GAME OVERVIEW • Virginia concludes the regular season on Tuesday against in-state foe VMI. Faceoff is set for 7 p.m. • This week Virginia is ranked No. 9 in the USILA coaches poll and No. 10 in the Inside Lacrosse/Maverik media poll. THE SERIES VS. THE KEYDETS • Tuesday is the 24th all-time meeting against the Keydets, a series UVA holds a 23-0 all-time record. • VMI returns to UVA’s schedule after taking a break in the series in 2017. UVA and VMI met every season between 2006-16. UVA VS. THE COMMONWEALTH • UVA enters Tuesday’s contest with Richmond with a 110- 19-2 all-time record against opponents from the Commonwealth. • Virginia has won 69 games in a row against opponents from the Commonwealth of Virginia. The last loss was to Washington & Lee on April 23, 1977 when the Generals were an NCAA Division I institution in men’s lacrosse. • For the 13th year in a row UVA is facing an opponent from the Commonwealth of Virginia. From 2006-16 UVA played VMI every season, while adding Richmond to the annual schedule with the beginning of the Spiders’ pro- gram in 2014. • UVA beat Richmond, 14-10, on March 31 at Klöckner Stadium. 17 GAME VMI May 1, 2018 7 p.m. • Charlottesville, Va. Klöckner Stadium (8,000) • 5 NCAA TITLES • 17 ACC TITLES • 13 LACROSSE HALL OF FAMERS 2018 SCHEDULE Date Opponent Time /Result TV F.10 13/10 LOYOLA (Md.) W/13-12 (2OT) ACC Net. Extra F.17 at Drexel W/13-8 Drexel TV F.20 at High Point W/18-12 Big South Network F.24 rv/18 PRINCETON W/18-15 ACC Net. Extra M.4 12/12 SYRACUSE* L/11-12 ACC Net. Extra M.6 at Manhattan W/8-5 M.10 at Stony Brook W/15-14 M.17 at 4/4 Notre Dame* L/7-9 ESPNU M.20 DARTMOUTH W/12-6 ACC Net. Extra M.24 9/9 JOHNS HOPKINS L/13-15 ESPNU M.31 RICHMOND W/14-10 ACC Net. Extra A.7 at 20/rv North Carolina* W/15-12 ACC Net. Extra A.14 3/5 DUKE* L/13-18 ACC Net. Extra A.21 vs. rv/rv Vermont^ W/10-9 A.27 12/12 SYRACUSE ACC SF! W/11-10 ESPNU A.29 16/18 NOTRE DAME ACC F! L/7-17 ESPNU M.1 VMI 7 p.m. ACC Net. Extra M. 12-13 NCAA First Round & TBA ESPNU M. 19-20 NCAA Quarterfinals $ TBA ESPN2 or ESPNU M. 26 NCAA Semifinals % TBA ESPN or ESPN2 M. 28 NCAA Finals % TBA ESPN or ESPN 2 All Times Eastern; *ACC game; ! ACC Championship (Charlottesville, Va.); ^ New Canaan HS, New Canaan, Conn.; & NCAA First Round games at home sites; $ NCAA Quarterfinals hosted at Hofstra (May 19) & Navy (May 20) % NCAA Final Four hosted at Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass. Rankings: coaches poll/media poll Date: Tue., May 1, 2018 Location: Charlottesville, Va. Stadium: Klöckner Stadium (8,000) Rankings: Virginia (9 coaches, 10 media) Series vs. VMI: UVA leads, 23-0 in Charlottesville: UVA leads, 16-0 at Klöckner Stadium: UVA leads, 11-0 Last Meeting: 2016 (@ UVA, 19-4) First Meeting: 1949 (@UVA, 11-10) Largest UVA win: 33 (38-5, @UVA, 1996) Longest UVA Win Streak: 23 (1949-pres.) Tiffany vs. Birsner: First Meeting Websites: VirginiaSports.com VMIKeydets.com ON THE AIR ACC NETWORK EXTRA Dave Koehn, play-by-play Doug Tarring, analyst Allison Parrish, sideline @UVAMensLax @UVAMensLax @UVAMensLax #GOHOOS VIRGINIA MEDIA RELATIONS Men’s Lacrosse Contact: Vincent Briedis • @VincentBriedis O: (434) 982-5533 • C: (434) 362-3792 • [email protected]OPENING DRAW VIRGINIA CAVALIERS Record: 11-5, ACC: 1-3 Head Coach: Lars Tiffany UVA Record: 19-12 • second season Career Record: 132-81 • 14th season Tiffany vs. VMI: First Meeting VMI KEYDETS Record: 2-10, SoCon: 0-7 Head Coach: Jon Birsner VMI Record: 6-36 • third season Career Record: 6-36 • third season Birsner vs. UVA: 0-1 Mike D’Amario is set to play his final regular season game at Klöckner Stadi- um of his career. He enters Tuesday with 78 career goals in 51 career games. He needs four points for 100 in a career. VS Attack Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 2 Michael Kraus So. 43-37-80 38 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (honorable mention) 3 Ian Laviano Fr. 32-7-39 24 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 53 overall recruit 10 Mike D’Amario Sr. 27-3-30 14 GBs Has 78 career goals (96 points) in 51 career games First Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 5 Matt Moore Fr. 17-14-31 23 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 4 overall recruit 6 Dox Aitken So. 34-12-46 33 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 42 Mikey Herring Jr. 12-15-27 9 GBs Owns 41 career points (17-24) in 37 career games Face-off Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 6 Dox Aitken So. 34-12-46 33 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 28 Jared Conners So. 5-5-10 52 GBs Has seven career long-pole goals 36 Justin Schwenk So. 2-1-3 229x381 FOs Transfer from Monmouth Defensive Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 7 Chris Merle Fr. 0-1-1 9 GBs Spent the fall at the IMG Academy 20 Dave Smith Jr. 0-4-4 29 GBs Missed the Loyola game with an injury 34 John Fox Fr. 3-0-3 17 GBs Also played football in high school 9 Will Rock Fr. 0-5-5 43 GBs Disruptive pole defender 28 Jared Conners So. 5-5-10 52 GBs Has seven career long-pole goals Close Defense Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 16 Kyle Kology Fr. 0-0-0 12 CTs Made first collegiate start at Drexel 25 Scott Hooper Sr. 0-1-1 24 CTs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (third-team) 44 Logan Greco Jr. 0-0-0 19 CTs Owns 31 career starts Goalie Yr. GAA/Sv% Rec. Notes 38 Alex Rode Fr. 11.70/.496 7-5 Inside Lacrosse’s No. 1 goalie recruit VIRGINIA’S PROBABLE LINEUP #GOHOOS: BY THE NUMBERS 1 11 24 31 Virginia is No. 1 in the nation in ground balls per game with 37.88. UVA also led the nation in ground balls in 2017. Virginia’s 11 wins are the most by the Cavaliers in the regular season since the 2012 team won 11 before the NCAA Tournament. Tuesday is the 24th all-time meeting in lacrosse between UVA and VMI. The series was first played in 1949. Michael Kraus has recorded at least one point in 31 straight games. It is the longest active streak on the team.
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GAME OVERVIEW • Virginia concludes the regular season on Tuesday against in-state foe VMI. Faceoff is set for 7 p.m.• This week Virginia is ranked No. 9 in the USILA coaches poll and No. 10 in the Inside Lacrosse/Maverik media poll.
THE SERIES VS. THE KEYDETS• Tuesday is the 24th all-time meeting against the Keydets, a series UVA holds a 23-0 all-time record.• VMI returns to UVA’s schedule after taking a break in the series in 2017. UVA and VMI met every season between 2006-16.
UVA VS. THE COMMONWEALTH • UVA enters Tuesday’s contest with Richmond with a 110-19-2 all-time record against opponents from the Commonwealth.• Virginia has won 69 games in a row against opponents from the Commonwealth of Virginia. The last loss was to Washington & Lee on April 23, 1977 when the Generals were an NCAA Division I institution in men’s lacrosse.• For the 13th year in a row UVA is facing an opponent from the Commonwealth of Virginia. From 2006-16 UVA played VMI every season, while adding Richmond to the annual schedule with the beginning of the Spiders’ pro-gram in 2014. • UVA beat Richmond, 14-10, on March 31 at Klöckner Stadium.
17GAMEVMI
May 1, 20187 p.m. • Charlottesville, Va. Klöckner Stadium (8,000)
• 5 NCAA TITLES • 17 ACC TITLES • 13 LACROSSE HALL OF FAMERS 2018 SCHEDULEDate Opponent Time /Result TVF.10 13/10 LOYOLA (Md.) W/13-12 (2OT) ACC Net. ExtraF.17 at Drexel W/13-8 Drexel TVF.20 at High Point W/18-12 Big South NetworkF.24 rv/18 PRINCETON W/18-15 ACC Net. ExtraM.4 12/12 SYRACUSE* L/11-12 ACC Net. ExtraM.6 at Manhattan W/8-5M.10 at Stony Brook W/15-14M.17 at 4/4 Notre Dame* L/7-9 ESPNUM.20 DARTMOUTH W/12-6 ACC Net. ExtraM.24 9/9 JOHNS HOPKINS L/13-15 ESPNUM.31 RICHMOND W/14-10 ACC Net. ExtraA.7 at 20/rv North Carolina* W/15-12 ACC Net. ExtraA.14 3/5 DUKE* L/13-18 ACC Net. ExtraA.21 vs. rv/rv Vermont^ W/10-9A.27 12/12 SYRACUSE ACC SF! W/11-10 ESPNUA.29 16/18 NOTRE DAME ACC F! L/7-17 ESPNUM.1 VMI 7 p.m. ACC Net. ExtraM. 12-13 NCAA First Round & TBA ESPNU M. 19-20 NCAA Quarterfinals $ TBA ESPN2 or ESPNUM. 26 NCAA Semifinals % TBA ESPN or ESPN2M. 28 NCAA Finals % TBA ESPN or ESPN 2 All Times Eastern; *ACC game; ! ACC Championship (Charlottesville, Va.);^ New Canaan HS, New Canaan, Conn.;& NCAA First Round games at home sites;$ NCAA Quarterfinals hosted at Hofstra (May 19) & Navy (May 20)% NCAA Final Four hosted atGillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass.Rankings: coaches poll/media poll
Date: Tue., May 1, 2018Location: Charlottesville, Va.Stadium: Klöckner Stadium (8,000)Rankings: Virginia (9 coaches, 10 media)Series vs. VMI: UVA leads, 23-0
Head Coach: Lars TiffanyUVA Record: 19-12 • second seasonCareer Record: 132-81 • 14th seasonTiffany vs. VMI: First Meeting
VMI KEYDETSRecord: 2-10, SoCon: 0-7
Head Coach: Jon BirsnerVMI Record: 6-36 • third seasonCareer Record: 6-36 • third seasonBirsner vs. UVA: 0-1
Mike D’Amario is set to play his final regular season game at Klöckner Stadi-um of his career. He enters Tuesday with 78 career goals in 51 career games. He needs four points for 100 in a career.
VS
Attack Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 2 Michael Kraus So. 43-37-80 38 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (honorable mention) 3 Ian Laviano Fr. 32-7-39 24 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 53 overall recruit 10 Mike D’Amario Sr. 27-3-30 14 GBs Has 78 career goals (96 points) in 51 career gamesFirst Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 5 Matt Moore Fr. 17-14-31 23 GBs Inside Lacrosse’s No. 4 overall recruit 6 Dox Aitken So. 34-12-46 33 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 42 Mikey Herring Jr. 12-15-27 9 GBs Owns 41 career points (17-24) in 37 career games Face-off Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 6 Dox Aitken So. 34-12-46 33 GBs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (second-team) 28 Jared Conners So. 5-5-10 52 GBs Has seven career long-pole goals 36 Justin Schwenk So. 2-1-3 229x381 FOs Transfer from MonmouthDefensive Midfield Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 7 Chris Merle Fr. 0-1-1 9 GBs Spent the fall at the IMG Academy 20 Dave Smith Jr. 0-4-4 29 GBs Missed the Loyola game with an injury 34 John Fox Fr. 3-0-3 17 GBs Also played football in high school 9 Will Rock Fr. 0-5-5 43 GBs Disruptive pole defender 28 Jared Conners So. 5-5-10 52 GBs Has seven career long-pole goalsClose Defense Yr. G-A-P Other Notes 16 Kyle Kology Fr. 0-0-0 12 CTs Made first collegiate start at Drexel 25 Scott Hooper Sr. 0-1-1 24 CTs Face-Off Yearbook All-American (third-team) 44 Logan Greco Jr. 0-0-0 19 CTs Owns 31 career startsGoalie Yr. GAA/Sv% Rec. Notes 38 Alex Rode Fr. 11.70/.496 7-5 Inside Lacrosse’s No. 1 goalie recruit
VIRGINIA’S PROBABLE LINEUP
#GOHOOS: BY THE NUMBERS
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Virginia is No. 1 in the nation in ground balls per game with 37.88. UVA also led the nation in ground balls in 2017.
Virginia’s 11 wins are the most by the Cavaliers in the regular season since the 2012 team won 11 before the NCAA Tournament.
Tuesday is the 24th all-time meeting in lacrosse between UVA and VMI. The series was first played in 1949.
Michael Kraus has recorded at least one point in 31 straight games. It is the longest active streak on the team.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
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CREDENTIALSAdmission to the press box is by official credential only and is strictly limited to members of the working press, radio and television personnel. Please allow ample time for the mailing of credentials or they will be left at the Will Call window at Klöckner Stadium. Special requests should be made in advance. Parking is always available on an unreserved basis at University Hall. Normal pregame and postgame information is supplied.
PHOTOGRAPHERSRequests for photo passes must be made in advance through the Athletics Media Relations Office. Photographers must observe the field markings for lacrosse. No tri-pod equipment may be used on the field level, for the safety of the players and photographers. RADIOBroadcasts are made from the radio broadcast facilities in Klöckner Stadium. There is one courtesy line available for use by visiting radio crews. Adequate space is available for the visiting team needs. Arrangement for broadcasts must be validated in advance through the UVA Athletics Media Relations Office.
INTERVIEWSAll requests for interviews with coaches and players should be made through Vincent Briedis in the Athletics Media Relations Office. Postgame interviews are conducted at field level following the postgame handshake. Locker rooms are closed.
COVERING A GAME AT KLÖCKNER STADIUMWhen covering a game at Klöckner Stadium, please include the umlaut above the letter ‘o’ in Klöckner. Mac users can do this by clicking Alt-u or Option-u and then typing the letter o. PC users should make sure their number lock is off and then type Alt 0246.
COVERING THE CAVALIERSUNIQUELY UVAThe University of Virginia is an institution rich with history and tradition. Here is some of the terminology that contributes to UVA’s culture.
Grounds: The term used by students, faculty and alumni to refer to the University dating as far back as Thomas Jefferson. “Campus” is never used.
First Year, Second Year, Third Year, Fourth Year: Instead of freshman, sophomore, junior, senior. Why you may ask? To be a “senior” implies that a person has reached the final phase of learning, a feat that Thomas Jefferson believed to be impossible, arguing instead that education is a life-long process.
Commonwealth: Virginia is one of four constituent states of the United States of America that officially uses the name “Commonwealth” instead of the word state in all references. The other three common-wealths are Kentucky, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.
UNIVERSITY NICKNAMESVirginia’s athletics teams have been accompanied by a somewhat confusing array of nicknames. The most prominent and widely accepted of these monikers are “Cavaliers,” “Wahoos” and “Hoos.”
Although the terms “Cavaliers,” “Wahoos” and “Hoos” are used almost interchangeably to refer to University teams and players, “Cavaliers” is more often used by the media, while “Wahoos” and “Hoos” are frequently used by Virginia students and fans.
Legend has it that Washington & Lee baseball fans dubbed the Virginia players “Wahoos” during the fiercely contested rivalry that existed between the two in-state schools in the 1890s. By 1940, “Wahoos”was in general use around Grounds to denote University students or events relating to them. The abbre-viated “Hoos” sprang up later in student newspapers and has gained growing popularity in recent years.
THE CAVALIER MASCOTThe costumed Cavalier with a large character head debuted during Virginia’s 1984 football season and has remained the official mascot of the University.
UNIVERSITY COLORSOrange and blue were adopted as the University of Virginia’s official athletic colors at a mass student meeting in 1888. UVA athletic teams had previously worn silver gray and cardinal red, but those colors did not stand out on muddy football fields, prompting a student movement to change them.
