JHU s All-Time NCAA Tournament Results

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JHU s All-Time NCAA Tournament Results Year Date Round Opponent JHU Seed/Opp. Seed Result Attendance City, State Stadium 2010 May 15 First Round #5 Duke -/5 L/5-18 1,813 Durham, NC Koskinen Stadium 2009 May 9 First Round #11 Brown 8/- (OT) W/12-11 12,142 2009 May 17 #5 Virginia 8/1 L/8-19 2,491 Annapolis, MD Navy Marine Corps Stadium 2008 May 11 First Round #16 Hofstra 5/- W/10-4 2,864 2008 May 17 #14 Navy 5/- W/10-4 17,017 Annapolis, MD Navy Marine Corps Stadium 2008 May 24 #1 Duke 5/1 W/10-9 48,224 Foxboro, MA Gillette Stadium 2008 May 26 #3 Syracuse 5/3 L/10-13 48,970 Foxboro, MA Gillette Stadium 2007 May 12 First Round #11 Notre Dame 3/- (OT) W/11-10 2,548 2007 May 19 #6 Georgetown 3/6 W/14-6 8,123 Princeton, NJ Princeton Stadium 2007 May 26 #15 Delaware 3/- W/8-3 52,004 M&T Bank Stadium 2007 May 28 #2 Duke 3/1 W/12-11 48,443 M&T Bank Stadium 2006 May 13 First Round #13 Penn 4/- W/13-3 1,964 2006 May 20 #5 Syracuse 4/5 L/12-13 8,335 Stony Brook, NY LaValle Stadium 2005 May 14 First Round Marist 1/- W/22-6 1,175 2005 May 21 #8 UMass 1/8 W/19-9 6,504 2005 May 28 #4 Virginia 1/4 (OT) W/9-8 45,275 Philadelphia, PA Lincoln Financial Field 2005 May 30 #2 Duke 1/2 W/9-8 44,920 Philadelphia, PA Lincoln Financial Field 2004 May 15 First Round #16 Providence 1/- W/15-3 1,213 2004 May 22 #8 North Carolina 1/8 W/15-9 2,869 Charlottesville, VA Scott Stadium 2004 May 29 #4 Syracuse 1/4 L/9-15 46,923 M&T Bank Stadium 2003 May 10 First Round #20 Army 1/ W/14-2 1,408 2003 May 18 #9 Towson 1/?? W/14-6 4,416 Towson, MD Johnny Unitas Stadium 2003 May 24 #6 Syracuse 1/?? W/19-8 37,823 M&T Bank Stadium 2003 May 26 #2 Virginia 1/2 L/7-9 37,944 M&T Bank Stadium 2002 May 19 #8 UMass 1/8 (OT) W/13-12 7,468 2002 May 25 #4 Princeton 1/4 L/9-11 23,123 New Brunswick, NJ Rutgers Stadium 2001 May 20 Quaterfinals #5 Notre Dame 4/5 L/9-13 10,118 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 2000 May 21 #12 Notre Dame 4/- W/15-11 4,916 2000 May 27 #1 Syracuse 4/1 L/12-14 24,105 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1999 May 22 #7 Hofstra 2/7 W/11-7 12,292 Hempstead, NY Hofstra Stadium 1999 May 29 #3 Virginia 2/3 L/11-16 27,586 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1998 May 17 #5 Maryland 4/5 (OT) L/10-11 11,261 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1997 May 18 #5 Duke 4/5 (OT) L/11-12 9,011 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1996 May 12 First Round #10 Notre Dame 7/- W/12-7 6,089 Annapolis, MD Navy Marine Corps Stadium 1996 May 19 #2 Maryland 7/2 W/9-7 9,346 1996 May 27 #3 Virginia 7/3 L/10-16 27,066 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1995 May 20 #8 Loyola 1/8 W/18-5 4,996 1995 May 27 #4 Maryland 1/4 L/8-16 30,327 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1994 May 14 First Round #11 Towson State 6/- W/22-16 4,203 1994 May 21 #3 Princeton 6/3 (OT) L/11-12 4,796 Princeton, NJ Palmer Stadium 1993 May 22 #5 Virginia 4/5 W/14-10 5,293 1993 May 29 #1 North Carolina 4/1 L/10-16 21,529 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1992 May 10 First Round #12 Notre Dame 5/- W/15-7 1,794 1992 May 16 #4 Towson State 5/4 W/15-7 7,812 Towson, MD Towson Stadium 1992 May 23 #1 Syracuse 5/1 L/16-21 19,640 Philadelphia, PA Franklin Field 1991 May 14 #5 Syracuse 4/5 L/8-11 10,723 1990 May 20 First Round #10 Princeton 7/- L/8-9 3,150 1989 May 21 #7 UMass 2/7 W/9-4 1989 May 27 #6 North Carolina 2/6 W/10-6 20,615 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1989 May 29 #1 Syracuse 2/1 L/12-13 23,827 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1988 May 22 #10 Virginia 2/- L/10-11 4,348 1987 May 17 #5 North Carolina 4/5 W/11-10 n/a 1987 May 23 #1 Maryland 4/1 W/13-8 12,933 Rutgers, NJ Rutgers Stadium 1987 May 25 #2 Cornell 4/2 W/11-10 16,901 Rutgers, NJ Rutgers Stadium 82 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

JHU s All-Time NCAA Tournament Results 1986 1986 May 18 May 24 #8 UMass #5 North Carolina 1/8 1/5 W/13-6 (OT) L/9-10 Newark, DE Delaware Stadium 1985 1985 1985 May 15 May 19 May 25 #8 Adelphi #4 Virginia #2 Syracuse 1/8 1/4 1/2 W/15-9 W/11-8 W/11-4 Providence, RI Brown Stadium 1984 1984 1984 May 16 May 20 May 26 #8 Delaware #5 North Carolina #2 Syracuse 1/8 1/5 1/2 W/10-3 W/14-9 W/13-10 Newark, DE Delaware Stadium 1983 1983 1983 May 18 May 21 May 28 #8 Cornell #5 North Carolina #2 Syracuse 1/8 1/5 1/2 W/7-6 W/12-9 L/16-17 Piscataway, NJ Rutgers Stadium 1982 1982 1982 May 19 May 22 May 29 #7 Maryland #3 Virginia #1 North Carolina 2/7 2/3 2/1 W/14-9 W/13-9 L/5-7 Charlottesville, VA Scott Stadium 1981 1981 1981 May 20 May 23 May 30 #8 Maryland #5 Virginia #2 North Carolina 1/8 1/5 1/2 W/19-14 W/10-6 L/13-14 Princeton, NJ Palmer Stadium 1980 1980 1980 May 21 May 24 May 31 #7 Harvard #3 Syracuse #1 Virginia 2/7 2/3 2/1 W/16-12 W/18-11 (2OT) W/9-8 Ithaca, NY Schoellkopf Field 1979 1979 1979 May 16 May 19 May 26 #8 North Carolina State #4 Virginia #2 Maryland 1/8 1/4 1/2 W/20-6 W/16-7 W/15-9 College Park, MD Byrd Stadium 1978 1978 1978 May 17 May 20 May 27 #7 Hofstra #3 Maryland #1 Cornell 2/7 2/3 2/1 W/20-8 W/17-11 W/13-8 Piscataway, NJ Rutgers Stadium 1977 1977 1977 May 18 May 21 May 28 #7 North Carolina #3 Maryland #1 Cornell 2/7 2/3 2/1 W/16-9 W/22-12 L/8-16 Charlottesville, VA Scott Stadium 1976 1976 May 19 May 22 #6 UMass #2 Cornell 3/6 3/2 W/11-9 L/5-13 Ithaca. NY Schoellkopf Field 1975 May 21 #7 Washington & Lee 2/7 L/7-11 1974 1974 1974 May 18 May 25 June 1 #7 Hofstra #3 Washington & Lee #1 Maryland 2/7 2/3 2/1 W/18-10 W/11-10 W/17-12 Piscataway, NJ Rutgers Stadium 1973 1973 1973 May 19 May 26 June 3 #7 Army #6 Virginia #1 Maryland 2/7 2/6 2/1 W/11-5 W/12-9 (2OT) L/9-10 Philadelphia, PA Franklin Field 1972 1972 1972 May 20 May 27 June 3 #5 Washington & Lee #1 Maryland #2 Virginia 4/5 4/1 4/2 W/11-5 W/9-6 L/12-13 College Park, MD College Park, MD Byrd Stadium Byrd Stadium 2005 NCAA Champions 83 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

