2008 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship

The 2008 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Tournament was held from May 10 through May 26, 2008. This was the 38th annual Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship tournament. Sixteen NCAA Division I college men's lacrosse teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament.

2008 NCAA Division I Men's
Lacrosse Championship
DatesMay 10–26, 2008
Teams16
ChampionsSyracuse (9th title)
Runner-upJohns Hopkins
Attendance[1]48,224 semi-finals
48,970 finals
97,194 total
NCAA Division I Men's Championships
«2007 2009»

The first round of the single-elimination tournament was played on May 10 and May 11 at the home field of the top-seeded team. The quarterfinals were held on May 17 and May 18 on two separate neutral fields: the Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland, and Schoellkopf Field in Ithaca, New York. The tournament culminated with the semifinals and finals held on Memorial Day weekend at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. The championship weekend, which included the Division II and Division III championships, was hosted by Harvard University and the Eastern College Athletic Conference.[2][3] The championship was won by Syracuse University, beating Johns Hopkins University 13–10, in front of a title game record crowd of 48,970 fans.[4]

Qualifying teams

The Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Committee was responsible for selecting the teams that competed in the championship tournament. The qualifying teams, along with the seeding for each team in the tournament, were announced on Sunday, May 4, 2008. Seven conferences received automatic bids to the tournament for its top team. The remaining nine teams were selected as "at large" bids by the committee.[5]

Five conferences held a conference tournament championship to award the conferences' bid. Canisius earned an automatic bid by winning the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) championship. This marks the first time that Canisius College has gained entry to the National Championship tournament.[6] Colgate earned an automatic bid by winning its first-ever Patriot League championship.[7] Hofstra earned an automatic bid by winning Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) championship,[8] Notre Dame earned an automatic bid by winning Great Western Lacrosse League (GWLL) championship,[9] and UMBC earned an automatic bid by winning America East Conference championship.[10]

Two conferences award their bids based on regular season conference records. Loyola earned an automatic bid by winning the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) championship with a 6–1 conference record.[11] The Ivy League's automatic bid was awarded to Cornell. Cornell and Brown had identical conference records, but due to a victory by Cornell in head to head competition earlier in the season the tiebreaker was given to Cornell.[12]

The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) conference tournament champion was Duke.[13] However, the ACC does not receive an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament because a conference must have at least six members competing (for 2 years) in order to be awarded an automatic bid.[14]

The following teams were awarded at-large bids by the NCAA Selection Committee: Duke (ACC), Virginia (ACC), Syracuse (Independent), North Carolina (ACC), Johns Hopkins (Independent), Maryland (ACC), Denver (GWLL), Navy (Patriot), and Ohio State (GWLL).[5]

Tournament bracket

First Round
May 10–11[15]
Quarterfinals
May 17–18
Semifinals
May 24
Final
May 26
            
1 Duke 12
  Loyola 7
1 Duke 21
  Ohio State 10
8 Cornell 7
  Ohio State 15
1 Duke 9
5 Johns Hopkins 10
5 Johns Hopkins 10
  Hofstra 4
5 Johns Hopkins 10
  Navy 4
4 North Carolina 7
  Navy 8
5 Johns Hopkins 10
3 Syracuse 13
3 Syracuse 20
  Canisius 3
3 Syracuse 11
6 Notre Dame 9
6 Notre Dame 8*
  Colgate 7
3 Syracuse 12*
2 Virginia 11
7 Maryland 10
  Denver 7
7 Maryland 7
2 Virginia 8*
2 Virginia 10
  UMBC 9
  • * = Overtime

Game summaries

First Round

The first round of the 2008 championship tournament saw upsets, an overtime game, and the NCAA career points record broken.

Unseeded Ohio State bested #8 Cornell 15–7. The opening goal of this game was scored by Ohio State goaltender Stefan Schroder, who ran the length of the field to put one past the Big Red netminder.[16] Navy upset #4 seeded North Carolina in Chapel Hill with a final score of 8–7 on the strong play of the Midshipmen defense and the four goal effort of Tim Paul, who was honored with Nike Player of the Week honors.[17] Notre Dame, who was hosting its first NCAA Tournament game, topped Colgate in a contest that was settled in overtime.[18] In a victory over Loyola, Duke's Matt Danowski broke the NCAA career points record, eclipsing Joe Vasta's mark.[19] Syracuse ended Canisius's first ever appearance in the tournament early with a 20–3 victory.[20] Johns Hopkins was led by Paul Rabil's four goals in a 10–4 win over Hofstra.[21] Virginia's Garrett Billings third goal of the game with 6:50 left in the game sealed the Cavaliers win over UMBC.[22] Maryland beat GWLL's Denver 10–7.[23]

Quarterfinals

Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium, location of most highly attended lacrosse quarterfinal in NCAA history

The quarterfinals were held at two separate locations the weekend of May 17 and May 18. On Saturday, 17,017 people attended the quarterfinals at Navy–Marine Corps Memorial Stadium. This set an attendance record for the most people to attend the quarterfinal round of the lacrosse championships.[24] Fans in attendance saw Johns Hopkins defeat Navy 10–4. Navy was held without a goal for both the second and third quarters.[25] The other game played in Annapolis was Maryland versus Virginia, which went into overtime. Ben Rubeor scored the game-winning goal in the extra period to send the Cavaliers to the semifinals.[26]