One of the students attending the mass meeting was Allen Potts, a star athlete who played on Virginia’s first football team in 1888. Potts showed up at the meeting wearing a navy blue-and-orange scarf that he had acquired during a summer boating expedition at Oxford University. Orange and blue were cho-sen as the official athletic colors after one of Potts’ fellow students pulled the scarf off Potts’ neck and, waving it to the crowd, yelled, “How will this do?” UVA later served as the inspiration for schools like Auburn and Florida when they selected school colors. WAH-HOO-WAHThe origin of “Wah-hoo-wah” is uncertain. The cheer was used to root on Virginia teams as early as 1890 and may have been borrowed from Dartmouth College, whose athletics teams were once known asthe Indians.
Legend attributes the yell to Natalie Floyd Otey, who sang the ballad “Where’er You Are, There Shall My Love Be” at Charlottesville’s Levy Opera House in 1893. The predominantly student audience noticed that Otey warbled the first three words of the song between each of the stanzas and decided to join in the refrain. By evening’s end, goes the legend, the crowd had corrupted “Where’er You Are” into “Wah-hoo-wah.”
The Levy Opera House stands at the corner of High Street and Park Street and has since been renovated into an office building.
ATHLETICS MEDIA RELATIONSVINCENT BRIEDISAsst. Director for Media Relations(Primary Football Contact) Player Interviews
THE SERIES VS. VMI• UVA holds a 23-0 all-time record against the Keydets.• UVA’s 11-10 win in the first game in 1949 is the closest of the series.• The teams met again in 1950 (a 14-4 UVA win) and then did not meet again until 1988.• The Cavaliers have rarely trailed the Keydets.• Based on available records going back to 1988, the Cavaliers have only trailed in three games.• VMI scored the first two goals in 1994 (2:19 and 7:30 of the first quarter) and led for 5:33.• The Cavaliers quickly tied the score with 7:08 to go in the opening quarter and took the lead for good with 3:51 left in the period.• VMI scored the first goal in 2012 (13:55 of the first quarter) and led for 5:41.• The Cavaliers didn’t score until the 8:17 mark on a Steele Stanwick unassisted goal, which prompted a 6-0 UVA run.• In 2013 VMI scored the first goal of the game at the 13:07 mark of the first quarter and led for 1:42.• UVA scored at 11:25 on a Nick O’Reilly goal, which prompted a 15-0 run. VMI didn’t score again until the fourth quarter.• In 2016, VMI led UVA 3-1 in the second quarter before closing the game on an 18-1 run.• The Cavaliers’ average victory margin in the series is 17.3 goals.• The 2009 meeting between these two teams was UVA’s first in Lexington, Va., since 1997. • UVA played again in Lexington in 2015, a 17-3 Cavalier win as the Keydets didn’t score until late in the fourth quarter.
VIRGINIA VS. THE SOUTHERN CONFERENCE• The Southern Conference is in its fourth season as a men’s lacrosse conference.• Virginia is 33-2 all-time against current memembers of the Southern Conference.• Virginia is 0-1 against Air Force, 3-0 against Bellarmine, 2-1 against High Point, 5-0 against Richmond and 23-0 against VMI.• There are three Southern Conference opponents UVA has never played: Furman, Jacksonville and Mercer. • All three of those programs started playing lacrosse in the last seven years: Jacksonville (2010), Mercer (2011) and Furman (2014).• The conference as a whole is very young in lacrosse. Richmond began in 2014 and High Point began in 2013. The old guard in the leauge are Air Force, who began playing lacrosse in 1967, and VMI, who started in 1983.• By comparison, UVA started its first varsity lacrosse season in 1904.
SERIES HISTORY�UVA leads, 23-0 • In Charlottesville: UVA leads, 16-0 • at VMI: UVA leads, 7-0 • at Neutral Site: N/A�Longest UVA win streak: 23 (1949-pres.) • Longest VMI win Streak: N/A�Largest Victory: 33 (38-5), Virginia in 1996
Season UVA VMI W/L/T Site1949 11 10 W UVA1950 14 4 W VMI1988 18 5 W UVA1989 27 7 W UVA1990 25 2 W UVA1991 27 5 W UVA1992 17 5 W VMI1993 23 7 W UVA1994 22 7 W VMI1995 28 6 W VMI1996 38 5 W UVA1997 31 4 W VMI2006 21 4 W UVA2007 20 0 W UVA2008 24 5 W UVA2009 19 3 W VMI2010 20 6 W UVA2011 22 6 W UVA2012 19 5 W UVA2013 18 4 W UVA2014 21 3 W UVA2015 17 3 W VMI2016 19 4 W UVA
UVA goals: 501VMI goals: 110
UVA Series Superlatives:Goals: 6, Mark LaVerghetta, 1996; Chris Bocklet, 2011; Mark Cockerton, 2013Assists: 8, Rob Falk, 1992Points: 10, Steve Wilt (4g, 6a), 1991Saves: 8, Tom Groeninger, 1988 Matt Barrett, 2015
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
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VIRGINIA ON THE GREEN GRASS OF KLÖCKNER• Virginia owns a 136-38 (.7861) all-time record at Klöckner Stadium, including a 5-4 mark in 2018. UVA also is 11-3 all-time at Klöckner Stadium in the NCAA Tournament. • UVA is 10-6 all-time at Klöckner Stadium under head coach Lars Tiffany.• Klöckner Stadium first hosted lacrosse in 1993. KRAUS CLIMBS UVA SINGLE-SEASON POINTS LIST• Attackman Michael Kraus is climbing the single-season points list at UVA. He needs three assists to become the first Cavalier in program history with 40+ goals and 40+ assists in the same season:
NAME, SEASON POINTS (G-A) 1. Doug Knight, 1996 86 (56-30) 2. Steele Stanwick, 2012 80 (29-51) Michael Kraus, 2018 80 (43-37) 4. Jay Connor, 1972 76 (18-58) 5. Michael Watson, 1996 74 (48-26) Tim Whiteley, 1996 74 (25-49) 7. Tucker Radebaugh, 1999 73 (42-31) 8. Doug Knight, 1997 72 (39-33) 9. Tim Whiteley, 1994 71 (24-47)10. Steele Stanwick, 2011 70 (32-38) AITKEN REACHES 30 GOALS IN 2018 • Midfielder Dox Aitken is climbing the single-season goals list by a UVA mid-fielder. He is only the 12th Cavalier midfielder to reach 30 in a season:
NAME, SEASON GOALS 1. Matt Poskay, 2006 41 2. Pete Eldredge, 1972 36 3. Greg Traynor, 1994 34 A.J. Shannon, 2003 34 Dox Aitken, 2018 34 5. David Curry, 1997 33 7. Pete Eldredge, 1971 31 Greg Traynor, 1995 31 Jay Jalbert, 1999 31 Shamel Bratton, 2009 3111. Rich Kroll, 1976 30 Rick Giusto, 1982 30 AITKEN THE FASTEST UVA MID TO 50 GOALS• Dox Aitken became the fastest Cavalier midfielder to 50 career goals, doing so in 25 career games (vs. Hopkins on March 24). • He reached the mark in five fewer games than Pete Eldredge (30 games). SCHWENK WINNING THE FACEOFF• Monmouth transfer Justin Schwenk has been a valuable addition to the UVA team in 2018.• He is currently No. 1 in the ACC and No. 11 in the nation with a .601 winning percentage. Schwenk has won 229-of-381 faceoffs in 2018.• He is also No. 1 in the ACC with 5.81 ground balls per game.• With 20 faceoff wins at Stony Brook, Schwenk is the only player in program history with at least two games with 20+ faceoff wins.• Schwenk is No. 2 all-time on UVA’s single-game ledger for faceoffs won in a game after he posted 25 against Princeton. The 25 wins are the most in the nation this year for a game. • At Monmouth in 2017, Schwenk was named the MAAC Rookie of the Year. SCHWENK SETS UVA SINGLE-SEASON RECORD• Midfielder Justin Schwenk won 13 faceoffs against Syracuse in the semifinal round of the ACC Championship to pass Jack deVilliers for the most single-sea-son faceoff wins in UVA history.
NAME, SEASON FACEOFF WINS 1. Justin Schwenk, 2018 229 2. Jack deVilliers, 2003 204 3. Chad Gaudet, 2009 182 4. Brad Wood, 1986 180 5. Jason Hard, 1997 176
Name, Pos. Streak ‘18 Goals Career Goals Streak StartedMichael Kraus, A 14 43 77 Feb. 20, 2018Mike D’Amario, A 5 27 78 April 7, 2018Ryan Conrad, M 3 4 30 Feb. 20, 2018Mikey Herring, A/M 1 12 17 April 29, 2018
Name, Pos. Streak ‘18 Points Career Points Streak StartedMichael Kraus, A 31 43-37-80 77-59-136 Feb. 11, 2017Ian Laviano, A 8 32-7-39 32-7-39 March 20, 2018Ryan Conrad, M 6 4-3-7 30-17-47 April 29, 2017Matt Moore, M 6 17-14-31 17-14-31 March 31, 2018Mike D’Amario, A 5 27-3-30 78-18-96 April 7, 2018Mikey Herring, A/M 1 12-15-27 17-24-41 April 29, 2018
CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A GOAL
CONSECUTIVE GAMES WITH A POINT
KRAUS REACHES 100 CAREER POINTS• Currently Virginia’s Michael Kraus has 136 career points• Kraus tied Jay Connor and Tom Duquette for being the second fastest Cavalier to 100 career points, doing so in 25 career games (vs. Johns Hopkins).• Only Kevin Pehlke reached 100 career points faster, doing so in 22 career game. UNDERCLASSMEN SHINING FOR UVA IN 2018• The freshmen and sophomore classes for UVA are providing much of the offense through the first 15 games. • Of UVA’s 198 goals this year, 148 (74.7 percent) have been scored by freshmen or sophomores. • Of UVA’s 321 total points this year, 240 (74.8 percent) have been scored by freshmen or sophomores. LAVIANO ONE OF THE NATION’S TOP FRESHMEN• Ian Laviano is tied for No. 3 among the nation’s freshmen with 32 goals.• Here are the top freshmen goal scorers:
NAME, SCHOOL, POSITION GOALS1. Tehoka Nanticoke, Albany, Attack 34 Joe Robertson, Duke, Attack 343. Ian Laviano, Virginia, Attack 324. Mike Hawkins, Colgate, Attack 305. Asher Nolting, High Point, Attack 287. Marc O’Rourke, Bryant, Attack 277. Logan Wisnauskas, Maryland, Attack* 26* - denotes redshirt freshman LAVIANO AMONG UVA ALL-TIME FRESHMEN
• Attackman Ian Laviano is climbing the all-time goals list by UVA freshmen in a season:
NAME, SEASON GOALS 1. Joe Yevoli, 2002 40 2. Steele Stanwick, 2009 36 3. Kevin Pehlke, 1990 34 Michael Kraus, 2017 34 5. Ian Laviano, 2017 32 6. Michael Watson, 1994 31 7. Garrett Billings, 2006 30 8. John Christmas, 2002 29 Dox Aitken, 2017 29
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2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
MOORE AMONG UVA FRESHMEN MIDFIELDERS• Matt Moore is climbing the all-time UVA freshman midfielder goal list.
NAME, SEASON GOALS1. Dox Aitken, 2017 292. Larry LeDoyen, 1983 19 Jay Jalbert, 1997 194. Richie Werner, 1972 17 Matt Moore, 2018 176. Roddy Marino, 1983 167. Brad Hoag, 1994 14 Shamel Bratton, 2008 149. Rob Emery, 2011 13 Ryan Tucker, 2012 13 • Matt Moore is also climbing the UVA freshman single-season midfielder points list. NAME, SEASON POINTS (G-A)1. Dox Aitken, 2017 40 (29-11)2. Matt Moore, 2018 31 (17-14)3. Scott Gerham, 1981 27 (11-16)4. Larry LeDoyen, 1983 25 (19-6)5. Jay Jalbert, 1997 23 (19-4)6. Doug Cooper, 1971 21 (11-10)7. Andy Kraus, 1987 20 (12-8) Rob Emery, 2011 20 (13-7) VIRGINIA HITS GAME 1,000• Virginia has played 1,011 all-time games in program history.• UVA’s March 4 game against Syracuse was the 1,000th game in program history.• UVA is the 13th Division I school to accomplish the feat. Current DI program Hobart also has reached the 1,000-game plateau, but didn’t start playing Division I lacrosse until 1995.• From the 1,000-game list, UVA has four members on its 2018 schedule. • Of the 12 current members on the list, UVA has played everyone except for Lehigh. UVA’s 93 games against Johns Hopkins are the most against any opponent on the list.• List of 1,000-game programs overall numbers below:
No. School All-Time Games 1. Johns Hopkins 1,327 2. Lehigh 1,309 3. Syracuse 1,264 4. Cornell 1,263 5. Princeton 1,221 6. Harvard 1,201 7. Army 1,180 8. Navy 1,167 9. Rutgers 1,136 10. Penn 1,135 11. Maryland 1,092 12. Dartmouth 1,082 13. Virginia 1,011
Name, Pos. ’14 ‘15 ‘16 ‘17 ‘18 Career StreakScott Hooper, D * 13 15 14 15 57 7Logan Greco, D * 13 7 * 12 32 9Mike D’Amario, A * 0 14 5 12 31 4Zach Ambrosino, D * * 9 14 5 29 -Michael Kraus, A * * * 13 16 29 17Dox Aitken, M * * * 9 16 25 18Ryan Conrad, M * * 2 13 5 20 -Ian Laviano, A * * * * 15 15 7Kyle Kology, D * * * * 15 15 15Cameron Stafford, A * 0 11^ 0 3 14 -Griffin Thompson, GK * * * 7 6 13 -Matt Moore, M * * * * 11 11 11Alex Rode, GK * * * * 9 9 7Matt Emery, M * 0 2 1 5 8 -Regan Quinn, M * * * * 8 8 -Mikey Herring, A/M * * 0 0 3 3 3Mitch Gordon, A * * * 0 2 2 -Cooper Fersen, D * 0 0 1 0 1 -* did not play ^ - starts at Vermont Note: Some starts may be at positions other than the ones listed.
VIRGINIA IN THE POLLS• Virginia has been ranked in the top five of the USILA Coaches poll 281 weeks all-time. • UVA has been ranked in the Top 10 in 419 polls all-time.• UVA’s USILA ranking of No. 5 on Feb. 26 is its highest since being No. 5 on Feb. 23, 2015. • The USILA Poll began in 1973 MAN-DOWN GOALS AND EMO GOALS• Virginia scored four man-down goals through its first four games this sea-son. During that span UVA only had scored three extra-man goals. • The four man-down goals are the most in a season for UVA since the 2006 NCAA title team tallied seven. • UVA’s Michael Kraus has scored two man-down goals in 2017, one at High Point and one against Princeton. • Ian Laviano has one man-down goal (vs. Princeton) and Justin Schwenk (at High Point) has the other. • UVA scored its fourth EMO goal in game No. 5 against Syracuse to make the man-down and man-up goals even at four each. UVA doubled its man-up goals in the Stony Brook game, notching four. VIRGINIA IS A GROUND BALL MACHINE• UVA has led the nation in ground balls four of the last nine years (2009-17).• In 2018, UVA currently ranks No. 1 in the nation in ground balls (37.88). • UVA is the only school in the nation to finish in the Top-5 nationally in ground balls per game eight times over the last nine seasons. • Duke is the closest team to UVA, finishing in the Top-5 four times during the same span.• The only school in 2016 to finish with more ground balls per game was UVA head coach Lars Tiffany’s 2016 Brown team. • Below is how UVA has fared over the last nine seasons in ground balls: Virginia’s NCAA Ranking for Ground Balls Per Game
Year NCAA Rank Ground Balls Teams Ahead of UVA (Rank) 2009 2 40.78 per game North Carolina (1) 2010 1 37.17 per game N/A 2011 3 36.83 per game VMI (1), Jacksonville (2) 2012 3 35.25 per game Bryant (1), Robert Morris (2) 2013 1 39.93 per game N/A 2014 1 37.75 per game N/A 2015 12 32.13 per game 11 other teams 2016 2 35.20 per game Brown (1)2017 1 43.33 per game N/A2018 1 37.88 per game N/A CONRAD OUT FOR THE SEASON• Virginia captain Ryan Conrad is out for the season due to a lower extremity injury suffered in Virginia’s ACC game with Syracuse.• Conrad was a first-team preseason USILA All-American and on the Tewaaraton Trophy Watch List.• In five games in 2018, Conrad scored four goals, dished out three assists and picked up 23 ground balls as a valuable component of the faceoff midfield. In 34 career games, Conrad has 30 goals, 17 assists and 97 ground balls. UVA SCORES BIG AT HIGH POINT• After trailing 5-2 at High Point on Tuesday night, UVA outscored the Panthers 16-7 over the game’s final 51 minutes to take home a wild 18-12 win.• In the fourth period Dox Aitken was knocked with a full-time served penalty for an illegal body check with 9:00 remaining. HPU scored 29 seconds into the penalty.• Facing off man-down, UVA faceoff specialist Justin Schwenk won the ensuing faceoff and found Michael Kraus for a man-down goal. Facing off man-down again, Schwenk won again and scored 23 seconds later to take a 2-1 advantage during HPU’s EMO situation. • Michael Kraus led all players with five goals and two assists. Ironically he scored seven points last season against High Point too, but with flipped num-bers (two goals and five assists). In two career games against the Panthers, Kraus owns 14 total points on seven goals and seven assists.
