Offense has been Denver’s trademark over the last few seasons. Tierney, the architect of the quick-slide defense at Princeton, embraced that. “I was always so obsessed with not giving up more than seven goals to win, and now I’m obsessed with scoring 13 to win,” he told LM back in 2012.
But in a storyline that flew relatively under the radar amid the westward-ho fanfare, the Pioneers got back to doing what worked when Tierney won all those titles at Princeton in the 1990s and early 2000s.
“Our defense is what won us the championship,” Brown said.
Denver led Notre Dame 10-6 with four minutes left in the semifinals before Irish midfielder Sergio Perkovic went beast mode (again) and scored three straight Irish goals to help force overtime. In the title game, the Pioneers’ defense, anchored by Christian Burgdorf, whom Tierney says could be one of the best he’s ever coached, co-captain Carson Cannon and LaPlante (13 saves) held the Terps to their lowest scoring output all year.
Maryland coach John Tillman bemoaned the current championship weekend format, with its quick Saturday-to-Monday turnaround. It did not bother Denver.
Freshman faceoff man Trevor Baptiste battled Terps senior Charlie Raffa to a near dead-heat. What a rookie year for Baptiste, a former junior Olympic swimmer and football player that was headed to Division III Franklin & Marshall for lacrosse less than 12 months earlier, but was spotted by Denver and committed after a late recruiting trip in March. Just like the old days.
Baptiste was the nation’s top faceoff man, winning nearly 70 percent during the regular season.
“With any winning team, you have to have guys that do their role,” Baptiste said. “Wes scores goals. Ryan stops the ball. My job is to get the ball. Everyone takes care of their job.”
The head job is Tierney’s, who said he has taken more of an oversight role compared to some earlier coaching stops. Assistants Brown, first-year defensive coordinator John Orsen and his son, Trevor, are more in touch with the players on X’s and O’s. Indeed, it was Brown in the locker room on Memorial Day telling the offense, “Let the ball create the rhythm. When we do that, no one can stop us.”
It was Trevor Tierney, the goalie for Princeton in 2001 when his father won his last title there, who addressed the Denver locker room with a special message after the dramatic OT win against Notre Dame. Back in 2000, his junior year at Princeton, the Tigers beat then-defending champion Virginia 12-11 in a similar edge-of-your-seat finish. They were so amped that they got little rest afterward, and lacked enough energy for Monday’s 60 minutes and lost to Syracuse 13-7.
“This is the one game you can’t celebrate,” he told them.
It was sobering but sage advice for a group that just made its first NCAA title game, despite all of the regular- and post-season successes of recent years.
“You constantly hear that, three out of four final fours, four out of five final fours, are they going to blow another one?” Bill Tierney said. “I kept looking at it saying, ‘You know what, hold on here, there’s 68 teams and you make four out of five final fours.’ That’s pretty good.”