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UVa lacrosse teams focus on the future
By John Galinsky  / Daily Progress staff writer
April 22, 2003
 

One was victorious, one wasn’t. But both Virginia lacrosse coaches came out of their respective ACC tournaments with a similar mindset — keeping their teams focused on bigger battles ahead.
The Cavalier men defeated Duke 12-6 in Sunday’s championship game at Klockner Stadium, while the UVa women lost to Maryland 11-6 earlier in the day.
For both teams, however, the most significant month of the season is May, when the NCAA tournament is held. Each team has two important regular-season games remaining to prepare them for the NCAAs, and neither can afford to become too excited or discouraged by its ACC results.
UVa men’s coach Dom Starsia doesn’t believe that will be a problem. Even as his players celebrated their first conference championship since 2000, he heard them discussing their upcoming opponent in the parking lot outside Klockner.
“During the tailgate, without me bringing it up, I overheard some of the guys talking about Penn State,” he said. “I don’t think we’ll have a hard time putting this behind us and moving on. I think everyone is well aware of what we have ahead of us and what our goals are.
“Winning the conference championship is important to the University of Virginia. I don’t think it means as much to the lacrosse world as it does to people at this university and in this community. We feel good about what we did, but we want to build on what we accomplished.”
The third-ranked Cavaliers (9-2) got to the title game by edging North Carolina in a thrilling semifinal. Tournament MVP Billy Glading scored the game-winning goal in overtime, then fired in five more goals as Virginia used a dominant second half to put away Duke, the two-time defending champion.
Starsia says his team still has not played a complete game. The Cavaliers were shaky on defense against the Tar Heels, but Tillman Johnson bailed them out by making 18 saves, tying a career high. Johnson also had 13 saves in the final, but Duke generated few good scoring chances after Starsia switched to a zone defense late in the third quarter.
“We played more zone Sunday than we have all season,” said Starsia, who usually uses a man scheme. “When a team is hurting you off the dodge, like Duke was doing to us, I felt like a zone would slow them down. We played it about half the time in the fourth quarter and I think it kind of threw them off their game a little bit.”
Virginia allowed just two goals in the second half and began to find a rhythm on offense as the game progressed. Glading was the only Cavalier to score in the first 22 minutes, but five players combined for nine goals the rest of the way.
A.J. Shannon scored three times, while freshman Kyle Dixon continued his late-season emergence with two goals.
The Cavaliers conclude the regular season with home games against No. 15 Penn State on Saturday and Denver on Monday. The Nittany Lions upset them last year and are coming off a victory over No. 8 Rutgers.
“Anyone who thinks we’re going to approach this casually is mistaken,” Starsia said.
Likewise, UVa women’s coach Julie Myers said it would be a mistake to write off her team after its loss in the ACC final. The third-ranked Cavaliers scored just one goal in the first half and fell to No. 2 Maryland for the 17th time in their past 18 meetings.
But as Myers pointed out, no one has had much success against the Terrapins, who have won five of seven ACC tournaments and seven of the past eight NCAA championships.
“Just walking from the parking lot to my office this morning, three people asked me if we were still going to make the [NCAA] tournament,” Myers said. “Come on. A little perspective is good.”
The Cavaliers, who finish with a home game against No. 16 Vanderbilt on Sunday and a road game at No. 1 Loyola next Tuesday, are a lock for the 16-team NCAA field. If anything, they may have improved their seed by defeating then-No. 3 Duke in Friday’s semifinals.
It was far from a lost weekend for Virginia, which avenged an earlier loss to the Blue Devils and played well in the second half against the Terrapins.
It was UVa’s first appearance in the ACC title game since 1999, so that experience should help if the Cavaliers go far in the NCAAs.

“There are lots of positives,” Myers said. “We played a really solid game against Duke and we had moments of brilliance on Sunday. We had some major lapses that killed us, but there were a lot of things to learn from and a lot of things to build on.”

 

 

VA. NOTES
Apr 22, 2003

EXONERATED: Virginia football player Almondo "Muffin" Curry was found not guilty of a misdemeanor charge yesterday in Charlottesville General District Court.

Judge Joseph M. Serkes heard Curry's case, a clerk said.

Curry, a junior who starts at cornerback, was charged with misdemeanor assault and battery Jan. 19 following an incident involving another U.Va. student, Ayoola Keith Olorunsola.

U.Va. offensive guard Elton Brown was charged with misdemeanor assault in connection with the same incident. The case against Brown, a sophomore, was dismissed April 1.

