Box ScoreAnken's Post Game Interview At the Bottom
LEXINGTON, Va. – With a thrilling overtime victory, the VMI lacrosse team logged its first victory of the 2012 season. Junior attackman Russell East put away the winner just 52 seconds into the extra stanza at the Institute's SprinTurf Field.
East's
sniper, his first of game, getting an assist from senior midfielder Keith Long,
ended a 14-game losing streak. VMI's last victory came one year ago, nearly to
the day as the Keydets upended Presbyterian 15-9 on March 12, 2011 at home.
The
game was a vengeance of sorts. The last time these two teams met two seasons
ago, Wagner walked out of Lexington with an 8-7 overtime victory. The April 24,
2010 win still stands as the Seahawks' last win.
Senior
face-off specialist Stephen Robarge went 22-26 at the face-off X, but none were
bigger than his 22nd, which came at the beginning of overtime. After
winning the draw, Robarge moved to ball down field to Long, who eventually hit
East for the game-winner.
But the
overtime period would not have come without the efforts of Drew Leonard, who
stuffed home the game-tying goal with just five seconds left in regulation to
force the extra period. Once again, it was Long who came up big on the back end
with the game-tying assist.
“What a
grinding game,” said VMI head coach Brian Anken of his team's victory. “I knew
that was a good Wagner team. We've watched them play a couple of times this
year and they've got some really good weapons that we had some problems with
throughout the game, but I thought we made great adjustments.”
The
overtime thriller, VMI's first extra stanza contest since May 1, 2010, featured
eight ties and eleven lead changes, including three ties in the fourth quarter.
Part of
VMI's success came from have eight different goal scorers on 12 total goals.
Playing in his first game of the year after sitting out with an injury,
sophomore attackman Mickey Hofmeister tallied the first hat trick of his
career, posting three goals. Freshman Mike DeBlasio had a career-high tying
three points on two goals and a dish. Leonard also capped his day with two
goals, including the overtime –forcer.
VMI's
other five goal scorers were Long, East, Robarge, Andrew Nieminski and Bernie
Mowbray. In the assist column, Long led the way with a pair, while DeBlasio,
East, Hofmeister and Anderson Caldwell had one helper each.
“It was
almost 80 degrees and we're a team that likes to go deeper on the bench than
most teams typically would and we try and do that any time we can,” Anken said
in regards to his eight different scorers. “Today was perhaps one of the best
showings of unselfishness on offense that we've, with eight different goal
scorers.
Wagner's
scoring was paced by a trio of hat tricks from Colin O'Rourke, Mike Hurley and
Nick DePhillips. Cory Santor and Brian Faughnan each chipped in one marker. Of
Wagner's 11 goals, five were assisted, with O'Rourke capping a five-point day
with two helpers. Dustin Doty, Mike Hurley and Cory Santor had one apiece.
Face-offs
were a dominating stat for VMI during the game where Robarge put together one
of his top career games. The last time Robarge won 20-plus draws was in the
2011 season finale when he went 20-29. Against Wagner, Robarge only lost four
draws and went 22-26.
In the
clearing and riding aspect of the game, VMI gained its offensive zone on 10 of
its 11 tries. But more impressively, held Wagner to just 15 successful clears
against 23 tries.
VMI
(1-6) also won the groundball battle, grabbing 37 grounders to the Seahawks'
15. The Keydets' efforts were led by the face-off unit where Robarge hoovered a
season-high 13 while wingman Chris Rossie collected six. The unit's other wing
man, Long, grabbed three as Kyle Hofstetter grabbed up five.
Between
the pipes, junior keeper J Rice got his first career win, making six saves in
the game. Opposite him, Nicholas Gibaldi suffered his sixth loss of the season,
but turned in an outstanding effort with 19 saves.
VMI
jumped out to an early 2-0 lead as Hofmeister scored his first goal since the
second to last game of 2011. Deblasio had a hand in the Keydets' first two
goals as he assisted Hofmeister and then finished a goal of his own with East
on pass.
But the
Seahawks locked things up early in the second quarter with back-to-back goals
from DePhillips. But Long broke the tie, which was short lived as Wagner
charged downfield and scored just over a minute later, tying the game at 3-3.
Wagner
(0-6) broke the knot and took a narrow4-3 lead. Nieminski retied the game for a
third time as he pushed home a shot with 1:23 left in the first half. VMI
grabbed its first halftime lead of the season as Mowbray, a native of near-by
Charlottesville, Va., scored his first of the year with only seven seconds on
the clock. VMI took a 5-4 lead into the break.
The
Seahawks came out in the second half guns blazing and Hurley and O'Rourke
recaptured the lead, 6-5 for Wagner. DeBlasio once again tied things at 6-6 but
O'Rourke broke the stalemate a minute and a half later.
VMI
grabbed its first lead since the start of the second half, ringing up three
straight goals from Leonard, Hofmeister and Robarge, who scored just 12 seconds
after Hofmeister on the ensuing face-off.
Finding
itself down 9-7 at the end of the third, Wagner rallied and snagged a 10-9 lead
after three straight goals of its own. VMI's Hofmeister tied things at 10-10
with just under six seconds left on the clock. O'Rourke wrested control from
the Keydets with 4:23 left in regulation, a lead which Wagner held until
Leonard buried his game-tying marker with five seconds left.
The
Seahawks held the ball going into the final two minutes of the game but were
restricted to the restraining box, as they had the lead. VMI's pressure defense
took advantage of this and forced Wagner into one if its 16 turnovers before
heading down field and scoring the tying goal.
VMI will return to the
SprinTurf Field, located behind Foster Stadium, on Saturday when the Keydets
look to build off of momentum and take on Siena College in the first Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference clash of the season. Game time is set for 1 p.m.