Consider all of it preparation for Saturday’s surge.
“I feel like we look back on the Syracuse game, the Brown game, all those games and we were down by four and it gets to three and we’re like, ‘All right, we can definitely do this,’” said Moore, whose game-winner gave him 40 goals and 40 assists on the year, the first 40-40 season in Virginia history.
Such a comeback seemed improbable as Maryland authored a stellar defensive performance for about 55 minutes. Mixing in far more zone than usual, the Terps kept Virginia off balance and managed to stretch out possessions to apply pressure on the Cavaliers.
Kraus had only two assists in the first three quarters, and Aitken was especially quiet in the first half before scoring Virginia’s only goal of the third quarter. Meanwhile, Maryland stretched its advantage to 12-7.
“For three quarters, we weren’t getting good looks at the goal,” Tiffany said. “Give the Maryland defense a lot of credit for that, but Sean [Kirwan] made some adjustments and all the sudden it unleashed and the dam was broken. These guys made plays. These guys trust Sean, and you can see the results.”
Conrad got one back with 9:28 to go, then added another with 3:25 remaining. Still, Virginia was only within 12-9 — until Ian Laviano delivered a transition score 20 seconds later.
The comeback was on.
“Ian scores that goal, and there’s a penalty to bring us within two with three minutes left and [it’s like], ‘This is happening. This is happening,’” Tiffany said.
Maryland didn’t have much of a chance to answer. The Terps took their final shot with 8:15 to go, committing turnovers on each of their last four possessions. One of those was a shot clock violation with 3:53 left that immediately preceded Virginia’s outburst.
“As a coach, those are always things you look back on,” Tillman said. “Our kids did everything they needed to do. I needed to do a better job in that moment in managing some of the things in this game. These guys did what they were supposed to do. I didn’t do my job.”
With only 12 seconds of possession as the Cavaliers melted Maryland’s advantage, there was little the Terps’ offense could do as Virginia chipped away at the deficit, forced overtime and eventually claimed their only lead of the game.
Instead of getting ready to face another ACC team and advance to the final days of the season, Maryland faces months of wondering how its five-goal advantage vanished.
“It’s definitely tough to sit there and watch, but I think our defense did an amazing job stepping up,” midfielder Bubba Fairman said. “Their offense has been phenomenal all season, and I think our defense really stepped up to the plate and held them down. We had all the trust in the world in them. I think if we just got one more possession, we would have been there.”
Instead, Virginia moves on, having done so with a reminder of exactly what is at the core of its identity. For the Cavaliers, it seems, no deficit is too large, and no amount of time is too small to stifle the possibility of a rally.
“It’s just something that we rely on all the time,” Conrad said. “We’ve had so much experience just in this one year of so many comeback victories. You can hear it. Every single kid on the team has confidence in ourselves. Honestly, we don’t need to say it, but we still have guys out there saying ‘Hey, we’ve been here before, we’ve done this a hundred times, we’ve been down by more than this. We can do it.'”