NCAA Tournament History NCAA Tournament Record Breakdown NCAA Results Broken Down by Opponent Overall: 65-30 (.684) Home: 42-4 (.913) Away: 6-5 (.545) Neutral: 17-21 (.447) In overtime: 5-5 (.500) In one-goal games: 12-12 (.500) Adelphi (1-0) 1985 QF W/15-9 Army (2-0) 1973 QF W/11-5 2003 1st Rd. W/14-2 Brown (1-0) 2009 1st Rd. (OT) W/12-11 1981 F L/13-14 1982 F L/5-7 1983 SF W/12-9 1984 SF W/14-9 1986 SF (OT) L/9-10 1987 QF W/11-10 1989 SF W/10-6 1993 SF L/10-16 2004 SF W/15-9 84 In First Round Game: 10-2 (.833) In Quarterfinal Games: 28-9 (.757) In Semifinal Games: 18-10 (.643) In Games: 9-9 (.500) In Games Played at... Lincoln Financial Field (Philadelphia, PA) 2-0 (1.000) Towson (Towson Stadium / Johnny Unitas Stadium) 2-0 (1.000) Brown (Brown Stadium) 1-0 (1.000) Hofstra (Hofstra Stadium) 1-0 (1.000) Rutgers (Rutgers Stadium) 4-2 (.667) Navy (Marine Corps Stadium) 2-1 (.667) M&T Bank Stadium () 3-2 (.600) Gillette Stadium (Foxboro, MA) 1-1 (.500) Delaware (Delaware Stadium) 1-1 (.500) Cornell (Schoellkopf Stadium) 1-1 (.500) Virginia (Scott Stadium) 1-2 (.333) Princeton (Palmer & Princeton Stadiums) 1-2 (.333) Maryland (Byrd Stadium) 3-10 (.231) Penn (Franklin Field) 0-2 (.000) Duke (Koskinen Stadium) 0-1 (.000) Stony Brook (LaValle Stadium) 0-1 (.000) In Games Played Under... Bob Scott (1972-74) 7-2 (.778) Henry Ciccarone (1975-83) 18-6 (.750) Don Zimmerman (1984-89) 12-3 (.800) Tony Seaman (1990-98) 8-9 (.471) John Haus (1999-2000) 2-2 (.500) Dave Pietramala (2001-) 19-8 (.704) JHU s NCAA Tournament Series Records Opponent Series Record Last Meeting Result Adelphi JHU leads, 1-0 1985 W/15-9 Army JHU leads, 2-0 2003 First Round W/14-2 Brown JHU leads, 1-0 2009 First Round (OT) W/12-11 Cornell JHU leads, 3-2 1987 W/11-10 Delaware JHU leads, 2-0 2007 W/8-3 Duke JHU leads, 3-2 2010 First Round L/5-18 Georgetown JHU leads, 1-0 2007 Quarerfinals W/14-6 Harvard JHU leads, 1-0 1980 W/16-12 Hofstra JHU leads, 4-0 2008 First Round W/10-4 Loyola JHU leads, 1-0 1995 W/18-5 Marist JHU leads, 1-0 2005 First Round W/22-6 Maryland JHU leads, 9-3 1998 (OT) L/10-11 Massachusetts JHU leads, 5-0 2005 W/19-9 Navy JHU leads, 1-0 2008 W/10-4 North Carolina JHU leads, 6-4 2004 W/15-9 North Carolina St. JHU leads, 1-0 1979 First Round W/22-6 Notre Dame JHU leads, 4-1 2007 First Round (OT) W/11-10 Penn JHU leads, 1-0 2006 First Round W/13-3 Princeton Princeton leads, 3-0 2002 L/9-11 Providence JHU leads, 1-0 2004 First Round W/15-3 Syracuse Syracuse leads, 8-4 2008 L/10-13 Towson JHU leads, 3-0 2003 Qaurterfinals W/14-6 Virginia JHU leads, 8-6 2009 L/8-19 Washington & Lee JHU leads, 2-1 1975 L/7-11 Cornell (3-2) 1976 SF L/5-13 1977 F L/8-16 1978 F W/13-8 1983 QF W/7-6 1987 F W/11-10 Delaware (2-0) 1984 QF W/10-3 2007 SF W/8-3 Duke (3-2) 1997 QF (OT) L/11-12 2005 F W/9-8 2007 F W/12-11 2008 SF W/10-9 2010 1st Rd. L/5-18 Georgetown (1-0) 2007 QF W/14-6 Harvard (1-0) 1980 QF W/16-12 Hofstra (4-0) 1974 QF W/18-10 1978 QF W/20-8 1999 QF W/11-7 2008 1st Rd. W/10-4 Loyola (1-0) 1995 QF W/18-5 Marist (1-0) 2005 1st Rd. W/22-6 Maryland (9-3) 1972 SF W/9-6 1973 F (2OT) L/9-10 1974 F W/17-12 1977 SF W/22-12 1978 SF W/17-11 1979 F W/15-9 1981 QF W/19-14 1982 QF W/14-9 1987 SF W/13-8 1995 SF L/8-16 1996 QF W/9-7 1998 QF (OT) L/10-11 Massachusetts (5-0) 1976 QF W/11-9 1986 QF W/13-6 1989 QF W/9-4 2002 QF (OT) W/13-12 2005 QF W/19-9 Navy (1-0) 2008 QF W/10-4 North Carolina (6-4) 1977 QF W/16-9 North Carolina State (1-0) 1979 QF W/20-6 Notre Dame (4-1) 1992 1st Rd. W/15-7 1996 1st Rd. W/12-7 2000 QF W/15-11 2001 QF L/9-13 2007 1st Rd. (OT) W/11-10 Penn (1-0) 2006 1st Rd. W/13-3 Princeton (0-3) 1990 1st Rd. L/8-9 1994 QF (OT) L/11-12 2002 SF L/9-11 Providence (1-0) 2004 1st Rd. W/15-3 Syracuse (4-8) 1980 SF W/18-11 1983 F L/16-17 1984 F W/13-10 1985 F W/11-4 1989 F L/12-13 1991 QF L/8-11 1992 SF L/16-21 2000 SF L/12-14 2003 SF W/19-8 2004 SF L/9-15 2006 QF L/12-13 2008 F L/10-13 Towson (3-0) 1992 QF W/15-7 1994 1st Rd. W/22-16 2003 QF W/14-6 Virginia (8-6) 1972 F L/12-13 1973 SF W/12-9 1979 SF W/16-7 1980 F (OT) W/9-8 1981 SF W/10-6 1982 SF W/13-9 1985 SF W/11-8 1988 QF L/10-11 1993 QF W/14-10 1996 SF L/10-16 1999 SF L/11-16 2003 F L/7-9 2005 SF (OT) W/9-8 2009 QF L/8-19 Washington & Lee (2-1) 1972 QF W/11-5 1974 SF W/11-10 1975 QF L/7-11 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

Single-Game Goals 7 Franz Wittelsberger vs. Hofstra 1974 6 Paul Rabil vs. Syracuse 2008 Terry Riordan vs. Loyola 1995 Brian Piccola vs. Towson 1992 Mike Morrill vs. UNC 1987 Jeff Cook vs. UNC 1981 Jim Zaffuto vs. Maryland 1981 Most Goals in a Game 6 Paul Rabil vs. Syracuse 2008 Jeff Cook vs. UNC 1981 Most Goals in a Semifinal Game 5 Several Times - Most Recent A.J. Haugen vs. Syracuse 2000 Most Goals in a Quarterfinal Game 7 Franz Wittelsberger vs. Hofstra 1974 Most Goals in a First Round Game 5 Chris Boland vs. Brown 2009 Single-Season Goals 14 Paul Rabil 2008 13 Franz Wittelsberger 1974 12 Brian Piccola 1992 11 Bobby Benson 2003 10 Conor Ford 2004 Kyle Barrie 2003 Matt Panetta 1989 Mike Morrill 1987 Del Dressel 1983 Career Goals 28 Paul Rabil 2005-08 26 Kevin Huntley 2005-08 25 Franz Wittelsberger 1973-76 Brian Wood 1984-87 Terry Riordan 1992-95 24 Kyle Barrie 2002-05 Del Dressel 1983-86 23 Brian Piccola 1992-95 20 Mike Morrill 1985-88 Single-Game Assists 6 Mike O Neill vs. Maryland 1977 5 Paul Rabil vs. Duke 2007 Kevin Boland vs. Army 2003 Jeff Wills vs. Syracuse 1992 Jeff Wills vs. Towson 1992 Jack Thomas vs. Virginia 1973 JHU s All-Time NCAA All-Tournament Selections 1978 Mike O Neill (MOP) 1979 Mike Federico (MOP) 1980 Jim Bidne (MOP) 1981 Jeff Cook (MOP) 1984 Larry Quinn (MOP) 1985 Larry Quinn (MOP) 1987 Brian Wood, Craig Bubier, Dave Pietramala