Brown and Curry are graduates of Hampton High. U.Va.'s coaching staff contended from the start that they would be cleared, and both players took part in spring practice.

POSITIVE EXPERIENCE: On his first play Saturday at Scott Stadium, with some 6,000 fans looking on, No. 2 quarterback Anthony Martinez completed a 22-yard pass to wideout Art Thomas. On Martinez's second play, linebacker Dennis Haley sacked him for a 4-yard loss.

Welcome to Division I-A football. Martinez, a former Patrick Henry High star, had his ups and downs in the Cavaliers' final spring practice, not surprising for a freshman who redshirted last season.

Martinez threw a short pass to Jason Snelling that the sophomore fullback from L.C. Bird turned into a 32-yard gain. He threw a long pass to wideout Ottowa Anderson that freshman cornerback Tony Franklin intercepted. Overall, Cavaliers coach Al Groh said he liked what he saw from Martinez.

"I thought he was in probably the best control of his huddle that he has been this year," Groh said.

Martinez said: "The spring went well. I feel as if I'm a lot further along" than when practice started last month.

ON HOLD: Defensive back Randy Jones, who hasn't played football since suffering serious injuries in an October 2001 car wreck, said Saturday that he's still waiting for his doctors to clear him for contact. Jones is up to 185 pounds -10 more than his pre-wreck weight - but he recently aggravated a foot injury.

In the wreck, Jones broke his left ankle, his left femur and his right shoulder.

STRETCH RUN: The Virginia men's lacrosse team, which won the ACC tournament Sunday, has two regular-season games left, both at Klockner Stadium. The third-ranked Cavaliers (9-2) meet Penn State on Saturday afternoon and Denver on Monday night.

By winning both, U.Va. would assure itself one of the top four seeds in next month's NCAA tournament, and it will be favored in each game. Still, Cavaliers coach Dom Starsia wasn't pleased Sunday to hear a young reporter call those games "tuneups."

"Just the language you're using makes me uncomfortable," Starsia said. "Penn State rocked us last year."

U.Va. traveled to Penn State last April for what was supposed to be a blowout. It was - for the underdog Nittany Lions, who romped 13-8.

"I think we learned our lesson last year," Virginia defenseman Brett Hughes said. "Maybe we overlooked Penn State."

BREAKTHROUGH: In Tillman Johnson's three seasons in goal, Virginia has beaten such teams as Johns Hopkins, Syracuse, Princeton and Maryland. A year ago, U.Va. advanced to the NCAA tournament semifinals before losing in double overtime to eventual champion Syracuse.

Yet the Cavaliers' conference title, their first since 2000, held special significance for Johnson, a two-time all-ACC pick.

"Personally, I've never won anything in my life playing lacrosse, and I'd really been looking forward to winning at least something, and I'm real happy for all of us," he said Sunday. "Since I've been here, our team hasn't won anything. We haven't won the ACC or the national championship, so I think this is something to get the ball rolling." - Jeff White

 

 

Virginia tops Duke for ACC championship
Cavaliers win conference championship on home field, senior Billy Glading scores game winning goal in overtime against UNC, five goals in title game against Duke
Sean Mclernon
Cavalier Daily Associate Editor

 

Virginia senior midfielder Billy Glading is known primarily for his defense, but it will be the memory of his offensive skills which will haunt Duke and North Carolina for a long time to come.

Glading scored an overtime goal to lift No. 2 seed Virginia to a 13-12 victory Friday night against the No. 3 seed Tar Heels (5-6). He went on to tie a tournament record of five goals Sunday to help the Cavaliers win the ACC tournament with a 12-6 win over No. 4 seed Duke (8-6) at Klöckner Stadium.

With the victory, Virginia extends its winning streak to four games and improves to 9-2 overall. The triumph also gives Virginia possession of the conference crown for the first time since 2000. Glading took tournament MVP honors for his performance.

"This really means a lot to us," junior goalie Tillman Johnson said. "Personally, I've never won anything in my life playing lacrosse. I've really been looking forward to winning at least something, and I think this is a real happy day for all of us."

Virginia jumped out to an early 3-1 advantage over the Blue Devils on a trio of tallies from Glading, but Duke quickly tied the score with two early second quarter goals. Duke midfielder Matt Zash moved past Virginia midfielder Trey Whitty to score on a diving low shot to the left side and give the Blue Devils their first lead of the day with 9:15 left in the second quarter.

