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Johns Hopkins-Virginia Men's Lacrosse Notes
March 19, 2008
Complete Release in PDF Format
Miscellaneous Notes in PDF Format
Game-by-Game Recaps in PDF Format
Setting the Scene: Johns Hopkins hits the road for the second time this season as the Blue Jays travel to Charlottesville, Virginia to take on the second-ranked Cavaliers of the University of Virginia. Game time at UVa's Klockner Stadium is set for 4 pm.
Looking Back: Johns Hopkins dropped its second straight overtime decision and fell to then fifth-ranked Syracuse, 14-13, in overtime. The Blue Jays slipped to 3-2 with the loss. Virginia became the first team in the nation to win eight games this season as the Cavaliers knocked off Towson, 18-13, last Saturday. Virginia is now 8-0.
These are the Facts: Johns Hopkins enters the game against Virginia with an all-time record of 874-274-15 (.759). The Blue Jays own nine NCAA titles, 29 USILA titles and six ILA titles for a total of 44 championships.
125th Anniversary: The 2008 season marks the 125th anniversary of the Johns Hopkins men's lacrosse program. The Blue Jays are wearing commemorative patches on their uniforms for the 125th anniversary of the program (it is NOT the 125th season) and the logo is being used in a variety of printed pieces to promote the anniversary.
Yes, That's 600 Games Over .500: Including last week's loss to Syracuse the Blue Jays' all-time record is now 874-274-15 ... that's 600 games over .500. To put this in perspective: JHU has played an average of just under 15 games per season under head coach Dave Pietramala. Using a 15-game season as a reference, if the Blue Jays posted a 5-10 record for 120 straight seasons, they would have exactly a .500 record.
Poll Position: Johns Hopkins is tied for sixth in this week's USILA Coaches Poll and ranks fourth in the Nike/Inside Lacrosse Media Poll. Virginia is ranked second in both the USILA Coaches Poll and the Nike/Inside Lacrosse Media Poll this week. To clarify, the Johns Hopkins Sports Information Office uses the USILA Coaches Poll to reflect JHU's official ranking at the time of a game.
A Tough Stretch: This week's game at Virginia is the second in a four-game stretch against teams that currently hold the top four spots in the USILA Coaches Poll. JHU played third-ranked Syracuse last week, travels to second-ranked Virgnia this week, returns home to host fourth-ranked North Carolina next week and closes out the four-game swing at top-ranked Duke on April 5. The combined record of those four teams is currently 26-2 (.929) with the two losses coming at the hands of one of the other teams (Syracuse lost to Virginia and North Carolina lost to Duke).
Rare Back-to-Back Losses: Last Saturday's loss against Syracuse was JHU's second straight. The two-game losing streak is just the second for the Blue Jays under head coach Dave Pietramala. JHU dropped three straight last season before rallying to win its last nine games en route to winning the NCAA Championship for the second time in three yers.
Number One Perspective: Johns Hopkins has played 53 games as the top-ranked team in the nation since the beginning of the 2002 season. That's more than all of other Division I men's lacrosse teams in the nation have combined to play as the top-ranked team in the nation over the same period of time.
One-Goal Turnarounds: The 8-7 overtime loss at Hofstra and the 14-13 loss to Syracuse were rare one-goal losses for the Blue Jays under head coach Dave Pietramala. Johns Hopkins is now 30-8 in one-goal games since Pietramala took over in 2001. Despite the losses, the Blue Jays have won 17 of their last 21 and 21 of their last 26 one-goal games. In the five seasons prior to Pietramala arriving (1996-2000) the Blue Jays were 5-8 in one-goal games.
More One-Goal Notes: The Blue Jays have come from behind to win 14 times during their last 17 one-goal wins. In 10 of those 14 come-from-behind one-goal wins the Blue Jays have come back from a deficit of two goals or more. The latest of these come-from-behind one-goal wins came against Notre Dame in the 2007 NCAA Tournament, when the Blue Jays erased a 4-1 second-quarter deficit.
In Case We Go Extra: The loss at Hofstra snapped a nine-game winning streak for the Blue Jays in overtime games. The Blue Jays had won nine straight overtime games dating back to a 10-9 win at Navy in 2004 before the loss to the Pride. Including last week's loss to Syracuse, JHU is 13-4 all-time in overtime under Pietramala's guidance, including an impressive 6-2 in overtime games played on the road.
Players on the 2008 team who scored game-winning goals in overtime during their career: More Overtime: The overtime games against Hofstra and Syracuse are the first back-to-back overtime games for Johns Hopkins since JHU played Towson and Virginia to overtime in the final two games of the 1988 season. This is just the third time in school history JHU has played back-to-back overtime games and the first time JHU has lost consecutive games in overtime.
Comeback Kids: The Blue Jays trailed - albeit briefly- vs. Albany and as late as early in the third quarter against UMBC. Johns Hopkins came from behind to win eight times last season, including six times during the season-ending nine-game winning streak. JHU trailed in its first two NCAA Tournament games, but never trailed during the Final Four.
Streaking: Johns Hopkins is 68-13 in its last 81 regular season games dating back to the end of the 2001 season and is 80-17 overall since the start of the 2002 season.
A Defensive Group: Johns Hopkins held all 17 of its opponents scoreless for a span of least 9:30 last season and held the opposition scoreless for a span of 10:45 or longer 23 times during the 2007 season. The Blue Jays have picked up right where they left off last season as they held Albany scoreless for a streak of 27:03 during the season-opening win, kept Princeton off the board for the first 23:04 and held Hofstra without a goal for 37:56. The streak of over 37 scoreless minutes for the Pride marks the eighth time since the start of the 2007 season that Hopkins has held an opponent scoreless for 25 minutes or longer. Other scoreless streak notes of interest:
JHU has held the opposition scoreless for a streak of 14 minutes or longer 24 times since the start of the 2007 season, including seven times in five games this season.
More Defensive: Albany scored its first goal just 36 seconds into the game against JHU. The Great Danes scored exactly one more goal in the next 41:21.
Still More Defensive: Princeton scored exactly one goal in the first 35:18 against JHU.
A Final Defensive: Hofstra scored six goals in the first 13:02 against the Blue Jays. The Pride didn't score again until just 9:02 remained in the fourth quarter.
Don't Forget the Offense: While the focus of any Dave Pietramala-coached team will always be defense, the Blue Jay offense has gotten off to a good start this season. Consider:
As a team the Blue Jays have scored on 32.1% of their shots through five games (54-of-168). JHU connected on 28.8% of its shots en route to winning the national championship a year ago.
More Offense: Johns Hopkins has scored more than one goal in 17 of the 22 quarters thus far (includes overtime periods). Take away the two overtime periods and JHU has scored more than one goal in 17 of 20 full-length quarters.
Playing the Possession Game: JHU has won the ground ball war in four of its five games this season and has a 180-153 ground ball advantage on the year (+5.4 GBs per game). JHU held a 40-31 advantage on GBs against Princeton one week after taking the same battle by a 40-29 count against Albany. Hofstra is the only team that has won the ground ball battle against the Blue Jays this season (31-29).
Kevin and Dave Huntley Make History: When Johns Hopkins slipped past Duke, 12-11, for the national championship last spring, there were plenty of members of the Huntley family in high spirits. After all, then junior attackman Kevin Huntley scored three times in the title game and punched home what proved to be the game-winning goal with 3:25 remaining in the fourth quarter. The national championship is the second for the Blue Jays since Huntley arrived in 2005.
Additional information, including player notes of interest, including in PDF version above.
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