Quint Kessenich, Steve Mitchell 1999 Dan Denihan 2000 A.J. Haugen 2002 Adam Doneger 2003 Corey Harned, Bobby Benson Kyle Barrie, Tom Garvey 2005 Jesse Schwartzman (MOP) Kyle Harrison, Greg Peyser 2007 Jesse Schwartzman (MOP), Jake Byrne, Paul Rabil Stephen Peyser, Eric Zerrlaut 2008 Michael Evans, Michael Gvozden Kevin Huntley, Paul Rabil Notes: Only a Most Outstanding Player selected for all years prior to 1995 except 1987, when a full all-tournament team was named. A Most Outstanding Player was first selected in 1977. Most Assists in a Game 5 Paul Rabil vs. Duke 2007 Most Assists in a Semifinal Game 6 Mike O Neill vs. Maryland 1977 Most Assists in a Quarterfinal Game 5 Jeff Wills vs. Towson 1992 Most Assists in a First Round Game 5 Kevin Boland vs. Army 2003 Single-Season Assists 13 Jeff Wills 1992 12 Kevin Boland 2003 11 Jack Thomas 1973 Rick Hirsch 1977 10 Paul Rabil 2007 7 Paul Rabil 2005 Kevin Boland 2004 Conor Ford 2003 Dan Denihan 2000 Brendan Schneck 1980 Mike O Neill 1978 Career Assists 23 Paul Rabil 2005-08 21 Kevin Boland 2001-04 19 Mike O Neill 1975-78 18 Rick Hirsch 1974-77 Jack Thomas 1972-74 15 Dave Marr 1993-96 Brian Piccola 1992-95 Jeff Wills 1989-92 14 Brian Wood 1984-87 Scott Baugher 1977-79 NCAA Tournament Records - Individual Single-Game Points 8 Dan Denihan vs. Notre Dame 2000 Jeff Wills vs. Syracuse 1992 Brian Piccola vs. Towson 1992 Mike O Neill vs. Maryland 1978 Mike O Neill vs. Maryland 1977 Franz Wittelsberger vs. Hofstra 1974 Most Points in a Game 7 Paul Rabil vs. Syracuse 2008 6 Several Times - Most Recent Paul Rabil vs. Duke 2007 Most Points in a Semifinal Game 8 Several Times - Most Recent Jeff Wills vs. Syracuse 1992 Most Points in a Quarterfinal Game 8 Several Times - Most Recent Dan Denihan vs. Notre Dame 2000 Most Points in a First Round Game 7 Chris Boland vs. Brown 2009 Single-Season Points 19 Jeff Wills 1992 17 Paul Rabil 2008 16 Brendan Schneck 1980 15 Kevin Boland 2003 Brian Piccola 1992 Mike O Neill 1978 Mike O Neill 1977 Franz Wittelsberger 1974 14 Paul Rabil 2007 Jack Thomas 1973 Career Points 51 Paul Rabil 2005-08 39 Brian Wood 1984-87 38 Brian Piccola 1992-95 35 Mike O Neill 1975-78 Franz Wittelsberger 1973-76 34 Del Dressel 1983-86 33 Kevin Huntley 2005-08 31 Jack Thomas 1972-74 30 Dan Denihan 1996-97, 1999-2000 Terry Riordan 1992-95 Jim Zaffuto 1978-81 Scott Baugher 1977-79 Single-Game Saves 26 Larry Quinn vs. North Carolina 1984 22 Brian Holman vs. Syracuse 1983 21 Scott Giardina vs. Notre Dame 1992 Quint Kessenich vs. Cornell 1987 Quint Kessenich vs. North Carolina 1987 20 Michael Gvozden vs. Syracuse 2008 Brian Holman vs. North Carolina 1982 Most Saves in a Game 22 Brian Holman vs. Syracuse 1983 21 Quint Kessenich vs. Cornell 1987 20 Michael Gvozden vs. Syracuse 2008 Most Saves in a Semifinal Game 26 Larry Quinn vs. UNC 1984 Most Saves in a Quarterfinal Game 21 Quint Kessenich vs. UNC 1987 Most Saves in a First Round Game 21 Scott Giardina vs. Notre Dame 1992 RABIL 85 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

NCAA Recaps 86 1974 Blue Jays Claim First NCAA Title in Scott s Last Season Johns Hopkins was not used to playing the bridesmaid in the sport of men s lacrosse. But after falling by a single goal in the championship game in both 1972 and 1973, the Blue Jays earned their first NCAA title in 1974. The NCAA served as a fitting send-off for legendary head coach Bob Scott, who was retiring from the sidelines after 20 years as the Blue Jays mentor. A 15-10 loss to Virginia in the season-opener was followed by an eight-game winning streak during which the Blue Jays won by five or more seven times. The streak was snapped with a 13-12 loss at sixth-ranked Navy, but that would be the last time a Bob Scott-coached team would lose. A 17-13 upset of top-ranked Maryland in the regular-season finale jumped started the run to the elusive NCAA title. In the first game of the NCAA s, Hopkins trailed Hofstra at the half, but the Blue Jays eventually wore down their visitors and cruised to an 18-10 win. Hopkins had to rally from a threegoal deficit in the fourth quarter to edge Washington & Lee in the semifinals, 11-10. Midfielder Rick Kowalchuk scored the game-winner with 1:50 left on the clock to lift the Blue Jays to their third straight championship game appearance. Waiting for the Blue Jays in the title game was old nemisis and long-time rival Maryland, which had beaten the Blue Jays, 10-9, in the 1973 NCAA game. Playing at Rutgers in the title game (a place the Blue Jays would later win the 1978 and 1987 NCAA titles), Hopkins controlled play from the outset and built a 14-6 lead with five minutes to go in the third quarter. Maryland stormed back with five unanswered scores to cut the deficit to 14-11, but Kowalchuk again came through with a key goal midway through the final period and the Blue Jays were on their way to a 17-12 victory. The 17 goals remain the most Johns Hopkins has ever scored in a national championship game. 1974 Statistical Leaders Goals: Franz Wittelsberger - 45 Assists: Jack Thomas - 35 Points: Jack Thomas -77 (42g, 35a) 1974 Season Results (12-2) Virginia Yale Washington College Princeton Cornell Mt. Washington Rutgers Brown Army Navy Maryland Hofstra (NCAA QF) Washington & Lee (NCAA SF) Maryland (NCAA ) L/10-15 W/19-6 W/20-10 W/21-7 W/13-8 W/19-12 W/13-10 W/21-7 W/17-4 L/12-13 W/17-13 W/18-10 W/11-10 W/17-12 1978 Sweet Revenge as JHU Downs Cornell for Title After a three-year hiatus from the top of the lacrosse world, Johns Hopkins returned to the winner s circle with a 13-8 win over old nemesis Cornell. Cornell had defeated the Blue Jays five straight times, including season-ending losses in the NCAA s in 1976 and 1977. During the regular season, Cornell handed JHU its only loss with a 16-11 decision at. Other than that setback, the Blue Jays won every other game by at least six goals and scored