YOUTH STARTING FOR UVA• Five different freshmen have started a game for the Cavaliers in 2018, while eight Cavaliers that have started this season are either freshmen or sopho-mores. • Seven of the last nine games UVA has started two freshmen and one sopho-more on its midfield: Dox Aitken (So.), Matt Moore (Fr.), Regan Quinn (Fr.).• Attackman Ian Laviano has started 15 games.• Defensemen Kyle Kology has started 15 games.• Midfielders Matt Moore has started nine games and Regan Quinn has stated seven games.• Goalie Alex Rode has started nine games.• Sophomores Dox Aitken, Michael Kraus and Giffin Thompson have also helped lead the youth movement in the starting lineup.• UVA also gets a lot of burn from first-year SSDM John Fox and Chris Merle, while first-year Will Rock sees a lot of time as a LSM. Sophomore faceoff spe-cialist Justin Schwenk takes the majority of UVA’s faceoffs.
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2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
SCORING DROUGHTS FOR OPPONENTSBelow are the longest scoring droughts for OPPOSING teams against Virginia this season (min. 10 minutes): Opp. Time Drought (Quarter) DateManhattan 22:00 4:28 (1st) to 12:28 (3rd) 3/6Richmond 18:49 8:53 (3rd) to 4:54 (4th) 3/31Syracuse 17:51 0:44 (1st) to 12:53 (3rd) 4/27Notre Dame 17:36 10:22 (1st) to 7:46 (2nd) 3/17Johns Hopkins 17:27 3:07 (1st) to 00:40 (2nd) 3/24Notre Dame 16:47 0:55 (2nd) to 14:08 (4th) 3/17Vermont 16:16 1:16 (3rd) to 00:00 (4th) 4/21Loyola 16:03 14:49 (3rd) to 13:46 (4th) 2/10Dartmouth 15:55 12:49 (2nd) to 11:54 (3rd) 3/20Dartmouth 15:14 13:03 (1st) to 12:49 (2nd) 3/20North Carolina 15:06 9:05 (2nd) to 8:59 (3rd) 4/7Stony Brook 12:26 15:00 (1st) to 2:34 (1st) 3/10Manhattan 12:03 7:22 (3rd) to 10:19 (4th) 3/6Johns Hopkins 11:53 15:00 (1st) to 3:07 (1st) 3/24Drexel 11:17 11:51 (3rd) to 0:34 (3rd) 2/17Princeton 11:06 0:04 (2nd) to 3:58 (3rd) 2/24Drexel 10:44 12:22 (4th) to 1:38 (4th) 2/17Duke 10:29 13:11 (3rd) to 2:42 (3rd) 4/14Syracuse 10:26 10:39 (4th) to 0:13 (4th) 3/4High Point 10:24 10:40 (3rd) to 0:16 (3rd) 2/20Dartmouth 10:24 11:54 (3rd) to 1:30 (3rd) 3/20Manhattan 10:19 10:19 (4th) to 0:00 (4th) 3/6
Name Years Games Goals Goals Per Game 1. Doug Knight 1994-97 60 165 2.752. Michael Watson 1994-97 62 142 2.293. Matt Ward 2003-06 62 139 2.244. Kevin Pehlke 1990-93 55 138 2.515. Chris Bocklet 2009-12 63 137 2.176. Ben Rubeor 2005-08 61 136 2.237. Steele Stanwick 2009-12 69 126 1.838. Garrett Billings 2006-09 69 125 1.81 Mark Cockerton 2011-14 63 125 1.9810. Danny Glading 2006-09 69 119 1.7211. Chase Monroe 1985-88 53 116 2.1912. Jay Jalbert 1997-00 58 112 1.9313. Tom Duquette 1970-73 51 107 2.1014. Tucker Radebaugh 1996-99 59 106 1.8015. Jeff Nicklas 1982-86 52 104 2.00
All-TIME UVA CAREER 100 GOAL SCORERS
Name Years GlS1. Eldredge, Pete 1969-72 94 Carroll, Brian 2007-10 943. Bratton, Shamel 2008-11 89 4. Poskay, Matt 2003-06 885. Rotelli, Chris 2000-03 85 6. Traynor, Greg 1992-95 827. Jalbert, Jay* 1997-00 78 8. Tucker, Ryan 2012-15 779. Kraus, Andy 87-89, 91 7510. Emery, Rob 2011-14 73 Holman, Tom 1976-79 7012. Giusto, Rick 1979-82 69 Jones, David 1992-95 6914. Cooper, Doug 1971-74 66 Kroll, Rich 1974-77 6616. Colin Briggs 2009-12 63 Aitken, Dox 2017-pres. 6318. Shannon, A.J.* 2000-03 59 Bratton, Rhamel 2008-11 5920. Curry, David* 1996-97 55 Dixon, Kyle 2003-06 55 Coholan, Greg* 2013-16 55* - career goals as a midfielder
UVA ALL-TIME MIDFIELDER CAREER GOAL LEADERS
VIRGINIA WINS SEASON OPENER• With UVA’s season-opening win over then-No. 13 Loyola, the Cavaliers have won 10 of their last 11 season openers and 16-of-18. FIRST YEARS COME STRONG VS. LOYOLA• UVA first years making their collegiate debut against then-No. 13 Loyola on Feb. 10 scored eight of UVA’s 13 goals (61.5 percent) and 11 of UVA’s 22 total points (50 percent), helping the Cavaliers win in double overtime (13-12).• UVA first years that scored goals: Ian Laviano (5), Matt Moore (2), John Fox (1).• UVA first years that scored points: Laviano (6), Moore (3), Fox (1), Will Rock (1).
2018 CAPTAINS NAMED• Midfielder Ryan Conrad and defenseman Scott Hooper have been selected by their peers as the captains of the 2017 men’s lacrosse team.• Conrad is the first “third-year” named captain since Steele Stanwick in 2011. Greg Coholan and Tanner Scales each were named captains as redshirt jur-niors during their fourth year on Grounds. FIRST YEARS SHINE VS. LOYOLA IN 2017 & 2018• First year Ian Laviano scored six points (five goals, one assist) in his collegiate debut against then-No. 13 Loyola. Along with Matt Moore’s three points (two goals, one assist), the duo matched Dox Aitken and Michael Kraus’ duo debut in 2017 with nine combined points.• Aitken (four goals) and Kraus (two goals, three assists) led UVA with nine combined points at then-No. 6 Loyola in 2017.• The nine combined points by the 2017 and 2018 UVA freshmen duos in a season-opening collegiate debut is the most since Drew McKnight (two goals, four assists) and Jay Jalbert (four goals) combined for 10 points in the 1997 season opener against then-No. 2 Syracuse.• Laviano became the 8th Cavalier freshman since 1997 to record at least four points in a season-opening deubt. Aitken and Kraus were No. 6 and No. 7.• Here is a list of UVA true freshmen since 1990 that tallied at least four points in a collegiate debut that came in the season opener:
CONRAD OUT FOR THE SEASON• Virginia captain Ryan Conrad is out for the season due to a lower extremity injury suffered in Virginia’s ACC game with Syracuse.• Conrad was a first-team preseason USILA All-American and on the Tewaaraton Trophy Watch List.• In five games in 2018, Conrad scored four goals, dished out three assists and picked up 23 ground balls as a valuable component of the faceoff midfield. In 34 career games, Conrad has 30 goals, 17 assists and 97 ground balls. UVA SCORES BIG AT HIGH POINT• After trailing 5-2 at High Point on Tuesday night, UVA outscored the Panthers 16-7 over the game’s final 51 minutes to take home a wild 18-12 win.• In the fourth period Dox Aitken was knocked with a full-time served penalty for an illegal body check with 9:00 remaining. HPU scored 29 seconds into the pen-alty.• Facing off man-down, UVA faceoff specialist Justin Schwenk won the ensuing faceoff and found Michael Kraus for a man-down goal. Facing off man-down again, Schwenk won again and scored 23 seconds later to take a 2-1 advantage during HPU’s EMO situation. • Michael Kraus led all players with five goals and two assists. Ironically he scored seven points last season against High Point too, but with flipped numbers (two goals and five assists). In two career games against the Panthers, Kraus owns 14 total points on seven goals and seven assists.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
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ALL-ACC• Dox Aitken, M• Michael Kraus, A
ALL-ACC TOURNAMENT• Mike D’Amario, A• Michael Kraus, A• Matt Moore, M• Justin Schwenk, M TEWAARATON TROPHY NOMINEES• Dox Aitken, M• Michael Kraus, A TEWAARATON TROPHY WATCH LIST• Dox Aitken, M• Ryan Conrad, M • Michael Kraus, A USILA PLAYER OF THE YEAR WATCH LIST• Michael Kraus, A IL FACE-OFF YEARBOOK PRESEASON ALL-AMERICANS• Ryan Conrad, M (first-team)• Dox Aitken, M (second-team)• Scott Hooper, D (third-team)• Michael Kraus, A (honorable mention)
IL FACE-OFF YEARBOOK MIDSEASON ALL-AMERICANS• Dox Aitken, M (first-team)• Ryan Conrad, M (honorable mention)• Scott Hooper, D (honorable mention)• Michael Kraus, A (honorable mention)
IL FACE-OFF YEARBOOK PRESEASON ALL-ACC• Dox Aitken, M• Ryan Conrad, M• Scott Hooper, D• Michael Kraus, A
ACC OFFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK• Ian Laviano (Feb. 12)• Michael Kraus (April 9)
ACC DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK• Griffin Thompson (Feb. 12)
BALTIMORE SUN NATIONAL PLAYER OF THE WEEK• Ian Laviano (Feb. 13)
USILA TEAM OF THE WEEK MEMBERS• Ian Laviano (Feb. 13)• Jared Conners (Feb. 27)• Michael Kraus (March 13)• Logan Greco (April 10)• Michael Kraus (April 17)
MAJOR LEAGUE LACROSSE DRAFT• Scott Hooper, Charlotte Hounds (Round 4, Pick 28)
2018 HONORS #HOOSTOGETHER PATCHES IN 2018• In the aftermath of the events that took place in Charlottesville this summer, the Virginia athletics department initiated the #HoosTogether campaign on social media in an effort to unite our community in support of love, diversity and inclusion.• During the 2017-18 academic year, all UVA sports programs will incorporate a #HoosTogether patch on their uniforms or equipment. It is UVA’s hope the patches serve as a reminder of what can be accomplished when we are united behind a common goal and we hope this effort continues to help bring our community together. VIRGINIA WINS SEASON OPENER• With UVA’s season-opening win over then-No. 13 Loyola, the Cavaliers have won 10 of their last 11 season openers and 16-of-18. FIRST YEARS COME STRONG VS. LOYOLA• UVA first years making their collegiate debut against then-No. 13 Loyola on Feb. 10 scored eight of UVA’s 13 goals (61.5 percent) and 11 of UVA’s 22 total points (50 percent), helping the Cavaliers win in double overtime (13-12).• UVA first years that scored goals: Ian Laviano (5), Matt Moore (2), John Fox (1).• UVA first years that scored points: Laviano (6), Moore (3), Fox (1), Will Rock (1).
2018 CAPTAINS NAMED• Midfielder Ryan Conrad and defenseman Scott Hooper have been selected by their peers as the captains of the 2017 men’s lacrosse team.• Conrad is the first “third-year” named captain since Steele Stanwick in 2011. Greg Coholan and Tanner Scales each were named captains as redshirt jur-niors during their fourth year on Grounds. FIRST YEARS SHINE VS. LOYOLA IN 2017 & 2018• First year Ian Laviano scored six points (five goals, one assist) in his collegiate debut against then-No. 13 Loyola. Along with Matt Moore’s three points (two goals, one assist), the duo matched Dox Aitken and Michael Kraus’ duo debut in 2017 with nine combined points.• Aitken (four goals) and Kraus (two goals, three assists) led UVA with nine combined points at then-No. 6 Loyola in 2017.• The nine combined points by the 2017 and 2018 UVA freshmen duos in a season-opening collegiate debut is the most since Drew McKnight (two goals, four assists) and Jay Jalbert (four goals) combined for 10 points in the 1997 season opener against then-No. 2 Syracuse.• Laviano became the 8th Cavalier freshman since 1997 to record at least four points in a season-opening deubt. Aitken and Kraus were No. 6 and No. 7.• Here is a list of UVA true freshmen since 1990 that tallied at least four points in a collegiate debut that came in the season opener:
VIRGINIA OPENS DREXEL GAME QUICKLY• Virginia scored two goals in the first 14 seconds of its game at Drexel last Saturday. • Justin Schwenk won the game’s opening faceoff and streaked toward the
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2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANSNCAA Statistics
Virginia - 2017-18 Men's Lacrosse Ranking Summary thru games 04/29/2018
StatisticNational
Rank
Conference
RankValueNational Leader Value
Conference
LeaderValue
Assists Per Game (68 ranked) 5 1 7.69 Cornell 10.14 Virginia 7.69
Caused Turnovers Per Game (69 ranked) 10 1 8.38 Hampton 11.58 Virginia 8.38
Virginia midfielder Dox Aitken wasted lit-tle time in the second overtime, scooping up the ground ball off the faceoff and pushing it through traffic, including splitting two Loyola defenders, before scoring the unassisted goal to lift the Cavaliers (1-0) over the No. 13 Greyhounds (0-1), 13-12, at Klöckner Stadium. Aitken’s goal came 15 seconds into the second overtime period. Loyola was pinpoint in the first half, entering the intermission with a 7-3 lead, as Pat Spencer recorded two goals and two assists. Mike Orefice took the opening faceoff of the third quarter right in for a goal, giving the Greyhounds an 8-3 advantage 11 seconds into the second half. UVA’s mojo ignited on Cameron Stafford’s man-up goal, courtesy of an Ian Laviano help-er with 11:23 left in the third quarter. Stafford’s goal started a 7-0 Virginia run that was capped on Michael Kraus’ unassisted goal with 14:33 left in the fourth period. Laviano scored three goals in the spurt, including giving UVA its first lead of the game 10 seconds left in the fourth quarter. Spencer ended UVA’s run with an unas-sisted goal at 13:46, but UVA scored two more quick goals to take a 12-9 advantage. Matt Moore’s goal capped the mini two-goal run with 9:55 remaining in regulation. The Greyhounds bounced back, scoring three straight goals to tie the game, 12-12, with 2:14 in regulation. Loyola held the ball most of the closing minutes, unable to score before heading to overtime. Loyola was unable to get a shot off in the first overtime, while turning the ball over three times. The Greyhounds had a chance late in the first overtime, but were unable to get a shot, setting up Aitken’s heroics to start the second overtime. Loyola won the battle of shots (49-44), while UVA won the matchups with ground balls (41-30), faceoffs (18-11) and saves (15-10).
Scoring (G-A) – L: Pat Spencer 3-2, John Duffy 3-1, Mike Orefice 3-0, Jay Drapeau 2-0, Aidan Olmstead 0-2, P.J. Brown 1-0. V: Ian Laviano 5-1, Matt Moore 2-1, Dox Aitken 1-2, Michael Kraus 1-2, Mike D’Amario 1-0, John Fox 1-0, Mikey Herring 1-0, Cameron Stafford 1-0, Will Rock 0-1.
Game 2Virginia 13, Drexel 8Feb. 17 • Philadelphia, Pa.