The Cavaliers would not let the Blue Devils hold onto their lead for long. A sidearm bullet to the right side from freshman midfielder Kyle Dixon tied the score with just under two minutes to play. Dixon's goal was followed by another when sophomore attackman John Christmas came around from behind the net to score with 5:55 left in the half and give Virginia a lead they would not relinquish for the rest of the afternoon.

"We were getting out in transition early on against them," Duke coach Mike Pressler said. "The game of lacrosse is a momentum game though, and goals come in strings and bunches, and Virginia just had a little bit more than us in the second half"

The Cavaliers began to pull away in the third quarter, grabbing a 7-4 lead on Glading's fourth goal of the afternoon, a low sidearm bounce shot to the right side. Senior midfielder A.J. Shannon scored three goals in the third and fourth quarter to help Virginia push their lead to 12-5.

Duke's Matt Rewkowski found the back of the Virginia net with 1:21 remaining to break a 16-minute long scoring drought for the Blue Devils but it was too little too late. The Cavaliers succeeded in shutting down the Duke offense throughout the second half.

"We played a little zone at the end of the third quarter, and we sort of felt like we found a little chink there," Virginia coach Dom Starsia said. "I felt like we could drop in and play a zone and defend them effectively for the rest of the game if we had to. They kind of hurt us off the dodge and going to a zone helps to take that threat away."

The Virginia defense had much more trouble in the semifinal against the Tar Heels, who were able to fire 30 shots on goal. It was Johnson's career-high 18 saves, including several spectacular stops during one-on-one situations, which kept the Cavaliers in the game.

Virginia appeared to be in control against the Tar Heels, holding a 12-9 lead with under three minutes remaining, but North Carolina scored three goals before time expired to force overtime.

The Tar Heels had the ball with a man-advantage after Virginia freshman Matt Ward was called for a 30-second pushing penalty, but freshman attackman Ryan Blair stepped out-of-bounds with the ball, giving the Cavaliers possession.

Virginia took advantage of the opportunity, as freshman attackman Joe Yevolli found an open Glading in front of the goal. Glading easily found the back of the net to send Virginia to the championship game. Duke upset No. 1 seed Maryland, 7-6, in the other semifinal Friday night.

The two victories move the Cavaliers to 9-0 when scoring 10 goals or more and 6-1 at home this season. Virginia will finish off its regular season schedule with two more games at Klockner next weekend, against No. 18 Penn State and Denver.

 

 

Quiet hero Glading honored as MVP
Joe Lemire
Cavalier Daily Sports Editor
Exceptional athletic feats are not uncommon to senior midfielder Billy Glading, but his exploits somehow often escape attention. Heck, even his own coach didn't notice his prodigious goal-scoring day Sunday.

"He tolls them so quietly," coach Dom Starisa said. "I had no idea at the end of the day that he had five goals." However, others did take notice. Glading garnered honors as both the ACC Tournament MVP and as Inside Lacrosse's National Player of the Week.

Glading has made a name for himself as a defensively-oriented midfielder, perfectly complementing his more offensively-minded linemates, fellow senior midfielders Chris Rotelli and A.J. Shannon. Defenders never draw the headlines the way scorers do, but Glading is especially disadvantaged by the particular effectiveness of his teammates. Rotelli is a reigning first-team All-American and Shannon was named a preseason third-team selection.

Glading finally may be on the right track, adding these MVP honors to the previous week's accolade of ACC Player of the Week for a three-goal game in Virginia's first meeting with Duke April 12.

Only recently have his hard work and dedication netted him gaudy offensive statistics and personal accolades, but his play certainly has not gone unnoticed by his teammates.

"I think Billy's been playing great defense all year," Virginia goalie Tillman Johnson said. "Though he excelled really well on offense in this tournament, he's a defensive midfielder for us. Seeing him out there just gives us confidence."

Anyone at Klöckner Stadium this past weekend, however, will more likely remember his ACC tournament record-tying five-goal performance than any of his groundballs or defensive checks. In Sunday's victory over Duke, Glading needed only 13 minutes of the first quarter to record a hat trick.

Similarly, those who might have missed the final and only saw Friday night's semi-final against North Carolina, likely only will recall the way Glading buried Joe Yevoli's feed in the top-right corner of the net with 2:18 left in the first overtime period to notch a 13-12 victory for Virginia.

Glading now has scored 10 goals in his last three games -– not bad for a defensive guy. And he's worked hard for every one of them, with the majority of his goals coming in the transition game and outside the normal six-on-six offensive sets. Of course, Sunday fell just short of a storybook ending to this senior's final conference tournament. With three minutes left, Glading had his easiest opportunity of the afternoon -- a wide-open net -- and yet he failed to break the tournament goal record clanking his shot off the right post.

