SALISBURY, Md. - The game never got comfortable
for the top-ranked Salisbury University Sea Gulls as they survived
an intense men's lacrosse game against No. 5 Lynchburg College,
10-9, on an overcast and frigid Saturday afternoon before a crowd
of 740 at Sea Gull Stadium.
Salisbury (2-0), the defending NCAA Division III national
champions, increases its regular-season winning streak to 64 games
as the home mark now stands at 62 consecutive games. Lynchburg was
the last team to beat Salisbury at Sea Gull Stadium with a 13-12
loss on April 10, 2003.
"I am proud we won today. They are a good team," said SU coach
Jim Berkman. "We made some mistakes clearing the
ball and we didn't shot well at times. We will have to learn from
our mistakes."
The Sea Gulls scored their fifth goal of the third quarter when
senior attackman Greg Titus fired home his fourth
goal of the game off an assist from junior midfielder Kylor
Berkman (one goal, four assists) at the 1:32 mark. SU held
its largest lead on the day, 10-6, but the Gulls wouldn't score the
rest of the game.
Lynchburg (0-1) won the ensuing faceoff and darted to the
Salisbury goal where senior attackman Stephen Weis beat Sea Gull
goalie Riley Clark (nine saves) for the goal. It
only took the Hornets 12 seconds to score on that play.
The fourth quarter started with the Hornets a man-up and 40
seconds later junior attackman Michael Mundorf was sprawled out in
the SU crease celebrating his first goal of the season. Mundorf
came around the backside of the Sea Gull goal and lost SU defender
Ben Sandlin, in the process, as he tight roped the
right side of crease to sneak a shot past Riley. Lynchburg stun the
Salisbury defense minutes later when Weis scored his third
unassisted goal at the 10:48 mark to cut the Sea Gull lead to one,
10-9.
Salisbury struggled with face-offs in the second half as
Lynchburg won 7-of-12 and 12-of-22 for the game. The Hornets
outshot the Sea Gulls 25-14 in the second half and 44-36 for the
game. Salisbury scooped up 38 ground balls to 29 by Lynchburg. The
Gulls were 3-for-8 on extra-man opportunities while the Hornets
went 0-for-5.
SU had several chances to put the game away in the fourth
quarter but couldn't get a shot past Lynchburg goalie Garrett
Curran (11 saves).
The Hornets cleared the ball into the Sea Gull offensive end
with 1:12 left in the game down by one goal. Senior midfielder
Taylor Stehlgens turned the ball over seconds later as long-stick
midfielder Ryan Browning came in to break up the
Stehlgens pass and picked up the ground ball. Salisbury secured its
22nd clear of the day (22-for-26) but Stehlgens caused a
Matt Hickman (two goals) turnover with 43 seconds
left.
Lynchburg's Ryan Cranston (one goal, one assist) came up with
the ground ball and cleared the ball with 32 seconds left in the
game. Cranston unleashed a shot wide to force a Salisbury timeout.
The Hornets got off two final shots, from Stehlgens and Cranston,
and had one more chance as the final seconds ticked off the
scoreboard. Lynchburg worked the ball around at the top of the
offensive box but senior midfielder Johnny Black (two goals) could
not hold onto a pass as the ball went out of bounds with a second
left.
"This is a huge win for us this early in the season," said
Sandlin. "We had to lockdown in the final minute. We had to stop
them."
The two teams traded goals in the first quarter. Salisbury
jumped out with a Titus man-up goal and a goal by junior attackman
Patrick Bonanno (two goals). Both goals were
assisted by Kylor Berkman in the first seven minutes. Lynchburg
answered with back-to-back goals by Black as the game was knotted
at two apiece after one quarter.
Titus and Hickman scored the first two goals of the second
quarter, off Mike Von Kamecke (three assists)
assists, before Cranston answered with an unassisted goal with 4:57
left before the half. Salisbury defensive midfielder Will
Poletis scored his first goal of the season, a
man-down, off an assist from Browning with 41 seconds to go in
the first half as SU led 5-3 at halftime.
Salisbury will begin its Capital Athletic Conference schedule
this Wednesday, February 27, on the road at Wesley College at 3:30
p.m.