at least 13 goals in all but two games. Still, the Big Red seemed to have Hopkins (and everyone else s) number. When the NCAA Tournament rolled around however, the Blue Jays would not be denied. Hopkins won its three NCAA Tournament games by an average of 7.6 goals per game, never allowing more than 11 goals and never scoring less than 13. Hopkins had to first overcome challenges from Hofstra (20-8) in the quarterfinals and Maryland (17-11) in the semifinals. These wins in the early rounds set the stage for the battle with Cornell in the title game. The Big Red carried a nationalrecord 42-game winning streak into the title game. It wouldn t reach 43. This time the Blue Jays came away with the victory, avenging their previous losses to the Big Red. Hopkins held a 7-5 advantage at the half, and attackman Mike O Neill, the national player of the year, keyed a crucial scoring run in the fourth quarter. Ahead 9-7 entering the final period, O Neill registered one goal and assisted on scores by Jim Bidne and Frank Cutrone to give Hopkins a five-goal cushion. O Neill s heroics broke the game open and the Blue Jays handed head coach Henry Ciccarone the first of his three national championships. Ironically, just like NCAA number one four years earlier, the Blue Jays second title came at the hands of the team it had lost to in the previous year s title game 1978 Statistical Leaders Goals: Mike O Neill - 33 Assists: Mike O Neill - 35 Points: Mike O Neill - 68 (33g, 35a) 1978 Season Results (13-1) Yale Washington College Harvard Towson State Princeton Virginia Cornell Army Maryland Navy Brown Hofstra (NCAA QF) Maryland (NCAA SF) Cornell (NCAA ) W/16-7 W/21-11 W/11-4 W/22-5 W/14-7 W/17-7 L/11-16 W/13-3 W/19-13 W/22-11 W/21-6 W/20-8 W/17-11 W/13-8 1979 Back-to-Back Johns Hopkins completed the 1979 campaign with a perfect 13-0 record and the Blue Jays second straight national championship. Ask anyone about the greatest Hopkins teams of all time and few will mention the 1979 team. They should! Hopkins was led by an outstanding defensive unit that featured two First Team All-Americans, goalie Mike Federico and defenseman Mark Greenberg. Only two opponents managed to score in double figures against the Blue Jays defense during the entire 1979 season and JHU outscored its three NCAA Tournament opponents, 51-22. Hopkins breezed to a 20-6 win over North Carolina State (yes, the Wolfpack fielded a lacrosse team back then) in the quarterfinals and added a 16-7 win over Virginia in the semifinals to move to the title game. Standing between the Blue Jays and another national title was long-time rival Maryland. The Terrapins had given Hopkins its closest game during the regular season, a 13-12 thriller, and were playing for the championship on their home field at Byrd Stadium. Maryland took a 4-3 lead after one quarter, but Hopkins took control with a string of five unanswered goals in the second period. Ahead 8-4 at halftime, the Blue Jays never allowed the Terps to put together a sustained scoring run in the second half and cruised to a 15-9 victory to secure their first undefeated and untied season since 1941 (12-0). Sophomore Jeff Cook fired home three goals and added two assists in the title game and senior Dave Huntley added three goals and one assist to pace a balanced scoring attack that saw eight different players score for Hopkins. 1979 Statistical Leaders Goals: Dave Huntley - 22 Assists: Jim Zaffuto - 19 Points: Wayne Davis - 35 (21g, 14a) 1979 Season Results (13-0) Towson State Yale Washington College Harvard Princeton Virginia Cornell Army Maryland Navy North Carolina State (NCAA QF) Virginia (NCAA SF) Maryland (NCAA ) 1980 Make it Three Straight W/16-8 W/15-3 W/15-5 W/18-7 W/14-2 W/13-8 W/13-5 W/12-7 W/13-12 W/17-10 W/20-6 W/16-7 W/15-9 Johns Hopkins became the first team to win three consecutive NCAA s, although this one was much tougher at the end than any of the previous three as the Blue Jays limped into the title-game with a lineup ravaged by injuries. The Blue Jays marched through the regular season with an 11-1 record, their only defeat coming on a 12-9 decision to Virginia. As fate would have it, the Blue Jays were given a chance to avenge that loss two months later and they took full advantage of the opportunity. After winning their final two regular season games by a total of 29 goals, the NCAA Tournament opened with Hopkins downing Harvard, 16-12, in the quarterfinal round. The Blue Jays then needed a big second half to earn an 18-11 decision over Syracuse in the semifinals. Brendan Schneck torched the Orange for four goals and three assists and six other players scored twice to pace Hopkins. 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

NCAA Recaps The championship game with Virginia was set when the Cavaliers edged North Carolina in double overtime in the other semifinal. The Blue Jays went into the title game hampered by injuries, with their leading scorer and top faceoff man both sidelined. However, a sensational defensive effort and timely scoring provided just enough to land the gold trophy. Hopkins rallied to score two goals in the fourth quarter to force the game into sudden-death overtime. A goal by Jeff Harris in the second overtime period pushed Hopkins to a 9-8 victory and an unprecedented third straight NCAA title. It would be 10 more years before another team won three straight titles and to this day only two other teams have turned the trick. 