Since his own coach was oblivious to his performance, a reporter asked Glading after the game if even he had been aware of what he missed by firing that last shot off the iron.

"Yeah, I was aware of that," Glading said with a laugh. "I just looked up briefly and was surprised to see that there was no goalie in net but just kind of jerked" the shot.

Still, Glading certainly has had one of the most memorable weeks in his collegiate athletic career. Yet it may not be his proudest accomplishment in sports. As a high school senior, Glading led his Gonzaga Prep basketball team to three wins over a DeMatha team that included the Supersonics' Joe Forte and Kentucky senior Keith Bogans. In two of those games, Glading scored the winning points in the games' final seconds. But as it seems to go with all of his exploits, "I bet you didn't know that..."

 

 

Spring game showcases football's improvement
Matt Trogdon
 
What a difference a year makes.

The Virginia football team held its annual spring game Saturday, April 19 marking the end of spring practice and the beginning of an endless off-season for Cavalier fans. Amid the cloudy skies and chilly April air, one aspect of the "game" stood out above everything else: the Virginia football team has gotten very good. . . very fast.

The spring game of 2002 featured a Virginia team with more questions than answers. Fans wondered if Matt Schaub could ever win in a Virginia uniform. They questioned the ability of a young, inexperienced line, and they hoped beyond hope that Virginia's all-world recruiting class could make an immediate impact.

The spring game of 2003 could not have been much different. Here's a short recap of what has changed in the last year.

Matt Schaub: Heisman Candidate

During last year's spring game, Matt Schaub looked uncomfortable in the pocket. His passes were unsteady. His feet were slow. He threw a pass that was picked off and returned for a touchdown. Needless to say Virginia fans were not too excited about the team's offense. This year's scene was hardly reminiscent. Schaub looked poised in the pocket. His passes were laser-sharp, hitting their targets with consistency and ease. As for his feet, they went untested. Schaub had the protection of a virtual red-jersey, the "don't hit the quarterback" jersey.

The fact that coach Al Groh elected to put Schaub under the red-jersey rule speaks volumes about Schaub's importance to the team. Spring games often have provided the venue for serious injuries. Groh was not willing to take the chance of his star quarterback suffering such a setback.

Most strikingly, the program distributed among the fans only had one player on it. You can guess which player. Under his picture, the program text read "Matt Schaub, 2002 ACC Player of the Year, 2003 Heisman Trophy Candidate." My, how far he has come.

Ahmad Brooks: The Real Deal

Virginia fans heard the hype from recruiting analysts around the nation. They waited anxiously as their star recruit attended military school to improve his grades. They received their reward Saturday when Ahmad Brooks said "hello" to Virginia football. Brooks did not disappoint, drawing ooh's and ahh's from the Virginia faithful with his amazing speed and hard-hitting ability. On one play, Brooks took a bad angle and ran down Virginia running back Marquis Weeks, who had attempted to bounce to the outside. Later in the day, he broke through the offensive line and put Schaub in his crosshairs. Luckily, he remembered the red-jersey rule and pulled up short, only to touch Schaub on the shoulder. Schaub later said that if Brooks had hit him, he would still be lying on the field. I don't doubt it.

Last year, Virginia fans marveled at the experience of their linebacking corps, which included seniors Angelo Crowell and Merril Robertson. This year, they marveled at the same unit because of its promise. With Brooks joining sack phenom Darryl Blackstock and fellow freshman Kai Parham, fans have reason to be excited.

Wali Lundy and Marquis Weeks: Untouchable?

Last spring, a Virginia fan had to worry a good deal about the team's running game. Antoine Womack had graduated, severing the final bond to the George Welsh years of Running Back U. Alvin Pearman had shown signs of brilliance, but lacked the consistency to be a feature back. This spring, the situation at running back is, again, indicative of a new era. Virginia not only has one running back with feature back capabilities, it has two. Wali Lundy looked superb Saturday, picking the right holes and hitting them hard. Marquis Weeks ran with more power than Lundy, throwing a vicious shoulder on one play that broke a Lance Evans tackle and allowed the rising junior to go 43 yards for the score. Together, they should provide a one-two unseen in the state since the days of that other power-speed combo. Not Suggs and Jones. Try Womack and Thomas Jones.

Watch out ACC, the 2003 Cavaliers should be a strong to very strong contender for the league title. Considering where they were a year ago, that's an amazing possibility.