Virginia sophomore midfielder Dox Aitken scored four goals to lift the No. 11 Virginia Cavaliers (2-0) over the Drexel Dragons , 13-8, at Vidas Field. It is UVA’s 11th straight victory over the Dragons and now the Cavaliers lead the all-time series 17-1. UVA wasted no time as Justin Schwenk won the game’s opening faceoff and scored his first goal of the season, nine seconds into the game. On the ensuing faceoff, a Drexel faceoff violation gave UVA the ball and Ryan Conrad scored five seconds later after taking it to the rack, giving UVA an early 2-0 lead 14 seconds into the contest. After a Drexel goal from Will Manganiello at 7:32 in the first, UVA reeled off two more goals, one by Aitken and another by Mike D’Amario, taking a 4-1 lead with 2:43 left in the opening period. The Dragons scored two quick goals to cut UVA’s lead to two goals, 5-3, with 8:38 left in the second quarter. The Cavaliers answered with a 5-0 run to close the half. Virginia entered the intermission with a 9-3 lead. During the run Aitken scored two more goals, while Ryan Lamb, Cameron Stafford and Regan Quinn all added scores. Drexel started the third quarter quickly, scoring two goals to cut UVA’s lead to four goals, 9-5. Manganiello’s third goal of the game capped the run with 11:51 left in the third period. UVA answered with goals from John Fox and D’Amario, increasing the advan-tage back to six, 11-5. The Dragons closed out the game on a 3-2 run, but it wasn’t enough as the Cavaliers kept them at bay with the five-goal victory. The Cavaliers won the battle of shots (44-36), ground balls (34-30) and faceoffs (17-8). Drexel had more saves (10-9) and more turn-overs (16-12). Nine different Cavaliers scored goals for UVA, led by Aitken’s four scores. D’Amario had two scores, while seven other Cavaliers notched one goal, highlighted by the first career goal by Quinn. Griffin Thompson picked up the win in the cate with nine saves.
Virginia 4-5-2-2-13Drexel 1-2-3-2-8Att-3164
Scoring (G-A) – V: Dox Aitken 4-0, Mikey Herring 0-3, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Matt Moore 1-1, Regan Quinn 1-1, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Ryan Lamb 1-0, John Fox 1-0, Cameron Stafford 1-0, Justin Schwenk 1-0, Michael Kraus 0-1. D: Will Manganiello 3-1, Matthew Varian 2-1, Robert Frazee 1-2, Marshall King 1-1, Reid Bowering 1-0, Charles Dumas 0-1.
Game 3Virginia 18, High Point 12Feb. 20 • High Point, N.C.
The No. 6 Virginia Cavaliers (3-0) over-came an early deficit to pick up a road win against the High Point Panthers (0-4) , 18-12, at Vert Stadium. The Panthers started fast, opening the game on a 5-2 run as Virginia was unable to save a shot during the spurt. Dox Aitken and Michael Kraus cut it to 3-2 by 11:10 in the first, but a 3-0 HPU run forced Tiffany to change goalies as he inserted freshman Alex Rode with 6:03 remaining in the first. Ian Laviano picked up some garbage on the crease and scored his first goal at 4:26 in the first, which started a 5-1 UVA run. The run gave the Cavaliers their first lead of the game, 7-6, with 11:04 left in the second quarter. Laviano scored twice in the spurt, while Kraus scored and dished out two assists during the run. Matt Emery capped the streak with his first goal of the season on one of Kraus’ assists with 11:04 left in the first half. UVA and High Point traded goals back and forth the rest of the half, as the game was knotted at 9-9 entering the intermission. The Cavaliers started hot in the third quarter, opening on a 4-1 run, grabbing a 13-10 lead. Aitken, Kraus, Laviano and Matt Moore all scored goals during the spurt. Moore’s unassisted goal with 9:00 left in the third capped the run. Asher Nolting snapped UVA’s run with a goal with 16 seconds left in the third period, cutting UVA’s lead to two goals, 13-11, head-ing into the fourth. The nail in the coffin for High Point came while Aitken had a full-time served illegal body check penalty. HPU scored a man-up goal with 8:30 left in the game. Justin Schwenk went on to win back-to-back man-down faceoffs, both of which ended with UVA goals. Schwenk assisted the first UVA man-down goal with 8:24 left when Kraus scored. Then Schwenk called his own number at 8:24 after winning his second man-down faceoff. Schwenk’s goal gave UVA a 17-12 lead. High Point never scored again and Mike D’Amario capped the game with his unassist-ed goal at 3:21, finishing the game’s scoring. Virginia 4-5-4-5-18High Point 6-3-2-1-12Att-1211
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 5-2, Ian Laviano 4-0, Mikey Herring 0-4, Dox Aitken 3-0, Mike D’Amario 2-0m Ryan Conrad 1-1, Matt Emery 1-1, Justin Schwenk 1-1, Matt Moore 1-0, Jared Conners 0-1. H: Asher Nolting 3-2, Connor Robinson 3-1, Tyler Stinson 2-0, Chris Young 1-1, Koby Russell 1-1, Keegan O’Connor 1-0, Colin Clothier 1-0, Terrell Sands 0-1.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
Game 4Virginia 18, Princeton 15Feb. 24 • Charlottesville, Va.
Attackmen Michael Kraus and Ian Laviano each scored seven points to lift No. 6 Virginia (4-0) over the Princeton Tigers (1-1) in a shootout at Klöckner Stadium, 18-15. The win is UVA’s sixth in a row over the Tigers, dat-ing back to the 2005 regular season. Virginia’s faceoff specialist Justin Schwenk was 25-of-34 (.735) from the faceoff X. The 25 faceoff wins place Schwenk No. 2 all-time at UVA for faceoff wins in a game. The record is held by Jason Hand, who had 29 wins against Syracuse in 1997. The game was a sprint to start as Princeton staked itself to an early 2-0 lead after Tiger goals from Connor McCarthy and Emmet Cordrey. Laviano scored two goals back-to-back, tying the game at 2-2 with 8:34 left in the first quarter. Princeton retook the lead, 4-2, after back-to-back goals, the second coming with 4:58 left in the first period. UVA retaliated with a nifty 4-0 run, taking its first lead of the game, 6-4, with 2:51 left. Laviano scored his third goal of the quarter to cap the run. An EMO goal by Austin Sims, fol-lowed by a Phillip Robertson goal with 52 sec-onds left in the quarter tied the game, 6-6, heading into the second frame. The Cavaliers used a 3-0 run to take a 9-6 lead after a Mikey Herring goal at 9:55. Princeton bounced back with a 4-1 run, includ-ing a Cordrey goal with four seconds left in the second quarter that tied the game, 10-10, heading into the intermission. The difference for Virginia came in the third quarter, outscoring Princeton 5-2. Kraus, Laviano and Matt Moore all scored to start the frame off, taking a 13-10 lead. Princeton cut its deficit to two goals, 13-11, with 13 seconds left, but UVA won the ensuing faceoff and Laviano found long-stick Conners for a score as time expired in the third quarter. The teams played the fourth quarter to a 3-3 draw and UVA came away with the three-goal victory.
Princeton 6-4-2-3-15Virginia 6-4-5-3-18Att-1882
Scoring (G-A) – P: Michael Sowers 1-4, Philip Robertson 3-1, Chris Brown 1-3, Emmet Cordrey 3-0, Austin Sims 2-1, Riley Thompson 2-0, Connor McCarthy 1-0, Andrew Song 1-0, Braedon Gait 1-0, Jasper Arnold 0-1. V: Ian Laviano 5-2, Michael Kraus 4-3, Mike D’Amario 2-1, Mikey Herring 1-2, Matt Moore 2-0, Jared Conners 2-0, Dox Aitken 1-1, Regan Quinn 0-2, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Dave Smith 0-1.
Game 5Syracuse 12, Virginia 11March 4 • Charlottesville, Va.
No. 5 Virginia (4-1, 0-1 ACC) dropped its ACC opener to the No. 12 Syracuse Orange (3-1, 1-0 ACC), 12-11, at Klöckner Stadium. It is UVA’s third one-goal loss in a row to the Orange and its fourth overall. Virginia used a 6-1 run in the fourth quar-ter to tie the game, 11-11, but Tucker Dordevic scored an impressive unassisted goal with 13 seconds left to lift the Orange over the Cavaliers. Virginia opened up fast, taking a 3-1 lead on goals from Ryan Conrad, Michael Kraus and Ian Laviano. The extra-man goal by Laviano capped a 3-0 UVA run with 6:33 left in the first quarter. However, the Syracuse defense limit-ed the Cavaliers to only two scores over the next 38:53. During that dry spell, Syracuse out-scored Virginia by seven goals, 9-2, taking a 10-5 lead with 12:54 left in the game. The Cavaliers bounced back, going on a 6-1 run to tie the game, 11-11, with 1:41 left on a Jared Conners goal, assisted by the goalie Alex Rode. Mike D’Amario scored three times during the run to aid the Cavalier effort. Syracuse won the ensuring faceoff to set up Dordevic’s heroics. Syracuse won the battle of shots (43-30) and faceoffs (16-11). Virginia had more ground balls (41-38), saves (15-10) and turnovers (19-9). Aitken led UVA with five points on two goals and three assists. D’Amario had the hat-trick, while Kraus and Laviano also had two goals. The game served as the 1,000th in Virginia program history. UVA became the 13th Division I program to reach the plateau.
Syracuse 4-3-2-3-12Virginia 4-1-0-6-11Att-2981
Scoring (G-A) – S: Tucker Dordevic 4-0, Stephen Rehfuss 1-2, Jamie Trimboli 2-0, Brett Kennedy 2-0, Bradley Voigt 2-0, Peter Dearth 0-2, Nate Solomon 0-2, Tyler Ford 1-0, Brendan Bomberry 0-1. V: Dox Aitken 2-3, Mike D’Amario 3-1, Michael Kraus 2-1, Ian Laviano 2-0, Jared Conners 1-0, Ryan Conrad 1-0, Matt Moore 0-1, Will Rock 0-1, Alex Rode 0-2.
Goalie Summary – S: Dom Madonna 60:00 mins. 10 saves, 11 goals allowed. V: Alex Rode 60:00 mins. 15 saves, 12 goals allowed.
Game 6Virginia 8, Manhattan 5March 6 • Riverdale, N.Y.
The No. 9 Virginia Cavaliers (5-1) bounced back on one day’s rest and beat the Manhattan Jaspers (3-3), 8-5, at Gaelic Park in the Bronx. Six of Virginia’s eight goals were scored by freshmen. It was a scoreless contest until Manhattan broke through at 5:48 in the first on a goal by CJ Scharf. The Jaspers followed that with another goal at 4:28 to take an early 2-0 lead. UVA scored three in a row to take its first lead of the game, 3-2. UVA received goals from Regan Quinn, Matt Moore and Michael Kraus. The goal by Kraus with 12:59 in the second quarter capped the run and sent UVA into the intermission with a 3-2 lead. Manhattan tied the game, 3-3, with the first goal of the third quarter when Brandon Grinnell scored a man-up goal. Mike D’Amario started a 4-1 Virginia run and the Cavaliers never trailed again. Ian Laviano scored back-to-back goals and Jackson Appelt scored his first career goal with five seconds left in the third quarter to cap the spurt. Through three quarters UVA led by three goals, 7-4. Defense was the name of the game in the fourth as each team scored a goal. Moore’s open-net goal with 26 seconds left capped the game’s scoring. UVA won the battle of shots (38-29), ground balls (33-26), faceoffs (9-7), while Manhattan had more saves (18-12) and turn-overs (13-7). Six of UVA’s eight goals were scored by freshmen with Moore and Laviano leading the way with two each. Scott Hooper caused three turnovers on defense for the Cavaliers. Kraus led UVA with three points on one goal and game-high two assists.
Virginia 2-1-4-1-8Manhattan 2-0-2-1-5Att-431
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 1-2, Ian Laviano 2-0, Matt Moore 2-0, Mike D’Amario 1-0, Regan Quinn 1-0, Jackson Appelt 1-0, Mike Herring 0-1. M: Luke Hanson 1-1, Brandon Grinnell 1-0, Jake Nicolosi 1-0, CJ Scharf 1-0, Trevor Pelletier 1-0, Parker Giarratana 0-1, Mike Lombardi 0-1.
No. 9 Virginia (6-1) outlasted the Stony Brook Seawolves (1-5), 15-14, at LaValle Stadium. Michael Kraus led UVA with 10 points on five goals and five assists. Virginia erupted for eight goals in the third quarter, which ended up being the differ-ence in the game. After UVA and Stony Brook traded goals to start the third quarter, the Cavaliers instigated an 8-1 run to take a 15-8 lead. Mike D’Amario started the run with his goal on a Kraus helper with 10:04 left in the quarter. During UVA’s run, drama ensued. Stony Brook’s Patrick Kaschalk was flagged for a pushing penalty on Ian Laviano with 6:11 left in the third quarter. During the play, Laviano ended on the ground inside the substitution box, which caused the benches to empty in a small skirmish. Once the dust settled, UVA’s Zach Ambrosino and Stony Book’s Chris Pedone were each charged with three-minute unnecessary roughness penalties and were ejected. UVA scored an EMO goal immediately in the five-on-four situation. Aitken scored the extra-man goal at 5:59 in the third. Both teams continued to play in a five-on-five situation until 3:11 left in the third. Stony Brook owned a 2-1 advantage during the five-on-five period, cutting its deficit to two goals, 10-8. Once the game was back to six-on-six, Aitken rifled a goal on a Kraus helper with 1:44 left in the third quarter. After the shot, Stony Brook’s Harrison Matsuoka was penalized with a full-time served penalty for a cross-check to the head. After the penalty was called, there was another full-time served penalty assessed to the Seawolves’ coaching box for unsports-manlike conduct. With UVA in a six-on-four extra-man situation for one minute, the Cavaliers scored two EMO goals, one by Aitken and the next by Mike Herring. Schwenk won three faceoffs in a three-on-one situation during the penalty as UVA took a 14-8 lead. Kraus capped the 8-1 UVA run with the Cavaliers’ lone goal in the fourth quarter at 12:53. With a 15-8 lead, UVA started to sub to its second and third strings. Stony Brook made it interesting, finishing the game on a 6-0 run, prompting Tiffany to put starters back after the Seawolves scored the first three goals of the spurt.
Virginia 3-3-8-1-15Stony Brook 2-3-3-6-14Att-1404
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 5-5, Dox Aitken 4-0, Mikey Herring 2-0, Matt Moore 1-1, Ian Laviano 1-0, Mike D’Amario 1-0, Regan Quinn 1-0, Jared Conners 0-1, Cameron Stafford 0-1. SB: Tom Haun 3-0, Connor Grippe 3-0, Mike McCannal 1-2, Jack Walsh 0-3, Owen Daly 2-0, Chris Pickel 1-1, Wayne White 1-0, Justin Pugal 1-0, Harrison Matsuoka 1-0, Matt Robison 1-0, Cory Vanginhoven 0-1.
Game 8Notre Dame 9, Virginia 7March 10 • Stony Brook, N.Y.
The No. 7 Virginia Cavaliers (6-2, 0-2 ACC) dropped a heartbreaker against the No. 4 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (4-1, 1-ACC), 9-7, at Arlotta Stadium. The Cavaliers played catch-up most of the game after the Fighting Irish were up 4-0 only 4:38 into the game. Bryan Costabile capped the early 4-0 run with a goal on a Brendan Gleason helper at 10:22 left in the first quarter. UVA retaliated with a 4-0 run, all goals scored by Michael Kraus. Mikey Herring found Kraus on the crease with 11:18 left in the first half, capping the spurt. The Irish scored two goals before the half, giving Notre Dame a 6-4 lead at the intermis-sion. Costabile’s second goal of the game with 55 seconds left capped the mini two-goal streak. The Cavaliers dominated the third quar-ter, scoring all three goals to take its first lead of the game, 7-6. Dox Aitken scored two unas-sisted goals to tie the game and Mike D’Amario found nylon at 2:52 in the third on an extra-man opportunity to give the Cavaliers their only lead of the game. Notre Dame held UVA in check on the defensive end for most of the fourth quarter as the Cavaliers didn’t even attempt a shot for a span of over seven minutes late in the frame. The Irish scored two goals to start the fourth quarter, taking an 8-7 lead with 12:20 left to play. Once UVA pulled goalie Alex Rode out of the cage to help double Notre Dame in the final minute, the Irish capped its win with an open-net goal with 53 seconds left. UVA won the battle of shots (30-25), while Notre Dame had move ground balls (33-29), faceoffs (10-9) and saves (7-6). Both teams had 15 turnovers each.
Virginia 2-2-3-0-7Notre Dame 4-2-0-3-9Att-2071
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 4-0, Dox Aitken 2-1, Mike D’Amario 1-0, Mikey Herring 0-1. ND: Mikey Wynne 4-0, Brendan Gleason 2-1, Bryan Costabile 2-0, Brian Willettes 0-1, Pierre Byrne 1-0, Mikey Drake 0-1, Ryder Garnsey 0-1.
Game 9Virginia 12, Dartmouth 6March 20 • Charlottesville, Va.
