Powell's late heroics hand SU ninth
NCAA Lacrosse Championship
June 1, 2004
By Michael Licker, The Daily Orange
BALTIMORE - For three-and-a-half quarters, Michael
Powell loomed quietly, a silent assassin waiting to
strike. The most prolific scorer in Syracuse men's lacrosse
history - playing in his final game with a national
championship at stake - worked furiously behind the
net, trying anything to free himself from the grips
of Navy's defense - the top defense in the country.
Whenever Powell got near the net, Navy goalie Matt
Russell seemed to stand in the way. Still, Powell managed
to keep his teammates involved, striking for four assists
before the third quarter's end.
Then, the inevitable happened - Powell took over the
game. With 3:37 remaining, Powell rushed the net from
near midfield and delivered a perfect pass to Brian
Nee which he deposited for a 13-12 lead. Then, just
more than two minutes later, Powell tallied the game
winner off a fast break, three-on-one pass from Nee.
That goal-the last of SU's season and the last of Powell's
remarkable career - gave the Orange a 14-13 victory
over Navy at rainy M&T Bank Stadium on Monday and
SU's ninth NCAA Championship.
For Powell, Nee and three other SU senior starters,
it capped one of the greatest four-year runs in Syracuse
lacrosse history. The group has been to the Final Four
four times, played in three national championship games
and now has two national titles. The title is SU's third
since 2000.
"It's been a great ride with these guys,"
head coach John Desko said. "We've won a couple
national championships. I've had a lot of fun with these
guys. To have the team we have and to play against the
teams we've played - we didn't take any shortcuts to
get here. I'm proud of them."
Though Powell, who won Most Outstanding Player, claimed
he had a bad game, he managed to lead all scorers with
six points. While he struggled to put the ball in the
net, he constantly drew double-teams and then used his
innate ability to find open teammates. His passing and
the overwhelming attention he drew from the Midshipmen
defense led to two other SU players - Nee and Brian
Crockett - tallying hat tricks.
Navy outshot SU (44-40), had less turnovers (15-19),
recovered more groundballs (60-39) and won more face-offs
(20-10). Still, the Midshipmen (15-3) failed to take
control of the game.
"They shot well from outside," Navy coach
Richie Meade said. "We may have picked up more
groundballs but weren't as efficient with them. It doesn't
do any good if you pick up a groundball and then it
goes back on the ground."
Several times, SU (15-2) had chances to finish off
the Midshipmen early but lacked the final knock-out
blow. Up 7-5 in the second quarter, the Orange allowed
two late second-half goals and went to the locker room
even with Navy. Up, 10-8, at the end of the third quarter,
Powell missed an empty net when he rushed his shot and
clanged it off the post.
Still, SU managed to escape. In the end, the senior's
experience showed. Several times in the game's waning
minutes, SU invited Navy to steal the title. But the
inexperienced Midshipmen, playing in their first NCAA
Tournament since 1999, refused to take advantage of
their chances.
Down, 13-12, Billy Looney threw an errant pass that
led to Powell's fast-break goal. Then, down, 14-12,
with less than a minute to go, Ian Dingman wasted precious
seconds before putting in Navy's final goal. Syracuse
then gave Navy one more chance, turning the ball over
with 10 seconds left. Looney came up short again, his
shot blocked aside by junior Jarett Park.
For Powell, who along with Nee, Sean Lindsay, Jay Pfeifer,
Kevin Dougherty and Dan DiPietro earned All-Tournament
honors, it marked the perfect ending to his SU - and
possibly his entire - lacrosse career. After the game
he said he planned to take the summer off and decide
his future plans. He said he would like to play again
eventually, though.
"To end my career by scoring the last goal and
to win by one in the national championship," Powell
said, "I mean Hollywood should probably buy that."
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