1980 Statistical Leaders Goals: Brendan Schneck - 46 Assists: Jeff Cook - 27 Points: Breandan Schneck -71 (46g, 25a) 1980 Season Results (14-1) Yale Harvard Washington College Princeton Brown Virginia Cornell Army Maryland Navy Delaware Towson State Harvard (NCAA QF) Syracuse (NCAA SF) Virginia (NCAA ) W/23-3 W/13-3 W/18-1 W/8-4 W/16-11 L/9-12 W/16-9 W/11-10 W/15-6 W/13-8 W/19-6 W/23-7 W/16-12 W/18-11 W/9-8 (2OT) 1984 Blue Jays Recapture Title in Zimmerman s First Year Johns Hopkins compiled a perfect 14-0 mark and won its fifth NCAA title under the direction of first-year head coach Don Zimmerman. The regular season featured a classic defensive battle with North Carolina. The Blue Jays earned the 4-3 mid-season victory over the Tar Heels in large part due to a spectacular performance by goalie Larry Quinn. Three other regular season games were decided by four goals or less, but the Blue Jays managed to remain unscathed entering the NCAAs. The Blue Jays returned to the NCAA game for the eighth straight season after wins over Delaware (10-3) and North Carolina (14-9) in the first two rounds of the tournament. The Blue Jays faced a title-game rematch with Syracuse, the team that had come from behind to defeat Hopkins in the 1983 NCAA Final. As it turned out, this would be the second of three straight NCAA games between the Blue Jays and the Orange. It would also mark the third time Hopkins avenged a title-game loss from the previous year. Hopkins jumped out to a 6-0 lead with freshman attackman Brian Wood registering three straight scores. In the third quarter, Syracuse pulled within one goal at 8-7 and memories of SU s come-back win in the 83 title game ran through Rutgers Stadium. A three-goal outburst in a span of less than two minutes pushed the lead out to 11-7 and SU never seriously challenged again. As it would turn out, it would be the last undefeated season for Johns Hopkins until 2005. 1984 Statistical Leaders Goals: Willy Odenthal - 28 Assists: Peter Scott - 29 Points: Peter Scott - 50 (21g, 29a) 1984 Season Results (14-0) UMBC Harvard Washington College Princeton Virginia North Carolina Army Maryland Navy Rutgers Towson State Delaware (NCAA QF) North Carolina (NCAA SF) Syracuse (NCAA ) 1985 Hopkins-Syracuse III Goes to JHU W/10-8 W/23-2 W/8-4 W/16-6 W/16-9 W/4-3 W/12-7 W/16-10 W/9-6 W/21-10 W/18-7 W/10-3 W/14-9 W/13-10 Johns Hopkins successfully defended its national championship by defeating Syracuse, 11-4, in the 1985 title game. It was the third consecutive meeting between the Blue Jays and Orangemen in the national championship game with Hopkins winning the last two. A battle-tested Blue Jay team would appear in the NCAA Tournament as four regular season games were decided by two goals or less. JHU won three of the four with only an 11-10 loss at North Carolina blemishing the JHU s ledger Hopkins earned a return trip to the final by prevailing over Adelphi, 15-9, in the quarterfinals, and then overcoming a fivegoal deficit to down Virginia, 11-8, in the semifinals. In the championship game, Syracuse opened the scoring by taking an early 3-0 lead in first quarter. However, Hopkins responded by scoring four goals in less than two minutes to take a 4-3 edge at the close of the first period. From then on the Blue Jay defense, led by All-American goalie Larry Quinn, dominated the action. Hopkins held Syracuse scoreless for nearly 33 minutes at one point. The Blue Jays allowed only one goal over the last three quarters en route to the convincing 11-4 decision. Del Dressel scored three goals and Brian Wood, Craig Bubier and John Krumenacker each scored twice for the Blue Jays. The title-game appearance was the ninth straight for JHU. To this day no other team has appeared in more than four straight championship games. 1985 Statistical Leaders Goals: Brian Wood - 33 Assists: Brian Wood / Del Dressel -19 Points: Brian Wood - 52 (33g, 19a) 1985 Season Results (13-1) Syracuse Hobart Washington College Princeton Virginia North Carolina Army Maryland Navy Rutgers Towson State Adelphi (NCAA QF) Virginia (NCAA SF) Syracuse (NCAA ) W/8-6 W/10-6 W/16-4 W/12-6 W/12-5 L/10-11 W/12-8 W/8-7 (OT) W/24-10 W/13-8 W/10-8 W/15-9 W/11-8 W/11-4 1987 Two, One-Goal Wins Give JHU Seventh Title Johns Hopkins captured its third NCAA title in four years and an unprecedented seventh championship overall. The Blue Jays earned the national crown with a thrilling performance in the NCAA Tournament after suffering through an up-anddown regular season. The Blue Jays were 3-2 after a 9-7 loss to Virginia and just 5-3 after an 11-7 loss at top-ranked Maryland in mid-april. However, a 10-9 win over third-ranked Navy jump-started an improbable run to the national title. A pair of one-goal wins sandwiched around a five-goal upset of the tournament s top seed highlighted Hopkins run in the NCAA Tournament. As the No. 4 seed in the tournament, Hopkins faced a difficult matchup with No. 5 North Carolina in the quarterfinals. Attackman Mike Morrill scored six goals, including the game-winner, to propel the Blue Jays to an 11-10 win over the Tar Heels and a spot in the semifinals. Waiting for the Blue Jays in the semifinals was undefeated and top-ranked Maryland. Hopkins turned in a near flawless performance in upsetting the top-rated Terrapins, 13-8. Senior All-American Brian Wood led the way with five goals and two assists against Maryland, while junior Mike Morril added three goals and one assist. Many believe this was the most talented team the Terrapins had ever assembled and a case could be made that this ranks as one of the biggest upsets in the history of the tournament. In the championship, Hopkins met another undefeated opponent in second-ranked Cornell. The game was close throughout, with the defense relying on the sensational play of freshman goalkeeper Quint Kessenich (21 saves) in the cage. Attackman Craig Bubier s fourth goal of the game with 1:51 remaining finished off a fastbreak and clinched the Blue Jays seventh NCAA. The championship capped an amazing 14-year run for the Blue Jays that may never be rivaled in the sport. From 1974-87 Johns Hopkins played in 11 NCAA games and won the title seven times. Three of the four losses in the NCAA game during this run came by a total of just four goals. The Blue Jays were that close to winning 10 titles in 14 years! Unknown at the time was the first part of history being made by Johns Hopkins sophomore defenseman Dave Pietramala, a starter in the game and a First Team All-American. Pietramala returned to JHU as the head coach of the Blue Jays in 2001 and led Hopkins to what would be its next NCAA title after the 87 championship. In the process, he became the first person in the history of college lacrosse to win an NCAA Division I title as a player and a head coach. 