The No. 10 Virginia Cavaliers (7-2) received goals from seven different players en route to a mid-week win over the Dartmouth Big Green (2-4) of the Ivy League, 12-6, at Klöckner Stadium. Despite UVA cruising to victory over the Big Green, the halftime score suggested a much closer game. UVA held a 4-2 edge because Dartmouth’s goalie, George Christopher, made 10 saves in the first half. The Big Green scored first, 1:57 into the game. George Prince found Ben Martin on the crease for Dartmouth’s only assisted goal of the game, giving the Big Green its only lead, 1-0. Cameron Stafford took a Mitch Gordon helper at 10:23 in the first to tie the game, 1-1. Regan Quinn put UVA up, 2-1, with 1:10 left in the first on a Stafford assist. After Dartmouth’s Trevor Ballantyne tied the game, 2-2, at 12:49 in the second, UVA reeled off a 3-0 run to take a 5-2 lead. During the spurt, Gordon scored his first goal of the season, followed by another Stafford goal and Ian Laviano capped the run with 13:17 left in the third on a great transition assist from Dave Smith. Martin cut the Dartmouth deficit to two goals, 5-3, with an unassisted goal at 11:54 in the third. Virginia retaliated with a 5-1 run to put the game all but out of reach. Dox Aitken scored twice during the streak, while Michael Kraus found nylon, while Quinn and Laviano each scored their second goals of the game. Quinn capped the run on a Matt Moore helper with 7:55 left in the game. Dartmouth made it a four-goal game, 10-6, with a 2-0 run as Martin capped his hat-trick with 6:00 left in the game. Stafford and Moore finished the game’s scoring after that and secured the victory for UVA. UVA won the battle of shots (40-23), ground balls (45-31) and faceoffs (13-8). Dartmouth had more saves (12-8) and turn-overs (18-12). Making his first UVA start after making 11 career starts at Vermont (2015-16), Stafford tal-lied his fourth collegiate hat-trick and first at UVA. Gordon made his first collegiate start and finished with one goal and two assists. UVA played 33 different Cavaliers on Tuesday in order to give longer rest spurts to starters. Darthmouth 1-1-2-2-6Virginia 2-2-3-5-12Att-809
Scoring (G-A) – D: Ben Martin 3-0, George Prince 1-1, Trevor Ballantyne 1-0, Liam O’Connell 1-0. V: Cameron Stafford 3-1, Ian Laviano 2-2, Mitch Gordon 1-2, Matt Moore 1-2, Regan Quinn 2-0, Dox Aitken 2-0, Michael Kraus 1-1, Chris Merle 0-1, Dave Smith 0-1.
Goalie Summary – D: George Christopher 60:00 mins. 12 saves, 12 goals alloweed. V: Alex Rode 58:26 mins. 8 saves, 6 goals allowed. William Hudson 1:34 mins. 0 saves, 0 goals allowed.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
Game 10Johns Hopkins 15, Virginia 13March 24 • Charlottesville, Va.
The No. 9 Johns Hopkins Blue Jays (6-2) overcame a seven-goal halftime deficit to defeat the No. 10 Virginia Cavaliers (7-3), 15-13, at Klöckner Stadium. The Blue Jay claim the Doyle Smith Cup for the second year in a row. Virginia was electric to start the game, opening the contest on a 4-0 run. UVA received goals from Michael Kraus, Dox Aitken, Regan Quinn and Ian Laviano to start the game. Laviano’s unassisted score off a rebounded shot capped the run with 6:57 left in the first quarter. After Johns Hopkins found nylon for the first time at 3:07 in the first on a Patrick Fraser goal, UVA reeled out another 4-0 run to take an 8-1 lead with 2:49 left in the first half. Wade Maloney scored his first career goal on a Will Rock assist to start the spurt with 2:10 left in the first quarter. Jared Conners found Laviano with 2:49 left in the half to cap the run. Connor DeSimone scored with 40 sec-onds left in the half to end UVA’s run, but Kraus scored an unassisted goal with six sec-onds left to give UVA the seven-goal lead going into the intermission. Johns Hopkins owned the second half, starting the third quarter on a 6-0 run, cutting its deficit to one goal, 9-8, with 2:55 left in the third quarter. Aitken appeared to give UVA the breathing room it needed at the end of the third quarter, scoring back-to-back goals on helpers by Kraus to give UVA an 11-8 lead at 1:24 in the third. After the goal by Aitken at 1:24, Hunter Moreland won the ensuing faceoff and immediately scored an unassisted goal to close out the scoring in the third quar-ter. Moreland’s goal started a 7-0 Johns Hopkins run that doomed the Cavaliers. Joel Tinney’s goal with 3:53 left in the game capped the 7-0 run by the Blue Jays and gave Johns Hopkins a 15-11 lead. Laviano and Aitken scored again for the Cavaliers to cut the final winning margin at two goals for Johns Hopkins, 15-13. Outscored by Johns Hopkins in the sec-ond half, 13-4, UVA only managed 12 shots in the second half. The Blue Jays won the battle of shots (52-39), while the ground balls were equal (36-36). UVA had more faceoffs (17-15), saves (14-10) and turnovers (18-11).
John Hopkins 1-1-7-6-15Virginia 6-3-2-2-13Att-2710
Scoring (G-A) – JH: Kyle Marr 4-1, Joel Tinney 2-4, Cole Williams 3-0, Connor DeSimone 3-0, Shack Stanwick 1-1, Hunter Moreland 1-0, Patrick Fraser 1-0, Kyle Marr 0-1, Alex Concannon 0-1. V: Michael Kraus 2-5, Dox Aitken 6-0, Ian Laviano 3-0, Regan Quinn 10-0, Wade Maloney 1-0, Jared Conners 0-1, Scott Hooper 0-1, Will Rock 0-1.
Game 11Virginia 14, Richmond 10March 31 • Charlottesville, Va.
Virginia sophomore Michael Kraus scored four goals and dished out one assist as the No. 12 Cavaliers (8-3) charged past in-state foe Richmond (5-5), 14-10, at Klöckner Stadium. Despite trailing the Spiders by one goal after three quarters, 9-8, the Cavaliers outhus-tled their way to victory in the fourth quarter. Winning ground balls in the final frame, 19-8, UVA finished the game on a 6-1 run, including three goals by Kraus, to win the game. UVA opened the game on a 3-1 run behind goals from Jared Conners, Mikey Herring and Ian Laviano. Two failed UVA clears led directly to Richmond goals and the game was tied, 3-3, with 10:21 left in the second quarter. The Spiders capped a 3-0 run with an unassisted goal by Garrett Smith at 10:15 left in the second quarter. The Cavaliers replied with another 3-1 run, taking a 6-5 lead. Wade Maloney found Dox Aitken with 3:12 left in the half, capping the run. Austin Brown scored a man-up goal with 49 seconds left in the first half for Richmond, sending the game into the inter-mission tied at 6-6. Richmond wasted no time to start the third quarter, scoring two quick goals and tak-ing an 8-6 lead after only 1:07 of play in the third quarter. An Aitken holding penalty at the close of the second quarter gave the Spiders an extra-man opportunity with possession to start the third and aid in the Spider spurt. A Regan Quinn goal followed by a Spider goal (Ryan Lee) with 8:53 left in the third quar-ter kept UVA’s deficit at two goals, 9-7. A beautiful defensive strip by UVA’s Scott Hooper started a quick fast break and Will Rock found Mitch Gordon with 6:49 left in the third for the Cavalier goal that started a 7-1 run to end the game, six of which came in the fourth quarter. UVA tied the game with 12:45 left to play after a tremendous defensive strip by Richmond landed right in the stick of Cameron Stafford. The UVA senior promptly deposited his good fortune into the net. UVA never trailed again. Kraus scored back-to-back goals at 9:56 and 7:58 left, giving UVA the game’s final lead.
Richmond 1-5-2-1-10Virginia 3-3-2-6-14Att-2441
Scoring (G-A) – R: Teddy Hatfield 1-2, Mitch Goldberg 2-0, Ryan Lanchbury 2-0, Ryan Lee 2-0, Mitch Savoca 1-1, Eric Hael 0-2, Austin Brown 1-0, Garrett Smith 1-0, Tate Gallagher 0-1. V: Michael Kraus 4-1, Dox Aitken 2-0, Mikey Herring 2-0, Ian Laviano 1-1, Wade Maloney 0-2, Matt Moore 0-2, Regan Quinn 1-0, Mitch Gordon 1-0, Cameron Stafford 1-0, Jared Conners 1-0, John Fox 1-0, Will Rock 0-1, Dave Smith 0-1.
Game 12Virginia 15, North Carolina 12April 7 • Chapel Hill, N.C.
Michael Kraus scored seven points (3 goals, 4 assists) and Mike D’Amario added four goals to assist the No. 11 Virginia Cavaliers (9-3, 1-2 ACC) to a key Atlantic Coast Conference win over No. 20 North Carolina (6-6, 0-2 ACC), 15-12, at Kenan Stadium. UVA’s defense also shutdown UNC attackman Chris Cloutier, who was No. 2 in the nation with an active 31-game goal-scoring streak. UVA defensemen Logan Greco helped snap the streak as Cloutier didn’t score any goals and managed only two assists. Cloutier’s streak started on May 14, 2016. The Tar Heels found nylon first, scoring at 11:18 in the first to take an early 1-0 lead. UVA responded with a 3-1 run, taking its first lead of the game, 3-2. After Dox Aitken’s first shot of the game was saved, Ian Laviano picked up the garbage and quickly scored to start the run. Aitken scored back-to-back goals to give UVA the lead. His second was off a Kraus pass at 3:37 in the first. UNC tied the game, 3-3, at 14:07 after William Perry scored on a Timmy Kelly assist. It was the last time the game was tied as Virginia finished the first half on a 6-1 run, taking a 9-4 lead into the intermission. The streak started on back-to-back goals by D’Amario, both on Mikey Herring helpers. Herring found D’Amario wide open on the crease on both goals, the second was a creative fake followed by a behind-the-back goal. D’Amario recorded a hat-trick during the run, Matt Moore scored once and Kraus scored twice, including cap-ping the scoring in the first half with an unas-sisted tally at 1:37 in the second. D’Amario started the third quarter with a goal on a Kraus assist at 9:38. UNC bounced back quickly, going on a 3-0 spurt to cut its deficit to three goals, 10-7. Perry scored a man-up goal at 7:23 in the third quarter. UVA retaliated with its own 3-0 run on goals by Kraus and back-to-back scores by Laviano. The third goal of the game for Laviano came at 1:27 in the third on a Herring assist to give the Cavaliers a 13-7 lead. North Carolina finished the game on a 5-2 run, but it wasn’t enough to overcome the Cavalier lead. Virginia 3-6-4-2-15North Carolina 2-2-5-3-12Att-370
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 3-4, Mike D’Amario 4-0, Mikey Herring 1-3, Ian Laviano 3-0, Matt Moore 2-0, Dox Aitken 2-0, Jared Conners 0-1, Cameron Stafford 0-1. NC: Matt Gavin 3-1, William Perry 2-2, Timmy Kelly 1-3, Chris Cloutier 0-2, Tanner Cook 1-0, Jack Rowlett 1-0, Andy Matthews 1-0, William McBride 1-0, Cam Macri 1-0, Ryan O’Connell 1-0, Sean Morris 0-1.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
14
Game 13Duke 18, Virginia 13April 14 • Charlottesville, Va.
The No. 3 Duke Blue Devils (11-2, 3-1 ACC) outlasted the No. 10 Virginia Cavaliers (9-3, 1-3 ACC), 18-13, at Klöckner Stadium. With Duke holding a one-goal lead (12-11) with 2:49 left in the third quarter, the Blue Devils went on a 6-0 run to secure the ACC vic-tory. The Blue Devils started the game on a 5-1 run. Sean Lowrie capped the run on a helper from Justin Guterding at 6:14 in the first. UVA scored two of the next three goals to trail by three, 6-3, after one quarter of play. Mikey Kerring scored on a Michael Kraus helper, and then Dox Aitken assisted Kraus at 1:21 in the first. Duke outscored UVA, 5-3, in the second quarter to own an 11-6 lead at the intermis-sion. Herring, Aitken and Ian Laviano all found the nylon in the second period. Aitken’s unas-sisted goal at 2:37 in the second capped the first half scoring and gave the sophomore his 30th goal of the season. Aitken is the 12th all-time Cavalier midfielder to score at least 30 goals in a season and the first since 2009 (Shamel Bratton, 31). The Cavaliers bounced back in the third quarter. After Duke’s Joe Manown picked up a saved shot at 13:11 in the third and scored, UVA tallied off five goals in a row to make it a one-goal game, 12-11. During UVA’s 5-0 run Michael Kraus scored twice and also assisted Aitken and Herring. Matt Moore’s unassisted goal at 2:49 in the third capped the spurt. Duke replied with the 6-0 run to secure the victory. Guterding found Kevin Quigley at 8:53 in the fourth to cap the streak. UVA man-aged goals from Mike D’Amario and Kraus to end the game, but it wasn’t enough. Duke won the battle of shots (43-39), ground balls (44-33), faceoffs (21-14), saves (10-9) and had more turnovers (15-13). Two of the nation’s best attackmen shined in the game. Duke’s Guterding had four goals and five assists for nine points, which was mirrored by UVA’s Kraus, who had the same numbers. Duke 6-5-2-5-18Virginia 3-3-5-2-13Att-2681 Scoring (G-A) - D: Justin Guterding 4-5, Peter Conley 3-1, Joe Robertson 3-0, Joey Manown 2-0, Kevin Quigley 2-0, Brian Smyth 2-0, Sean Lowrie 1-0, Nakeie Montgomery 1-0, Brad Smith 0-3, Mitch Russell 0-1. V: Michael Kraus 4-5, Mikey Herring 3-1, Dox Aitken 2-1, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Matt Moore 1-1, Ian Laviano 1-0, Regan Quinn 0-1, Dave Smith 0-1 Goalie Summary - D: Danny Fowler 60:00 mins. 10 saves, 13 goals allowed.V: Alex Rode 15:00 mins. 3 saves, 6 goals allowed. Griffin Thompson 45:00 mins. 6 saves, 12 goals allowed. Shots: D-43, V-39Ground Balls: D-44,V-33Clearing: D-17x21,V-14x16Faceoffs: D-21, V-14Penalties: D-7-5:00,V-4-2:00EMO: D-2x4, V-4x7
Game 14Virginia 10, Vermont 9April 21 • New Canaan, Conn.
Hometown hero Michael Kraus scored the game-winning goal with 1:47 left to lift the No. 13 Virginia Cavaliers (10-4) , 10-9, over the Vermont Catamounts (10-3) at Dunning Stadium on the campus of New Canaan High School. Kraus is a 2016 graduate of New Canaan High School. The game was the inau-gural IMLCA Game of the Week. Virginia trailed for the first time all game, 9-8, with 1:16 left in the third quarter after Jack Knight scored on a Charlie Cobb helper, giving Vermont the lead. Both defenses bat-tled for the next 14 minutes of game action without either team yielding a goal. Vermont’s Zack Bucci was tagged with a holding penalty with 3:04 left to play, giving UVA an extra-man opportunity. UVA’s Mike Herring slipped unde-tected about eight yards out and Dox Aitken found him for the EMO goal, tying the game at 9-9 with 2:30 left to play. The Catamounts won the ensuing faceoff and went back toward their own goal. Vermont was unable to clear the ball as time ran out on the clear attempt, giving the ball back to Virginia via a turnover. UVA was able to get the restart moving quickly and Kraus scored the game-winning goal with 1:47 left to play after streaking about 20 yards and unleashing the shot. UVA started the game with a narrow 2-0 lead on goals by Mike D’Amario and Ian Laviano. Back-to-back goals by Vermont’s Liam Limoges tied the game, 2-2, with 3:21 left in the first quarter. D’Amario retaliated with a goal at 3:08 in the first and assisted Aitken to give UVA a two-goal lead, 4-2. Vermont scored two goals in the last 35 seconds of the first quarter to tie the game, 4-4. UVA held a 2-1 advantage to head into the intermission with a one-goal lead, 6-5. Vermont made its run in the third quarter, going on a 4-2 spurt to take a 9-8 lead. Jack Knight capped a 3-0 Vermont run with 1:16 left in the third, giving the Catamounts their only lead of the game. The Virginia defense clamped down, holding Vermont scoreless over the game’s final 16:16 and setting up the late-game hero-ics by Herring and Kraus. Virginia 4-2-2-2-10Vermont 4-1-4-0-9Att-3000
Scoring (G-A) – VA: Mike D’Amario 3-1, Michael Kraus 2-1, Dox Aitken 1-2, Ian Laviano 2-0, Jared Conners 1-0, Mikey Herring 1-0, Cory Harris 0-1, Matt Moore 0-1, Regan Quinn 0-1, Will Rock 0-1. UVM: Jack Knight 2-1, Braiden Davis 0-3, Ian MacKay 2-0, Dawes Milchling 2-0, Liam Limoges 2-0, Ben French 1-0, Charlie Cobb 0-1, Mark Maciano 0-1.