On Sunday, at Cornell's Schoellkopf Field, Syracuse defeated Notre Dame 11–9 on the play of midfielder Dan Hardy who recorded four points, including three goals and the game winning score.[27] Also, Duke routed Ohio State 21–10 on the offensive efforts of Zack Greer who recorded a career-high eleven points on six goals and five assists.[28]

Final Four

Gillette Stadium, the location of semifinals and finals of the 2008 Championships

On Saturday, May 24, 48,224 fans were spectators for the 2008 Division I Final Four doubleheader held at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.[29] The first game featured Syracuse versus Virginia, and the second was a rematch of last year's championship game between Johns Hopkins and Duke.

Syracuse vs. Virginia

1 2 3 4OT Total
SU 2 1 3 51 12
UVA 3 3 3 20 11

In the first game of the Final Four doubleheader, Syracuse defeated Virginia 12–11 in a double overtime thriller.[30]

Virginia commanded the first half of the contest due in part to extra-man opportunities resulting from penalties by Syracuse. In the second quarter, the Cavaliers went on a run of five unanswered goals and entered half-time with a 6–3 lead, and the game's momentum. The game remained in Virginia's favor through the third quarter, prior to the Orange fourth quarter comeback.[30]

Syracuse's Mike Leveille scored five goals, including a goal with 3:00 remaining in the game to send the game into overtime, and the eventual game-winner in the second overtime period to propel the Orange into the Championship game. Syracuse's come-from-behind victory included scoring six of the final eight goals of the contest.[30]

Syracuse's Junior midfielder Matt Abbott, known more for his groundball and clearing game, tallied three goals in the second half for his first career hat trick to spark to second half rally. Extra possessions earned by face-off specialist Danny Brennan, including both opportunities in the overtime periods and 70% total for the game, helped the Orange stage the comeback. While, Syracuse goalkeeper John Galloway settled down in the second half and made a number game saving stops as regulation time expired.[30]

Virginia scoring was led by Danny Glading with three goals and one assist, while Garret Billings scored two goals. Ben Rubeor, a Tewaaraton Trophy finalist, was held to one point on an assist.[30]

Johns Hopkins vs. Duke

1 2 3 4 Total
JHU 1 3 3 3 10
Duke 2 0 3 4 9

Johns Hopkins defeated Duke 10–9 in the second game of the Final Four doubleheader. The heavily favored Duke team, who had beaten the Blue Jays earlier in the season 17–6, were handed only their second loss of the season.[31]

Hopkins controlled the deliberate tempo of the game, and held a 4–2 lead going into halftime. After scoring first after halftime, Hopkins saw Duke pull even with three goals in 45 seconds during the third quarter, including back-to-back goals just 7 seconds apart.[31]

In fourth quarter, the speed of the game accelerated as Duke began to push offensively. Johns Hopkins goaltender Michael Gvozden was up to the task. He recorded 7 of his 17 saves in the fourth quarter, including one as time expired to seal the victory.[31]

Hopkins was led by Senior Kevin Huntley who netted four goals in the contest.[31]

Championship: Syracuse vs. Johns Hopkins

The Syracuse University Orange were honored at the White House by President of the United States George W. Bush in June 2008 for their winning the 2008 national championship.
1 2 3 4 Total
SU 2 4 4 3 13
JHU 4 1 3 2 10

On Memorial Day, Monday May 26, Syracuse defeated Johns Hopkins in the national championship game 13–10 in front of 48,970 fans at Gillette Stadium. This game set the attendance record for the NCAA lacrosse championship game and for any NCAA outdoor championship.[29] This marks the 10th victory in a national championship game for the Syracuse program.[32][33] This is John Desko's, Syracuse's Head coach, fourth championship in his ten-year career at Syracuse.[4]

The Orange were led by midfielder Dan Hardy with a team-high three goals, fifth-year Senior face-off specialist Danny Brennan who scored his first career goal, and attackman Mike Leveille, the tournament's Most Outstanding Player honoree and 2008 Tewaaraton Trophy winner, who recorded three points on one goal and two assists.[34]

Syracuse goalkeeper John Galloway became the first true freshman goaltender in NCAA history to record 16 wins in one season,[30] and just the fourth to win an NCAA title.[4]

Johns Hopkins' Paul Rabil played an outstanding game leading his team with career-high six goals and one assist in the losing effort.[35] In addition, Blue Jay netminder Michael Gvozden made 20 saves, the most saves in a Championship game since Maryland's Brian Dougherty in 1995.[36]

Record by conference

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Quarterfinals Final Four Championship Game Champions
Atlantic Coast Conference45–4.55532--
Great Western Lacrosse League32–3.4002---
Patriot League21–2.3331---
Independent27–1.8752221
America East Conference10–1.000----
Colonial Athletic Association10–1.000----
Eastern College Athletic Conference10–1.000----
Ivy League10–1.000----
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference10–1.000----

Tournament notes

  • 97,194 fans attended the tournament surpassing the previous year's tournament record of 100,447.

References

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