1987 Statistical Leaders Goals: Mike Morrill - 31 Assists: Mike Morrill - 16 Points: Mike Morrill - 47 (31g, 16a) 1987 Season Results (10-3) Syracuse Rutgers Washington College Princeton Virginia North Carolina Army Maryland Navy Towson State North Carolina (NCAA QF) Maryland (NCAA SF) Cornell (NCAA ) L/14-15 W/10-7 W/23-7 W/21-6 L/7-9 W/11-10 W/11-9 L/7-11 W/10-9 W/13-7 W/11-10 W/13-8 W/11-10 87 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

NCAA Recaps - 2005 88 For 14 games the Johns Hopkins men s lacrosse team had found a way to make one more play than its opponent. Come-from-behind wins against Syracuse, Duke and Navy in the regular season all included late-game heroics to force overtime and then a game-winning goal to send the Blue Jay faithful home happy. Add in wins by three goals or less against Princeton, UMBC, Virginia and North Carolina and this battle-tested team had seen everything and won in every conceivable way. But this was different. This was too much to ask, even of this resourceful group. Sixth-seeded Virginia had just taken an 8-7 lead with 12.9 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter of the national semifinal game against the Blue Jays. Head coach Dave Pietramala and his players would have to endure the wrong press conference again. The questions would be the same as they had been the last two years, but even more difficult to answer. This team, this group of players, was special to Pietramala and assistant coaches Seth Tierney and Bill Dwan. Fate, it seemed, had dealt the cruelest of blows. In hindsight the most important thing about Matt Ward s goal that gave the Cavaliers the 8-7 lead, other than he left too much time on the clock, was that neither team had a timeout remaining. Virginia surely would have done something differently and the Blue Jays may have actually gotten nervous. Instead, junior Greg Peyser calmly walked to the middle of the field to take the ensuing faceoff. After fumbling around to grab the ground ball he raced into the Virginia zone and skipped a cross-field pass to sophomore Jake Byrne, who amazingly didn t shoot it right away. Byrne quickly spun outside his defender, switched to his left hand as he drove to the goal and bounced a shot between the legs of Virginia goalie Kip Turner. The clock read 1.4 seconds. Lincoln Financial Field debuted in 2003 and had been the site of the last two NFC s games. It s safe to say it hadn t seen anything like that. Both teams went for broke in overtime and Turner and his Hopkins counterpart, sophomore Jesse Schwartzman, both came up with a pair of saves. The Blue Jays came up with the loose ball on Schwartzman s last save and quickly transitioned to the other end of the field, where freshman sensation Paul Rabil found senior Benson Erwin in the middle of the field. Erwin took two steps before firing home a bounce shot that set off a wild celebration. The ending of regulation and the ensuing game-winner were replayed dozens of times in the next 48 hours on ESPN s SportsCenter and countless other news organizations. Benson Erwin. A senior defensive midfielder was a household name. Why should this game be any different? The Blue Jays were now 15-0 and it seemed as though a different hero emerged every time they took the field. It was probably just Erwin s turn. The road to the national championship game actually started a year earlier when the Blue Jays lost to Syracuse in the semifinals. Disappointed beyond belief, then junior Kyle Harrison retreated to Ocean City, Maryland and locked himself in his parent s house. Not long after, he fired off the first of several emails to his teammates and coaches vowing that the 2005 season would not end like his first three. He also challenged them. If they weren t prepared to do everything it took to win a national championship, don t bother returning in September. After such a bold leap it seemed only ironic that it would be Harrison who would score the first goal of the season just 39 seconds into a 9-6 season-opening win at Princeton. Bryne scored three goals and added one assist in the win as the Blue Jays jumped to a 6-0 first-half lead and cruised to a win that wasn t as close as the score might indicate. Back-to-back business-like wins over UMBC (9-6 in one of the coldest games in school history) and Hofstra (11-5) set the stage for a rematch with Syracuse in the Dome. The last five Johns Hopkins-Syracuse games in the Carrier Dome had been decided by one goal each. Midway through the second quarter the Blue Jays trailed 7-1 and the Orange were well on their way to a lopsided victory. Pietramala and Tierney had tinkered with the idea of moving Rabil to the first midfield (it really was just a matter of when, not if) and the second quarter proved to be the time to pull the trigger. As it turned out, the move was just what the Blue Jays needed. Rabil scored twice before halftime to pull the Jays within four, 7-3, and added his third straight goal with just under six minutes remaining in the third quarter to make it 7-4. Peyser, Harrison and Byrne all scored in the final five minutes of the period goals that were matched only by a Greg Rommel tally for the Orange to make it 8-7 at the end of the third. After pulling within a goal four times in the final 18 minutes the Blue Jays finally tied it on Rabil