Game 15Virginia 11, Syracuse 10April 27 • Charlottesville, Va.
The No. 11 Virginia Cavaliers (11-4) advance to Sunday’s ACC Championship final with an 11-10 victory over the No. 12 Syracuse Orange (7-6) on Saturday night at Klöckner Stadium. The No. 4 seed Cavaliers will play for the 2018 ACC title on Sunday against the No. 3 seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish, who earlier defeated the No. 2 seed Duke Blue Devils, 14-11. UVA held an early 2-1 advantage after goals from Dox Aitken and Matt Moore, both assisted by Michael Kraus. Moore scored his first of his game-high four goals at 12:49 in the first to cap a 2-0 UVA spurt. Syracuse used goals from Pat Carlin and David Lipka to take a 3-2 lead. Lipka’s goal on a Carlin helper capped the run with 3:54 left in the first. Kraus scored unassisted to tie the game, 3-3, but a UVA shot that was saved cre-ated an opportunity with 44 seconds left in the first period for the Orange. Stephen Rehfuss capitalized on a fast break with a man down, scoring on an assist by Bradley Voigt to give the Orange a one-goal lead after one quarter of play. The Cavaliers owned the second quarter, shutting out the Orange. Kraus scored unas-sisted at 8:17 in the period and Aitken scored on a Kraus helper at 3:12 to cap the scoring in the second quarter. UVA entered the intermis-sion with a 5-4 lead. Moore started the third quarter scoring for UVA, an unassisted score at 14:19 in the period. It pushed UVA’s lead to 6-4. From that point on UVA and Syracuse traded goals back and forth with the Orange never getting closer than one goal. A key for UVA was Justin Schwenk at the faceoff X. He was 16-of-23 on the game. Schwenk now has 216 faceoff wins, breaking Jack deVilliers (204) program record for faceoff wins in the season. Between Schwenk and UVA’s Luke Brugel, UVA won 11-of14 second half faceoffs to help keep the Cavaliers a step ahead. Syracuse won the battle of shots (38-34), while UVA had more ground balls (37-35), faceoffs (18-7), saves (10-5) and turnovers (17-10). Syracuse 4-0-3-3-10Virginia 3-2-4-2-11Att-2615
Scoring (G-A) – V: Matt Moore 4-1, Michael Kraus 2-3, Dox Aitken 2-2, Mike D’Amario 2-0, Ian Laviano 1-0, Jared Conners 0-1. S: Stephen Rehfuss 2-1, Tucker Dordevic 2-0, Pat Carlin 1-1, Bradley Voigt 0-2, Brendan Bomberry 1-0, Peter Dearth 1-0, David Lipka 1-0, Seth DeLisle 1-0, Kevin Hutchings 1-0, Nate Solomon 0-1, Marcus Cummingham 0-1.
Goalie Summary– V: Alex Rode 60:00 mins. 10 saves, 10 goals allowed. S: Dom Madonna 60:00 mins. 5 saves, 11 goals allowed.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
Game 16Notre Dame 17, Virginia 7April 29 • Charlottesville, Va.
The No. 11 Virginia Cavaliers (11-5) fell in the ACC Championship game to the No. 16 Notre Dame Fighting Irish (8-5), 17-7, at Klöckner Stadium. The Fighting Irish claimed their second ACC Tournament title since join-ing the league in 2014. Despite the wide margin of defeat for UVA, the Cavaliers struck first on a Michael Kraus goal at 12:56 on a helper from Ian Laviano. Notre Dame proceeded to go on an 11-2 run that ended with 9:39 left in the third quarter. Ryder Garnsey capped the big Notre Dame streak with an unassisted goal, giving the Irish an 11-3 lead. Kraus helped UVA break through with an unassisted goal at 8:15 in the third, cutting the Notre Dame lead to seven goals, 11-4. Kraus’ goal started a mini 4-2 run for the Cavaliers. Mikey Herring’s goal on Matt Moore’s third assist of the game finished the Cavaliers scor-ing with 12:26 left. Notre Dame finished off the game on a 4-0 run to claim victory. Notre Dame won the battle of shots (38-35) and ground balls (45-41), while UVA had more faceoff wins (15-11), saves (9-8) and turn-overs (25-23). Mike D’Amario, Justin Schwenk, Kraus and Moore all were named to the ACC All-Tournament team. Duke placed two players, Rielly Walsh and Brad Smith, on the team. Syracuse’s Stephen Rehfuss made the squad. Notre Dame placed four on the team lead by tournament MVP Bryan Costabile. Garnsey, John Sexton and Matt Schmidt also made the team. Notre Dame 3-5-5-4-17Virginia 2-1-3-1-7Att-3139
Scoring (G-A) – V: Michael Kraus 3-1, Mike D’Amario 3-0, Matt Moore 0-3, Mikey Herring 1-0, Ian Laviano 0-1. ND: Ryder Garnsey 3-2, Byran Costabile 3-1, Brian Willets 3-0, Pierere Byrne 2-1, Mikey Wynne 2-0, Brendan Collins 2-0, Timmy Phillips 1-1, Jordan Walter 1-0, Wheaton Jockoboice 0-1, John Sexton 0-1.
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
16
SEASON/CAREER HIGHS 6 DOX AITKEN • MSeason HighsG 6 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)A 3 vs. Syracuse (3/4)Pts. 6 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)GB 4 vs. Loyola (2/10)CT 1 2x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)
Career HighsG 6 vs. John Hopkins (3/18)A 3 vs. Syracuse (3/18)Pts. 6 vs. John Hopkins (3/18)GB 5 vs. Syracuse (3/17) CT 2 2x, last vs. Duke (4/17)
45 ZACH AMBROSINO • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)CT 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 3x, last vs. North Carolina (4/17)CT 3 2x, last vs. North Carolina (4/17) 26 JACKSON APPELT • ASeason HighsG 1 vs. Manhattan (3/6)A - -Pts. 1 vs. Manhattan (3/6)GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG 1 vs. Manhattan (3/18)A - -Pts. 1 vs. Manhattan (3/18)GB - -CT - -
48 LUKE BRUGEL • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 1 2x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)CT - -FaceW 5 (7) vs. Drexel (2/17)
Career HighsG 1 vs. Drexel (2/17)A 1 4x, last vs. Cleveland State (4/17)Pts. 2 vs. Drexel (2/17)GB 8 vs. Duke (4/17)CT FaceW 12 (15) vs. Drexel (2/17)
24 CHASE CAMPBELL • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 1 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)CT 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. VMI (3/15)CT 1 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/18)
28 JARED CONNERS • DSeason HighsG 2 vs. Princeton (2/24)A 1 4x, last vs. Syracuse (4/27)Pts. 2 vs. Princeton (2/24)GB 7 vs. Stony Brook (3/10)CT 1 3x, last vs. Duke (4/14)
Career HighsG 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/18)A 1 5x, last vs. Syracuse (4/18)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/18)GB 7 2x, last vs. Stony Brook (3/18)CT 3 vs. Loyola (2/17) 22 RYAN CONRAD • MSeason HighsG 1 4x, last vs. Syracuse (3/4)A 2 vs. Loyola (2/10)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. High Point (2/20)GB 10 vs. Princeton (2/24)CT 2 vs. Drexel (2/17)
Career HighsG 3 3x, last vs. North Carolina (4/17) A 2 5x, last vs. Loyola (2/18)Pts. 4 2x, last vs. North Carolina (4/17)GB 11 vs. Cornell (3/17)CT 2 4x, last vs. Drexel (2/18) 10 MIKE D’ AMARIO • ASeason HighsG 4 vs. North Carolina (4/7)A 1 vs. Princeton (2/24)Pts. 4 4x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)GB 2 2x, last vs. Duke (4/14)CT 1 vs. Princeton (2/24)
Career HighsG 7 vs. Drexel (2/17)A 3 vs. Cornell (3/17)Pts. 8 vs. Cornell (3/11)GB 4 2x, last vs. Drexel (2/17)CT 1 6x, last vs. Princeton (2/18) 41 THEO DOL • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
14 MATT DZIAMA • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/20)CT 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)
Career HighsG - -A 1 vs. VMI (3/16)Pts. 1 vs. VMI (3/16)GB 6 vs. Syracuse (3/16)CT 3 vs. VMI (3/16)
4 MATT EMERY • MSeason HighsG 1 vs. High Point (2/20)A 1 vs. High Point (2/20)Pts. 2 vs. High Point (2/20)GB 1 vs. Notre Dame( 3/17)CT - -
Career HighsG 2 vs. Richmond (4/16)A 2 vs. VMI (3/16)Pts. 2 4x, last vs. High Point (2/20)GB 2 2x, last vs. Siena (2/17)CT - - 27 COOPER FERSEN • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. VMI (3/16)CT 2 2x, last vs. High Point (3/17) 34 JOHN FOX • ASeason HighsG 1 3x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)A - -Pts. 1 3x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)GB 2 4x, last vs. Syracuse (4/27)CT 3 vs. High Point (2/20)
Career HighsG 1 3x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)A - -Pts. 1 3x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)GB 2 4x, last vs. Syracuse (4/18)CT 3 vs. High Point (2/18) 37 MITCH GORDON • ASeason HighsG 1 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)A 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)Pts. 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)GB 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)CT - -
Career HighsG 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)A 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)Pts. 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)GB 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)CT 1 vs. Cleveland State (4/17) 44 LOGAN GRECO • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)CT 3 4x, last vs. Duke (4/14)
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)CT 3 4x, last vs. Duke (4/18) 8 CORY HARRIS • MSeason HighsG - -A 1 vs. Vermont (4/21)Pts. 1 vs. Vermont (4/21)GB 2 2X, last vs. Syracuse (4/27)CT - -
Career HighsG - -A 2 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)Pts. 2 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)GB 2 3x, last vs. Syracuse (4/18)CT -
17
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
13 GRIFFIN HARRIS • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)CT - - Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)CT - - 42 MIKEY HERRING • ASeason HighsG 3 vs. Duke (4/14)A 4 vs. High Point (2/20)Pts. 4 3x, last vs. Duke (4/14)GB 1 6x, last vs. North Carolina (4/7)CT - -
Career HighsG 3 vs. Duke (4/18)A 4 2x, last vs. High Point (2/18)Pts. 5 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)GB 2 2x, last vs. Robert Morris (4/17)CT 1 vs. Robert Morris (4/17)
25 SCOTT HOOPER • DSeason HighsG - -A 1 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)Pts. 1 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)GB 5 vs. Syracuse (3/4)CT 5 2x, last vs. Notre Dame (3/17)
Career HighsG - -A 1 2x, last vs. John Hopkins (3/18)Pts. 1 2x, last vs. John Hopkins (3/18)GB 6 vs. Notre Dame (3/17)CT 7 vs. Robert Morris (4/17)
21 JARRET JONES • D/LSMSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
16 KYLE KOLOGY • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. Notre Dame (3/17)CT 2 2x, last vs. High Point (2/20)
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 4 vs. Notre Dame (3/18)CT 2 2x, last vs. High Point (2/18)
2 MICHAEL KRAUS • ASeason HighsG 5 2x, last vs. Stony Brook (3/10)A 5 3x, last vs. Duke (4/14)Pts. 10 vs. Stony Brook (3/10)GB 5 vs. Notre Dame (3/17)CT 1 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)
Career HighsG 5 3x, last vs. Stony Brook (3/18)A 5 4x, last vs. Duke (4/18)Pts. 10 vs. Stony Brook (3/18)GB 5 vs. Notre Dame (3/18)CT 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/18) 40 RYAN LAMB • MSeason HighsG 1 vs. Drexel (2/17)A - -Pts. 1 vs. Drexel (2/17)GB 2 vs. Drexel (2/17)CT - -
Career HighsG 2 vs. VMI (3/16)A 2 vs. VMI (3/16)Pts. 4 vs.VMI (3/16)GB 2 2x, last vs. Drexel (2/18)CT - -
3 IAN LAVIANO • ASeason HighsG 5 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/24)A 2 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/20)Pts. 7 vs. Princeton (2/24)GB 3 vs. High Point (2/20)CT 1 3x, last vs. Duke (4/14)
Career HighsG 5 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/24)A 2 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/18)Pts. 7 vs. Princeton (2/24)GB 3 vs. High Point (2/20)CT 1 3x, last vs. Duke (4/18)
50 WADE MALONEY • MSeason HighsG 1 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)A 2 vs. Richmond (3/31)Pts. 2 vs. Richmond (3/31)GB 1 vs. Duke (4/14)CT - -
Career HighsG 1 vs. John Hopkins (3/18)A 2 vs. Richmond (3/18)Pts. 2 vs. Richmond (3/18)GB 1 vs. Duke (4/14)CT - - 7 CHRIS MERLE • MSeason HighsG - -A 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)Pts. 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)GB 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/24)CT 1 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/20)
Career HighsG - -A 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)Pts. 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)GB 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/18)CT 1 2x, last vs. Dartmouth (3/18)
5 MATT MOORE • M/ASeason HighsG 4 vs. Syracuse (4/27)A 3 vs. Notre Dame (4/29)Pts. 5 vs. Syracuse (4/27)GB 3 vs. Vermont (4/21)CT 1 2x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)
Career HighsG 4 vs. Syracuse (4/18)A 3 vs. Notre Dame (4/18)Pts. 5 vs. Syracuse (4/18)GB 3 vs. Vermont (4/18)CT 1 2x, last vs. Vermont (4/18)
18 MILAN MURRAY • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. Richmond (3/31)CT - -
Career HighsG 3 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)A - -Pts. 3 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)GB 2 vs. Richmond (3/18))CT 1 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)
49 JACK PEELE • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 2 vs. Cleveland State (4/17)CT - -
46 RYAN PRIDE • MSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
18
19 REGAN QUINN • ASeason HighsG 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)A 2 vs. Princeton (2/24)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/24)GB 2 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)CT - -
Careerr HighsG 2 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)A 2 vs. Princeton (2/18)Pts. 2 2x, last vs. Princeton (2/18)GB 2 vs. John Hopkins (3/18)CT - - 30 JACK REILLY • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB - -CT - -
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 vs. High Point (3/17)CT - -
9 WILL ROCK • D/LSMSeason HighsG - -A 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)Pts. 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)GB 5 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)CT 3 2x, last vs. North Carolina (4/7)
