The defending champion and the favorite to be crowned the next champion meet in the NCAA semifinals on Saturday. What more could a lacrosse fan want?
Penn State, the mostly unstoppable offensive juggernaut with an embarrassment of riches on attack, has continued to make program history and doesn’t appear as if its anywhere close to stopping.
Yale, on the other hand, strengthened its roster this offseason by adding TD Ierlan but just barely took down Penn in the quarterfinals on Sunday, 19-18. Ierlan, however, was the catalyst behind Penn State’s only loss of the season, a 14-13 loss to the Bulldogs on Feb. 23.
For what it’s worth, a late-February result is hardly convincing enough to lean one way or the other. But Ierlan’s performance does highlight one relative weakness — perhaps the only weakness — for the Nittany Lions against Yale.
Ierlan, perhaps the best faceoff specialist in NCAA history, has won 347 of 456 faceoffs (76.1 percent). Gerard Arceri has won 265 of 419 (63.2 percent), a very good number that is dwarfed by Ierlan’s accomplishments. When they met in February, Ierlan won 25 of 31 attempts (Arceri went 4-for-23).
The best way to limit a potent offense is to prevent it from getting the ball. Can Ierlan do it again?
PENN STATE VS. YALE
WHEN: SATURDAY, 2:30 P.M.
WHERE: LINCOLN FINANCIAL FIELD
WATCH: ESPN2
The Bulldogs thrived offensively against Penn State, as Jackson Morrill posted seven points (five assists) and both Matt Gaudet and Brendan Rooney tallied hat tricks. Still, Penn State overcame a lopsided faceoff mark to only lose by one goal.
Penn State is efficient in getting high-percentage shots that Mac O’Keefe and Co. almost always bury. With Grant Ament orchestrating the box-like offense, Penn State scored 13 goals on 34 shots in the first meeting. That was actually low for a team that leads the nation with a 43.3 shooting percentage.
The focus then shifts to Yale’s defense, which allows just under 11 goals per game but did hold down Penn State, Albany and Cornell (twice). Will Weitzel, Chris Fake and Aidan Hynes have been lockdown defenders in front of Jack Starr, who has been solid between the pipes.
Yale has been tested during championship weekend before, while this is uncharted territory for Penn State. It would be uncharacteristic for the Nittany Lions to press offensively, but in a potential late-game situation, Yale could have the edge.
In what figures to be a must-watch followup to an exciting quarterfinal weekend, Penn State and Yale collide at the Linc.