Advertisement

Shooting Barrage Can’t Give M. Lacrosse Win

Sophomore midfielder Brian Mahler opened up the scoring for Harvard with an unassisted goal at 5:56 in the period.

Next came two impressive plays by Widbin, as he set up sophomore midfielder Evan Calvert to tie the score at 2-2, and then went on to score a goal of his own with only 1:18 left in the first to give the Crimson its first and only lead of the game, 3-2.

The lead held up throughout the beginning of the second period until the Stags started a three-goal streak of their own, scoring the only goal of the second period at 8:46 to knot the game at three.

“[Fairfield] have always been tough competitors,” Kocis said. “We expected them to come out fired up to get back at us from last year. We didn’t play our ‘A’ game.”

The Stags opened the third period with a goal only 1:46 in. Fairfield would not score again until 4:00 in the period to bring the score to 5-3, but when they did, it opened the gate for a rush of goals in the last minute of the period.

Advertisement

Harvard was able once again to retaliate, notching back-to-back tallies. Freshman attackman Brooks Scholl was a major part of the rally, with a hand in both goals. Scholl had an unassisted tally at 1:13 in the period, and then went on to feed the ball to junior attackman Steve Cohen, who hit the goal with 40 seconds left in the third to once again tie the score at 5-5.

But the Crimson couldn’t keep the momentum, as the Stags came back to score with one second left in the third period to take a 6-5 advantage.

The fourth period remained scoreless until Harvard was able to come back and make one last effort when junior attackman Sean Kane found the net with 5:52 remaining to re-knot the score.

But Fairfield was able to take advantage of a power-play opportunity as a penalty for tripping was called at 4:48 in the period.

“We had a man-down situation so that put us down by one,” Kocis said. “We were determined to step it up at the end and we did everything we needed to but putting the ball into the net. We just didn’t get it done.”

It was only the Stags’ second man-up opportunity, but they were able to convert it to a game-winning goal by Greg Downing with 4:14 left to play.

After this tough loss, the Crimson will go on to face Penn on Saturday in its first Ivy game of the season. Harvard will have to brush off this weekend’s loss and focus on what lies ahead, beginning with the crucial battle with the Quakers.

“The Ivy season is a whole new season,” Wannop said. “You will see a different team and a different outcome on Saturday.”

—Staff writer Abigail M. Baird can be reached at ambaird@fas.harvard.edu.

Tags

Advertisement