Career HighsG - -A 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)Pts. 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)GB 5 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)CT 3 2x, last vs. North Carolina (4/18) 38 ALEX RODE • GSeason HighsSV 15 vs. Syracuse (3/4)SV% 65% vs. High Point (2/20)GA 15 2x, last vs. John Hopkins (3/24)Faced 52 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)GB 7 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)CT 2 vs. John Hopkins (3/24)
Career HighsSV 15 vs. Syracuse (3/18)SV% 65% vs. High Point (2/18)GA 15 2x, last vs. John Hopkins (3/18)Faced 52 2x, last vs. John Hopkins (3/18)GB 7 vs. Dartmouth (3/18)CT 2 vs. John Hopkins (3/18) 36 JUSTIN SCHWENK • MSeason HighsG 1 2x, last vs. High Point (2/20)A 1 vs. High Point (2/20)Pts. 2 vs. High Point (2/20)GB 9 3x, last vs. Syracuse (4/27)CT 1 vs. Duke (4/14)FaceW 25 (34) vs. Princeton (2/24) Career HighsG 1 5x, last vs. High Point (2/18)A 1 2x, last vs. High Point (2/18)Pts. 2 vs. High Point (2/20)GB 9 3x, last vs. Syracuse (4/18)CT 1 4x, last vs. Duke (4/18)FaceW 25 (34) vs. Princeton (2/24)
20 DAVE SMITH • MSeason HighsG - -A 1 4x, last vs. Duke (4/14)Pts. 1 4x, last vs. Duke (4/14)GB 3 6x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)CT 1 4x, last vs. Vermont (4/21)FaceW 1 (1) vs. Richmond (3/31)
Career HighsG 1 3x, last vs. North Carolina (4/17)A 1 4x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)Pts. 1 7x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)GB 4 2x, last vs. Notre Dame (3/17)CT 1 5x, last vs. Vermont (4/18)FaceW 5 (7) vs. VMI (3/16)
17 GRIFFIN SPOLANSKY • DSeason HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 vs. Richmond (3/31)CT 1 2x, last vs. Stony Brook (3/10)
Career HighsG - -A - -Pts. - -GB 3 2x, last vs. Richmond (3/18)CT 1 2x, last vs. Stony Brook (3/18)
11 CAMERON STAFFORD • ASeason HighsG 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)A 1 3x, last vs. North Carolina (4/7)Pts. 3 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)GB 1 3x, last vs. Richmond (3/31)CT 1 vs. Dartmouth (3/20)
Career HighsG 6^ vs. Dartmouth (3/16)A 2^ vs. Stony Brook (4/16)Pts. 6^ vs. Dartmouth (3/16)GB 5^ vs. Jacksonville, 2/16)CT 1 5x, last vs. vs. Dartmouth (3/18)
15 GRIFFIN THOMPSON • GSeason HighsSV 15 vs. Loyola (2/10)SV% 47% vs. Drexel (2/17)GA 15 vs. Loyola (2/10)Faced 27 vs. Loyola (2/10)GB 6 vs. Loyola (2/10)CT 1 vs. Loyola (2/10)
Career HighsSV 18 vs. Robert Morris (4/17)SV% 75% vs. Robert Morris (4/17)GA 17 vs. Johns Hopkins (3/17)Faced 62 vs. Johns Hopkins (3/17)GB 6 2x, last vs. Loyola (2/18)CT 2 vs. Robert Morris (4/17)
Key - Career Highs are Month/Year 2018 Season Highs are Month/Day* - at Monmouth^ - at Vermont
19
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS2018 Virginia LacrosseVirginia Overall Individual Statistics
TEAM STATISTICS VA OPPSHOT STATISTICS Goals-Shot attempts 198-630 184-605 Goals scored per game 12.38 11.50 Shot pct. . 3 1 4 . 3 0 4 Shots on goal-Attempts 375-630 360-605 SOG pct. . 5 9 5 . 5 9 5 S h o t s / G a m e 39.4 37.8 A s s i s t s 123 103MAN-UP OPPORTUNITIES G o a l s - O p p o r t u n i t i e s 19-50 24-64 Conversion Percent . 3 8 0 . 3 7 5GOAL BREAKDOWN Total Goals 198 184 M a n - u p 19 24 M a n - d o w n 4 1 U n a s s i s t e d 75 81 O v e r t i m e 1 0 Goals scored average 12.32 11.45GROUND BALLS 606 529TURNOVERS 241 222CAUSED TURNOVERS 134 117FACEOFFS (W-L) 252-433 181-433 Faceoff W-L Pct. . 5 8 2 . 4 1 8CLEARS 250-296 267-312 Clear Pct. . 8 4 5 . 8 5 6PENALTIES N u m b e r 69 53 M i n u t e s 54:00 44:30ATTENDANCE T o t a l 22422 6538 Dates/Avg Per Date 9/2491 6/1090 Neutral Site #/Avg 1/3000
Goals by Period 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT OT2 TotalVirginia 53 44 56 44 0 1 198Opponents 51 40 46 47 0 0 184
Saves by Period 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT OT2 TotalVirginia 38 46 57 35 0 0 176Opponents 46 48 47 36 0 0 177
Shots by Period 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT OT2 TotalVirginia 164 160 166 138 1 1 630Opponents 156 146 154 149 0 0 605
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS2018 Virginia Lacrosse
Virginia Player High/Low AnalysisAll games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
Virginia - INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS
POINTS 10 Michael Kraus at Stony Brook (Mar 10)9 Michael Kraus vs Duke (Apr 14)
GOALS 6 Dox Aitken vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)5 Michael Kraus at Stony Brook (Mar 10)5 Ian Laviano vs Princeton (Feb 24)5 Michael Kraus at High Point (Feb 20)5 Ian Laviano vs Loyola (Feb 10)
ASSISTS 5 Michael Kraus vs Duke (Apr 14)5 Michael Kraus vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)5 Michael Kraus at Stony Brook (Mar 10)
SHOTS 13 Michael Kraus at Stony Brook (Mar 10)13 Michael Kraus vs Princeton (Feb 24)
SHOTS ON GOAL 8 Dox Aitken vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)8 Michael Kraus at Stony Brook (Mar 10)8 Michael Kraus vs Princeton (Feb 24)8 Dox Aitken at High Point (Feb 20)
SAVES 15 Alex Rode vs Syracuse (Mar 04)15 Griffin Thompson vs Loyola (Feb 10)
GROUND BALLS 10 Ryan Conrad vs Princeton (Feb 24)9 Justin Schwenk vs Syracuse (Apr 27)9 Justin Schwenk at Stony Brook (Mar 10)9 Justin Schwenk at High Point (Feb 20)
CAUSED TURNOVER 5 Scott Hooper at Notre Dame (Mar 17)5 Scott Hooper at Drexel (Feb 17)
FACEOFFS WON 25 Justin Schwenk vs Princeton (Feb 24)20 Justin Schwenk at Stony Brook (Mar 10)
VIRGINIA INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
26
2018 Virginia LacrosseVirginia Opponent High/Low Analysis
All games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
Virginia - OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS
POINTS 9 Justin Guterding vs Duke (Apr 14)6 Joel Tinney vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)
GOALS 4 Justin Guterding vs Duke (Apr 14)4 Kyle Marr vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)4 Mikey Wynne at Notre Dame (Mar 17)4 Tucker Dordevic vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
ASSISTS 5 Justin Guterding vs Duke (Apr 14)4 Joel Tinney vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)4 Michael Sowers vs Princeton (Feb 24)
SHOTS 16 Austin Sims vs Princeton (Feb 24)11 Pat Spencer vs Loyola (Feb 10)
SHOTS ON GOAL 7 Mitch Goldberg vs Richmond (Mar 31)6 Kyle Marr vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)6 Tucker Dordevic vs Syracuse (Mar 04)6 Austin Sims vs Princeton (Feb 24)6 Pat Spencer vs Loyola (Feb 10)
SAVES 19 Nick Washuta vs Vermont (Apr 21)18 Michael Zingaro at Manhattan (Mar 06)
GROUND BALLS 8 John Sexton vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)8 John Sexton at Notre Dame (Mar 17)8 Davis Sampere at High Point (Feb 20)
CAUSED TURNOVER 5 John Sexton at Notre Dame (Mar 17)3 Harrison Matsuoka at Stony Brook (Mar 10)3 Ryland Rees at Stony Brook (Mar 10)3 Foster Huggins vs Loyola (Feb 10)
FACEOFFS WON 16 Charles Kelly at North Carolina (Apr 07)16 Dan Varello vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHS
27
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS2018 Virginia LacrosseVirginia Team High/Low Analysis
All games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
Virginia - TEAM GAME HIGHS
POINTS 30 vs Princeton (Feb 24)28 at High Point (Feb 20)
GOALS 18 vs Princeton (Feb 24)18 at High Point (Feb 20)
ASSISTS 12 vs Princeton (Feb 24)10 vs Duke (Apr 14)10 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)10 at High Point (Feb 20)
SHOTS 48 vs Princeton (Feb 24)47 at High Point (Feb 20)
SHOT PERCENT .395 (15-38) at North Carolina (Apr 07).383 (18-47) at High Point (Feb 20)
SHOTS ON GOAL 33 at High Point (Feb 20)32 vs Princeton (Feb 24)
ON GOAL PERCENT .711 (27-38) at North Carolina (Apr 07).707 (29-41) vs Vermont (Apr 21)
SAVES 15 at Stony Brook (Mar 10)15 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)15 vs Loyola (Feb 10)
GROUND BALLS 46 vs Richmond (Mar 31)46 vs Princeton (Feb 24)
FACEOFF PERCENT .733 (22-30) at Stony Brook (Mar 10).722 (26-36) vs Princeton (Feb 24)
TURNOVERS 25 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)19 at Stony Brook (Mar 10)19 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
CAUSED TURNOVERS 14 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)14 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)
Opponent - GAME HIGHS
POINTS 28 vs Duke (Apr 14)25 vs Princeton (Feb 24)
GOALS 18 vs Duke (Apr 14)17 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)
ASSISTS 10 vs Duke (Apr 14)10 vs Princeton (Feb 24)
SHOTS 52 vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)49 vs Loyola (Feb 10)
SHOT PERCENT .447 (17-38) vs Notre Dame (Apr 29).419 (18-43) vs Duke (Apr 14)
SHOTS ON GOAL 29 vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)29 at Stony Brook (Mar 10)
ON GOAL PERCENT .719 (23-32) vs Richmond (Mar 31).684 (26-38) vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)
SAVES 19 vs Vermont (Apr 21)18 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
GROUND BALLS 45 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)44 vs Duke (Apr 14)
FACEOFF PERCENT .600 (21-35) vs Duke (Apr 14).593 (16-27) vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
TURNOVERS 23 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)18 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)
CAUSED TURNOVERS 15 at Stony Brook (Mar 10)12 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
TEAM GAME HIGHS
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
28
2018 Virginia LacrosseVirginia High/Low Analysis
All games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
Virginia - GAME LOWS
POINTS 9 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)11 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
GOALS 7 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)7 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)
ASSISTS 2 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)3 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
SHOTS 30 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)30 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)
SHOTS ON GOAL 14 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)15 vs Notre Dame (Apr 29)
SAVES 6 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)8 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)
GROUND BALLS 29 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)29 vs Vermont (Apr 21)
TURNOVERS 7 at Manhattan (Mar 06)10 at North Carolina (Apr 07)
CAUSED TURNOVERS 3 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)6 vs Princeton (Feb 24)6 vs Johns Hopkins (Mar 24)6 vs Vermont (Apr 21)
Opponent - GAME LOWS
POINTS 7 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)8 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
GOALS 5 at Manhattan (Mar 06)6 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)
ASSISTS 1 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)3 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
SHOTS 23 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)25 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)
SHOTS ON GOAL 14 vs Dartmouth (Mar 20)15 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)
SAVES 5 vs Syracuse (Apr 27)7 at Notre Dame (Mar 17)7 vs Richmond (Mar 31)
GROUND BALLS 20 vs Vermont (Apr 21)26 at Manhattan (Mar 06)
TURNOVERS 8 vs Princeton (Feb 24)9 vs Syracuse (Mar 04)
CAUSED TURNOVERS 3 at Manhattan (Mar 06)4 at North Carolina (Apr 07)4 vs Duke (Apr 14)
TEAM GAME LOWS
29
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS20
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/108/7
40/32
21/23
46/33
16/16
17/10
17-2
1/14-
183-
2.0/0-
0.0Ap
r 07
North
Car
olina
15-1
215
/129/9
38/34
27/22
34/31
10/11
12/16
15-1
9/20-
244-
3.5/3-
5.0Ap
r 14
DUKE
13-1
813
/1810
/1039
/4323
/2733
/4413
/1514
/2114
-16/1
7-21
4-2.0
/7-5.0
Apr 2
1Ve
rmon
t10
-910
/98/6
41/34
29/19
29/20
13/14
15/8
19-2
2/18-
234-
2.0/3-
2.5Ap
r 27
SYRA
CUSE
11-1
011
/107/6
34/38
16/20
37/35
17/10
18/7
11-1
3/18-
204-
3.5/3-
2.5Ap
r 29
NOTR
E DA
ME7-
177/1
75/7
35/38
15/26
41/45
25/23
15/11
15-1
9/20-
245-
4.5/2-
1.0To
tals
198-
184
198/1
8412
3/103
630/6
0537
5/360
606/5
2924
1/222
252/1
8125
0-29
6/267
-312
69-5
4.0/53
-44.5
Note:
Gam
e tota
ls ar
e disp
layed
in th
e for
mat T
EAM/
OPPO
NENT
for e
ach c
atego
ry
VIR
GIN
IA G
AM
E-B
Y-G
AM
E C
OM
PA
RIS
ON
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
30
2018 Virginia LacrosseVirginia Game Results
All games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
Date Opponent Score Overall Conf Site Att. GoalieFeb 10 #13 LOYOLA WO2 13-12 1-0-0 0-0-0 Charlottesville, Va. 3164 Griffin Thompson (1-0)Feb 17 at Drexel W 13-8 2-0-0 0-0-0 Philadelphia, Pa. 1051 Griffin Thompson (2-0)Feb 20 at High Point W 18-12 3-0-0 0-0-0 High Point, N.C. 1211 Alex Rode (1-0)Feb 24 PRINCETON W 18-15 4-0-0 0-0-0 Charlottesville, Va. 1882 Alex Rode (2-0)
* Mar 04 #12 SYRACUSE L 11-12 4-1-0 0-1-0 Charlottesville, Va. 2981 Alex Rode (2-1)Mar 06 at Manhattan W 8-5 5-1-0 0-1-0 Riverdale, N.Y. 431 Griffin Thompson (3-0)Mar 10 at Stony Brook W 15-14 6-1-0 0-1-0 Stony Brook, N.Y. 1404 Griffin Thompson (4-0)
* Mar 17 at #4 Notre Dame L 7-9 6-2-0 0-2-0 Notre Dame, Ind. 2071 Alex Rode (2-2)Mar 20 DARTMOUTH W 12-6 7-2-0 0-2-0 Charlottesville, Va. 809 Alex Rode (3-2)Mar 24 #9 JOHNS HOPKINS L 13-15 7-3-0 0-2-0 Charlottesville, Va. 2710 Alex Rode (3-3)Mar 31 RICHMOND W 14-10 8-3-0 0-2-0 Charlottesville, Va. 2441 Alex Rode (4-3)
* Apr 07 at #20 North Carolina W 15-12 9-3-0 1-2-0 Chapel Hill, N.C. 370 Alex Rode (5-3)* Apr 14 #3 DUKE L 13-18 9-4-0 1-3-0 Charlottesville, Va. 2681 Alex Rode (5-4)^ Apr 21 vs Vermont W 10-9 10-4-0 1-3-0 New Canaan, Conn. 3000 Alex Rode (6-4)! Apr 27 #12 SYRACUSE W 11-10 11-4-0 1-3-0 Charlottesville, Va. 2615 Alex Rode (7-4)! Apr 29 #16 NOTRE DAME L 7-17 11-5-0 1-3-0 Charlottesville, Va. 3139 Alex Rode (7-5)
^ - IMLCA Game of the Week (New Canaan, Conn.)! - ACC Championship (Charlottesville, Va.)
