need much help in this postseason, as it blew past UMass, Loyola, Albany and finally Duke.
The Bulldogs trailed for just 3 minutes, 9 seconds over the course of the four games, all of it in the first round. Not once in the tournament were they even tied in the second half. And this weekend, they led for all but 2 minutes, 29 seconds.
If there was a turning point for the program, it probably wasn’t this year. Instead, it might have come after the 2009 season. It was then Shay realized it was best to concentrate far more on his own team than opponents, especially with the Ivy League’s truncated practice schedule. Then came an Ivy regular season title in 2010.
Tournament bids soon followed. A blue-collar worth ethic was firmly established.
And, as of Monday afternoon, it’s brought Yale to the pinnacle of the sport.
“From there, it was kind of maybe I saw the light,” Shay said. “The kids still try to reinforce the culture. It's the same style of kid, the same type of person. It just got better and better, and they wanted more and more. So here we are.”
And if anyone is, say, uncomfortable with that, so be it. On the day it reached the top, Yale wouldn’t have it any other way.