s fourth goal of the game with 1:42 remaining and Peyser gave them their biggest comefrom-behind win since 1999 when he scored his third goal of the game 2:26 into overtime. Already the top-ranked team in the nation, the Blue Jays returned home to host second-ranked Virginia and got a then career-high 20-save effort from Schwartzman to fuel a 9-7 win. A week earlier Rabil had his coming out party. This time it was classmate Kevin Huntley who took advantage of his opportunity as he scored all three of his goals in a six-minute span in the fourth quarter to emerge from the shadows. A 7-5 win at North Carolina and a 19-6 win over Albany set the stage for yet another showdown at. This time the Blue Jays would host now second-ranked Duke in a prime time game slated for national television (ESPNU). The game lived up to its advance billing. The Blue Jays jumped out to a 5-2 lead before a crowd of over 7,000, but Duke slowly began to take control by outscoring the Blue Jays, 6-1 in the second and third quarters combined. The Blue Jays were playing their third game in seven days and after the emotional beginning appeared to be suffering from the exhausting week. The Devils led 8-6 entering the fourth quarter, but a Rabil goal and back-to-back goals by senior Matt Rewkowski his first two of the season after battling back from a torn ACL suffered in the fall gave the Blue Jays a 9-8 lead. Duke answered with two straight goals, but the Blue Jays forced overtime when Harrison scored with 2:41 remaining. One scoreless overtime appeared to be leading to a second before Huntley drove from the side of the goal and slipped a shot inside the far post while being close-lined with 1:05 remaining in the second extra session. The win was Hopkins school-record 32nd straight at home. An 11-6 win at Maryland was fueled by seven goals and two assists from freshmen, while Schwartzman posted 17 saves to give the Blue Jays their fourth straight win over their biggest rival. Another game with Navy was another classic, as the Blue Jays pulled out yet another close victory. It appeared as though the Mids had snapped their 30-game losing streak to the Blue Jays when Nick Mirabito scored with just 58 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter to give Navy an 8-7 lead. As everyone learned a month later in Philadelphia, 58 seconds was like an eternity to the Blue Jays. Harrison scored his fourth goal of the game by beating a double-team at the side of the net and scoring over Matt Russell with his left hand to force overtime. The only one of Harrison s goals that was better than his fourth was his fifth, which came 1:37 into overtime as he took a pass about 10 yards in front of the goal and to the right of Russell, spun past a defender, leaped in the air and bounced a shot over Russell s head while being checked. Television replays of the goal left viewers in amazement. If Harrison wasn t the leading candidate for National Player of the Year honors before the game, he was now. An 8-4 win at Towson in a driving rain and a 12-6 win over Loyola gave the Blue Jays a 12-0 record and their first undeafeated regular season since 1995. All that was irrelevant to the Blue Jays. They had worked for a year to get back to the playoffs and the road to Philly went through. Hopkins overwhelmed Marist, 22-6 in the first round and drew a quarterfinal date with Massachusetts at home. UMass had knocked off Syracuse in the first round and people wondered if the Blue Jays would have trouble getting up for the Minutemen. Most assumed that Hopkins wanted Syracuse after the Orange had eliminated the Blue Jays from the NCAA tournament a year earlier. Any of those thoughts were gone before the first television timeout as the Blue Jays jumped to a 5-2 lead at the end of the first quarter and an 8-2 lead at the half en route to a surprisingly easy 19-9 victory. Virginia upset Navy, 10-8, later that day at to set the stage for an epic semifinal. Or at least, an epic final 20 minutes. The game itself was like several games in one. Neither team scored until there were less than five minutes remaining in the second quarter and Hopkins carried a slim 2-1 lead into halftime. A 3-0 run to open the third quarter gave the Blue Jays what appeared to be a comfortable 5-1 lead. Hopkins still led 6-3 entering the final quarter, but that s when things got interesting. A storm that would eventually bring the game to a halt drifted over Philadelphia between the third and fourth quarters. Sunny skies gave way to driving rain and 60-mile-per-hour winds. The storm brought the crowd, and Virginia, to life. The Cavaliers tied the game within the first eight minutes of the period and took their first lead of the game (7-6) with 4:45 remaining. Before the next faceoff could be taken a lightening strike sent the teams to the locker room, where they would remain for 50 minutes. Harrison, who was playing with a painful back injury suffered in practice during the week, needed just 20 seconds after play resumed to tie the game. Virginia won the ensuing faceoff and tried to hold the ball for the last shot. As it turned out, 12.9 seconds was 1.4 seconds too much to leave on the clock. Less than 48 hours after the stunning win over Virginia the Blue Jays found themselves in their second NCAA title game in three years. Second-seeded Duke had barely broken a sweat in its three NCAA games leading up to the championship game and had built a trio of two-goal leads in the title game against the Blue Jays. When Matt Danowski scored just over two minutes into the third quarter to give the Devils an 8-6 lead it looked like the high-scoring Devils were on their way. A funny thing happened over the final 27:43; the Blue Jays never wavered from their plan and the Blue Devils never scored again. Rabil drew the Blue Jays to within one, 8-7, and Peyser s laser shot