Team Record W-L-TOverall: 11-5
Conference: 1-3Home: 5-4Away: 5-1
Neutral: 1-0Overtime: 1-0
Attendance Dates Total AverageTotal: 16 31960 1998
Home: 9 22422 2491Away: 6 6538 1090
Neutral: 1 3000 3000
VIRGINIA RESULTS
31
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS
2018
Vir
gini
a La
cros
seV
irgi
nia
Gam
e-by
-Gam
e G
oals
-Ass
ists
-Poi
nts
All
gam
es (a
s of
Apr
30,
201
8)
23
45
67
89
1011
13Op
pone
ntDa
teSc
ore
KRAU
S,M
ICH
LAVI
ANO,
IAEM
ERY,
MAT
TM
OORE
,MAT
TAI
TKEN
,DOX
MER
LE,C
HRI
HARR
IS,C
ORRO
CK,W
ILL
D'AM
ARIO
,MST
AFFO
RD,C
HARR
IS,G
RILO
YOLA
Feb
1013
-12
W1-
2-3
5-1-
60-
0-0
2-1-
31-
2-3
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-1-
11-
0-1
1-0-
1DN
Pat
DRE
XEL
Feb
1713
-8W
0-1-
10-
0-0
0-0-
01-
1-2
4-0-
40-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
02-
0-2
1-0-
1DN
Pat
HPU
Feb
2018
-12
W5-
2-7
4-0-
41-
1-2
1-0-
13-
0-3
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
2-0-
20-
0-0
DNP
PRIN
Feb
2418
-15
W4-
3-7
5-2-
70-
0-0
2-0-
21-
1-2
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
02-
1-3
0-0-
00-
0-0
SUM
ar 0
411
-12
L2-
1-3
2-0-
20-
0-0
0-1-
12-
3-5
0-0-
0DN
P0-
1-1
3-1-
40-
0-0
0-0-
0at
MAN
MM
ar 0
68-
5W
1-2-
32-
0-2
0-0-
02-
0-2
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
1-0-
10-
0-0
0-0-
0at
STO
NYM
ar 1
015
-14
W5-
5-10
1-0-
10-
0-0
1-1-
24-
0-4
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-1-
10-
0-0
at N
DM
ar 1
77-
9L
4-0-
40-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
2-1-
30-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
PDA
RTM
ar 2
012
-6W
1-1-
22-
2-4
0-0-
01-
2-3
2-0-
20-
1-1
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
03-
1-4
0-0-
0JH
UM
ar 2
413
-15
L2-
5-7
3-0-
3DN
P0-
0-0
6-0-
6DN
P0-
0-0
0-1-
10-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
PRI
CHM
ar 3
114
-10
W4-
1-5
1-1-
2DN
P0-
2-2
2-0-
20-
0-0
0-0-
00-
1-1
DNP
1-0-
1DN
Pat
NC
Apr 0
715
-12
W3-
4-7
3-0-
3DN
P2-
0-2
2-0-
2DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
04-
0-4
0-1-
1DN
PDU
Apr 1
413
-18
L4-
5-9
1-0-
10-
0-0
1-1-
22-
1-3
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
02-
0-2
DNP
DNP
vs V
ERM
ONT
Apr 2
110
-9W
2-1-
32-
0-2
0-0-
00-
1-1
1-2-
30-
0-0
0-1-
10-
1-1
3-1-
40-
0-0
DNP
SUAp
r 27
11-1
0W
2-3-
51-
0-1
0-0-
04-
1-5
2-2-
40-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
2-0-
2DN
PDN
PND
Apr 2
97-
17L
3-1-
40-
1-1
0-0-
00-
3-3
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
3-0-
30-
0-0
0-0-
0
1415
1617
1819
2022
2425
26Op
pone
ntDa
teSc
ore
DZIA
MA,
MAT
THOM
PSON
,GKO
LOGY
,KYL
SPOL
ANSK
Y,M
URRA
Y,M
ILQU
INN,
REGA
SMIT
H,DA
VECO
NRAD
,RYA
CAM
PBEL
L,C
HOOP
ER,S
COAP
PELT
,JAC
LOYO
LAFe
b 10
13-1
2W
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
DNP
DNP
DNP
0-2-
2DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
at D
REXE
LFe
b 17
13-8
WDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P1-
1-2
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
at H
PUFe
b 20
18-1
2W
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
01-
1-2
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
PRIN
Feb
2418
-15
WDN
PDN
P0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
00-
2-2
0-1-
11-
0-1
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
SUM
ar 0
411
-12
L0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
at M
ANM
Mar
06
8-5
W0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P1-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
01-
0-1
at S
TONY
Mar
10
15-1
4W
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
at N
DM
ar 1
77-
9L
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDA
RTM
ar 2
012
-6W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
2-0-
20-
1-1
DNP
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
JHU
Mar
24
13-1
5L
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
1-0-
10-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-1-
10-
0-0
RICH
Mar
31
14-1
0W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
1-0-
10-
1-1
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
at N
CAp
r 07
15-1
2W
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDU
Apr 1
413
-18
LDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-1-
10-
1-1
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
vs V
ERM
ONT
Apr 2
110
-9W
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-1-
10-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PSU
Apr 2
711
-10
WDN
PDN
P0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
PND
Apr 2
97-
17L
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P
VIR
GIN
IA G
OA
LS
-AS
SIS
TS
-PO
INT
S
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
32
2018
Virg
inia
Lac
ross
eVi
rgin
ia G
ame-
by-G
ame
Goal
s-As
sist
s-Po
ints
All g
ames
(as
of A
pr 3
0, 2
018)
2830
3334
3637
3840
4142
44Op
pone
ntDa
teSc
ore
CONN
ERS,
JARE
ILLY
,JAC
HUDS
ON,W
ILFO
X,JO
HNSC
HWEN
K,JU
GORD
ON,M
ITRO
DE,A
LEX
LAM
B,RY
ANDO
L,TH
EOHE
RRIN
G,M
IGR
ECO,
LOGA
LOYO
LAFe
b 10
13-1
2W
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P1-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
DNP
1-0-
10-
0-0
at D
REXE
LFe
b 17
13-8
W0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
1-0-
11-
0-1
DNP
DNP
1-0-
1DN
P0-
3-3
0-0-
0at
HPU
Feb
2018
-12
W0-
1-1
DNP
DNP
0-0-
01-
1-2
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-4-
40-
0-0
PRIN
Feb
2418
-15
W2-
0-2
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P1-
2-3
0-0-
0SU
Mar
04
11-1
2L
1-0-
1DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
1-1
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
at M
ANM
Mar
06
8-5
W0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
1-1
0-0-
0at
STO
NYM
ar 1
015
-14
W0-
1-1
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
2-0-
20-
0-0
at N
DM
ar 1
77-
9L
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P0-
1-1
0-0-
0DA
RTM
ar 2
012
-6W
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
01-
2-3
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0JH
UM
ar 2
413
-15
L0-
1-1
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0RI
CHM
ar 3
114
-10
W1-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
P1-
0-1
0-0-
01-
0-1
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P2-
0-2
0-0-
0at
NC
Apr 0
715
-12
W0-
1-1
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P1-
3-4
0-0-
0DU
Apr 1
413
-18
L0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
P3-
1-4
0-0-
0vs
VER
MON
TAp
r 21
10-9
W1-
0-1
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
DNP
1-0-
10-
0-0
SUAp
r 27
11-1
0W
0-1-
1DN
PDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
0-0-
00-
0-0
NDAp
r 29
7-17
L0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
1-0-
10-
0-0
4547
4849
50Op
pone
ntDa
teSc
ore
AMBR
OSIN
O,PI
SANI
,LAW
BRUG
EL,L
UKPE
ELE,
JACK
MAL
ONEY
,WA
LOYO
LAFe
b 10
13-1
2W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
at D
REXE
LFe
b 17
13-8
W0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
Pat
HPU
Feb
2018
-12
W0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
DNP
PRIN
Feb
2418
-15
W0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
PSU
Mar
04
11-1
2L
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0at
MAN
MM
ar 0
68-
5W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
at S
TONY
Mar
10
15-1
4W
0-0-
00-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
at N
DM
ar 1
77-
9L
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PDN
PDN
PDA
RTM
ar 2
012
-6W
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0DN
PJH
UM
ar 2
413
-15
LDN
P0-
0-0
0-0-
0DN
P1-
0-1
RICH
Mar
31
14-1
0W
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
P0-
2-2
at N
CAp
r 07
15-1
2W
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DUAp
r 14
13-1
8L
DNP
DNP
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
vs V
ERM
ONT
Apr 2
110
-9W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
SUAp
r 27
11-1
0W
0-0-
0DN
P0-
0-0
DNP
DNP
NDAp
r 29
7-17
L0-
0-0
0-0-
00-
0-0
DNP
0-0-
0
VIR
GIN
IA G
OA
LS
-AS
SIS
TS
-PO
INT
S
33
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 355 USILA ALL-AMERICANS2018 Virginia Lacrosse
Virginia Category LeadersAll games (as of Apr 30, 2018)
## Points GP G A Pts Shots2 Michael Kraus 16 43 37 80 1466 Dox Aitken 16 34 12 46 1083 Ian Laviano 16 32 7 39 865 Matt Moore 16 17 14 31 8010 Mike D'Amario 15 27 3 30 56
## Goals GP G A Pts Shots2 Michael Kraus 16 43 37 80 1466 Dox Aitken 16 34 12 46 1083 Ian Laviano 16 32 7 39 8610 Mike D'Amario 15 27 3 30 565 Matt Moore 16 17 14 31 80
## Assists GP G A Pts Shots2 Michael Kraus 16 43 37 80 14642 Mikey Herring 16 12 15 27 285 Matt Moore 16 17 14 31 806 Dox Aitken 16 34 12 46 1083 Ian Laviano 16 32 7 39 86
## Ground Balls GP No.36 Justin Schwenk 16 9328 Jared Conners 16 5238 Alex Rode 13 459 Will Rock 16 432 Michael Kraus 16 38
## Game-winning Goals GP No.2 Michael Kraus 16 46 Dox Aitken 16 25 Matt Moore 16 23 Ian Laviano 16 210 Mike D'Amario 15 1
## Man-Up Goals GP No.6 Dox Aitken 16 542 Mikey Herring 16 410 Mike D'Amario 15 32 Michael Kraus 16 211 Cameron Stafford 14 2
## Man-Down Goals GP No.2 Michael Kraus 16 23 Ian Laviano 16 136 Justin Schwenk 16 1
## Faceoff Pct. GP Won Att Pct.36 Justin Schwenk 16 229 381 . 6 0 148 Luke Brugel 14 22 50 . 4 4 0
## Shots GP G A Shots Shot%2 Michael Kraus 16 43 37 146 . 2 9 56 Dox Aitken 16 34 12 108 . 3 1 53 Ian Laviano 16 32 7 86 . 3 7 25 Matt Moore 16 17 14 80 . 2 1 310 Mike D'Amario 15 27 3 56 . 4 8 2
## Shot Pct. GP G A Shots Shot%10 Mike D'Amario 15 27 3 56 . 4 8 242 Mikey Herring 16 12 15 28 . 4 2 911 Cameron Stafford 14 6 3 14 . 4 2 934 John Fox 16 3 0 7 . 4 2 928 Jared Conners 16 5 5 13 . 3 8 5
## Shots on Goal GP G A Shots SOG SOG%2 Michael Kraus 16 43 37 146 74 . 5 0 76 Dox Aitken 16 34 12 108 62 . 5 7 43 Ian Laviano 16 32 7 86 57 . 6 6 35 Matt Moore 16 17 14 80 49 . 6 1 310 Mike D'Amario 15 27 3 56 45 . 8 0 4
## Shots on Goal Pct. GP G A Shots SOG SOG%20 Dave Smith 15 0 4 3 3 1.00030 Jack Reilly 7 0 0 1 1 1.0008 Cory Harris 12 0 1 1 1 1.0007 Chris Merle 14 0 1 1 1 1.00045 Zach Ambrosino 11 0 0 1 1 1.000
## Caused Turnovers GP No.25 Scott Hooper 15 2444 Logan Greco 16 199 Will Rock 16 1716 Kyle Kology 16 1234 John Fox 16 11
## Penalties GP No.6 Dox Aitken 16 845 Zach Ambrosino 11 728 Jared Conners 16 734 John Fox 16 725 Scott Hooper 15 7
## Penalty Minutes GP No.45 Zach Ambrosino 11 8.028 Jared Conners 16 6.025 Scott Hooper 15 5.56 Dox Aitken 16 5.034 John Fox 16 4.5
VIRGINIA CATEGORY LEADERS
2018 VIRGINIA MEN’S LACROSSE 3 TEWAARATON TROPHY WINNERS
34
VIRGINIA CAVALIERSNumerical Roster NO. NAME POS. HT WT CL HOMETOWN HIGH SCHOOL 2 Michael Kraus A 5-11 195 So. New Canaan, Conn. New Canaan 3 Ian Laviano A 5-8 175 Fr. Laurel Hollow, N.Y. Cold Spring Harbor 4 Matt Emery M 6-3 200 R-Sr. San Francisco, Calif. St. Ignatius 5 Matt Moore M 6-1 195 Fr. Garnet Valley, Pa. Garnet Valley 6 Dox Aitken M 6-2 210 So. Villanova, Pa. Haverford School 7 Chris Merle M 6-1 190 Fr. Westhampton Beach, N.Y. Westhampton Beach 8 Cory Harris M 6-0 190 R-Jr. Fairfax, Va. Oaktown 9 Will Rock D 6-3 210 Fr. McLean, Va. Gonzaga 10 Mike D’Amario A 6-0 185 Sr. Niskayuna, N.Y. Niskayuna 11 Cameron Stafford A 6-0 180 Sr. Greenwich, Conn. Brunswick School/Vermont 13 Griffin Harris M 5-11 180 Fr. South Hamilton, Mass. The Governors Academy 14 Matt Dziama M 6-0 190 Jr. Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley/Deerfield Acad. 15 Griffin Thompson G 5-10 175 So. Princeton, N.J. Lawrenceville 16 Kyle Kology D 6-4 205 Fr. Chatham, N.J. Chatham 17 Griffin Spolansky D 6-2 190 Jr. New York, N.Y. Lawrenceville (N.J.) 18 Milan Murray M 6-2 210 So. Boston, Mass. Thayer Academy 19 Regan Quinn A 6-2 185 Fr. Rockville Centre, N.Y. Chaminade 20 Dave Smith M 5-9 175 Jr. Medford, N.J. Shawnee 21 Jarrett Jones D 6-1 190 So. Palos Verdes Estates, Calif. Palos Verdes 22 Ryan Conrad (c) M 6-0 190 Jr. Timonium, Md. Loyola-Blakefield 24 Chase Campbell D 6-3 205 Sr. Baltimore, Md. Gilman School 25 Scott Hooper(c) D 6-1 200 Sr. Wakefield, R.I. Hotchkiss School (Conn.) 26 Jackson Appelt A 5-8 170 Fr. New Canaan, Conn. New Canaan 27 Cooper Fersen D 6-5 220 Sr. Dorset, Vt. Berkshire School (Mass.) 28 Jared Conners D 6-5 210 So. Pittsford, N.Y. Pittsford 30 Jack Reilly D 6-2 195 So. Berwyn, Pa. Conestoga 33 William Hudson G 6-2 210 Jr. Baltimore, Md. Westminster (Ga.)/Holy Cross 34 John Fox M 6-0 190 Jr. New Canaan, Conn. Brunswick School 36 Justin Schwenk M 6-0 185 So. Royersford, Pa. Spring-Ford/Monmouth 37 Mitch Gordon A 6-2 190 So. Glen Arm, Md. St. Paul’s 38 Alex Rode G 6-1 180 Fr. Timonium, Md. St. Paul’s 40 Ryan Lamb M 6-2 200 R-So. Burke, Va. Paul VI Catholic 41 Theo Dol D 6-0 185 R-So. Georgetown, Ontario Avon Old Farms School (Conn.) 42 Mike Herring A 5-10 170 So. Dedham, Mass. Avon Old Farms School (Conn.) 44 Logan Greco D 6-0 205 R-Jr. Hauppauge, N.Y. Smithtown West 45 Zach Ambrosino D 6-0 200 Jr. Dover, Mass Taft School (Conn.) 46 Ryan Pride M 5-9 175 Fr. McLean, Va. The Landon School 47 Lawson Pisani A 6-2 225 Jr. Aspen, Colo. Hotchkiss School (Conn.) 48 Luke Brugel M 5-10 175 So. Great Falls, Va. Paul VI/Deerfield Academy 49 Jack Peele M 5-11 170 Fr. McLean, Va. The Potomac School 50 Wade Maloney M 6-0 215 So. Rumson, N.J. Lawrenceville (c)—captain
Head Coach: Lars Tiffany (Brown ‘90), second season at VirginiaAssistant Coach: Sean KirwanAssistant Coach: Kip TurnerVolunteer Assistant Coach: Hannon WrightOperations Assistant: Rocco RomeroAthletic Trainer: Rebecca Vozzo Student Assistant Athletic Trainer: Elise Lambalot, Rosalind Senopoulos Strength & Conditioning: Everrett GathronManagers: Pat Lemoine, Howie MillerVideographer: Jonathan Mack
Alphabetical Roster
NO. NAME POS. 6 Dox Aitken M 45 Zach Ambrosino D 26 Jackson Appelt A 48 Luke Brugel M 24 Chase Campbell D 28 Jared Conners D 22 Ryan Conrad (c) M 10 Mike D’Amario A 41 Theo Dol D 14 Matt Dziama M 4 Matt Emery M 27 Cooper Fersen D 34 John Fox M 37 Mitch Gordon A 44 Logan Greco D 8 Cory Harris M 13 GriffinHarris M 42 Mikey Herring A 25 Scott Hooper (c) D 33 William Hudson G 21 Jarrett Jones D 16 Kyle Kology D 2 Michael Kraus A 40 Ryan Lamb M 3 Ian Laviano A 50 Wade Maloney M 7 Chris Merle M 5 Matt Moore M 18 Milan Murray M 49 Jack Peele M 47 Lawson Pisani A 46 Ryan Pride M 19 Regan Quinn A 30 Jack Reilly D 9 Will Rock D 38 Alex Rode G 36 Justin Schwenk M 20 Dave Smith M 17 GriffinSpolansky D 11 Cameron Stafford A 15 GriffinThompson G (c)—captain
PLAYERS6 - Dox Aitken Dox (like Sox) - (Aiken)10 - D’Amario Duh-Mario14 - Dziama Jomma (rhymes with momma)16 - Kology Kah-low-gee18 - Milan Milan (like in Italy)38 - Rode Road41 - Theo Dol Tay-OH Dahl48 - Brugel Brew-Gull