from 15 yards tied the game by the end of the third quarter. When Byrne scored less than two minutes into the fourth quarter, Dwan paced the sideline giving his customary line: Next goal, boys, next goal. Who would have thought there wouldn t be a next goal? Schwartzman made three saves down the stretch and the Blue Jays maintained possession for virtually the entire final five minutes. When Duke was called for a pair of penalties with less than a minute remaining the pro-hopkins crowd erupted with joy, or was that relief? Eighteen years had passed since Hopkins last won the national championship, but that didn t seem to matter now. For 11 seniors who had compiled a school-record 55 wins in four years; for 38 players who had heeded Harrison s challenge, for a coaching staff that had endured during the lows of late May for four straight years, all that mattered was they had reached the top together and together they would celebrate a championship they had worked so hard to win. 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

It was obvious that they were the outsiders, the forgotten ones - in some respects, the team that didn t really matter. There were better stories out there and that s where the focus was. That s just what the Blue Jays wanted. Duke? Well, everyone knew that story and it was covered from every angle by every non-lacrosse reporter that could grab a credential. Two teams attending a press conference? No, sorry - just need to talk to another Blue Devil. Cornell? The Big Red were back. After a two-decade hiatus it was Cornell that represented the Ivy League on lacrosse s biggest stage. The only undefeated team in the nation drew just a number four seed in the tournament and everyone wanted to know what the players and coaches thought. Delaware? Everyone loves Cinderella at tournament time and the Hens were more than happy to grant every interview request thrown their way. In hindsight, who could blame them? They soaked in every aspect of the Final Four and it was refreshing to see such excitement at being on the big stage. Johns Hopkins? Ah, yeah. We ll talk to you later. Can I just get a copy of your notes? Sure, that s just what the Blue Jays wanted. By the time the Blue Jays arrived at M&T Bank Stadium for the NCAA against Delaware just before 10 am, the mercury was already well into the 80s and the team that had been written off just six weeks earlier was about to embark on a methodical 8-3 win over a game but over-matched Blue Hen team in the sweltering heat. Hopkins stretched a tight 2-1 lead at the half to 5-2 at the end of the third quarter. Exhausted, Delaware tried to push out, but the deeper and quietly confident Blue Jays gradually pushed the lead to 8-2 before a late UD goal made it 8-3. Hat tricks by junior Stephen Peyser and freshman Michael Kimmel fueled the win and Hopkins again picked its words carefully in the post-game press conference. Duke and Cornell were out playing in what turned out to be an epic semifinal that wasn t decided until the final seconds. A Duke goal with just three seconds left in regulation set up a rematch of the 2005 NCAA game won by Hopkins, 9-8. It was also a rematch for the Blue Jays with the last team to beat them. Duke came to Homewood on April 7 and promptly handed Hopkins its third straight loss, 11-9. A day later, head coach Dave Pietramala and senior captains Jake Byrne and Brendan Skakandi attended the obligatory press conference and respectfully answered every question from the reporters who remained in the room after Duke s press conference. Requests for one-on-one interviews after the press conference? There were a few, but by now the Blue Jays were feeding the fire so to speak. Hide over in the corner and let the spotlight shine brighter on the opposition. A few minutes passed and the trio slipped out a side door. Mission accomplished. Hopkins, playing just four miles from its campus, would enter Monday s national championship game as the afterthought. Just what the Blue Jays wanted. The Blue Jays, who few thought had a chance against the high-powered Blue Devils, needed just 12 seconds to take the lead as Byrne polished off a fast-break on the opening faceoff. It was 2-0 seven minutes later and 4-2 at the end of the first quarter. Still no one was convinced, but the Blue Jays knew. They were hungry and they were deep. Byrne scored four goals before intermission, Paul Rabil was unstoppable, the faceoff tandem of Peyser and Jamison Koesterer was having its way at the X and Jesse Schwartzman was feeding off his hometown crowd. The lead swelled to 10-4 at the half and the Blue Jays could have put the nail in the coffin less than 15 seconds into the second half, but a tic-tac missed the toe at the back end of a fastbreak on the opening faceoff of the third quarter and Duke, to its credit, pounced. The Devils scored five unanswered goals in the third quarter to pull within 10-9 entering the final period and finally drew even on an extra-man goal with just under five minutes remaining in the fourth quarter. A championship-game record crowd of 48,433 and a packed press box looked on as the final 4:37 began to tick away. It took just over a minute for the Blue Jays to capitalize on a Duke mistake as Rabil found Kevin Huntley behind the defense on a failed Blue Devil clear and Huntley buried what proved to be the game-winner from the door-step with 3:25 remaining. For the Blue Jay faithful in attendance, it was the longest 3:25 of their lives. To give credit where credit is certainly due, Duke brought it in the final three minutes. Brad Ross drilled a shot off the post 40 seconds after Huntley s goal and Schwartzman stuffed Zach Greer a minute later, but a JHU foul gave Duke an extra-man opportunity with 1:44 remaining. The Devils didn t manage a shot during the one-minute extra-man situation, but the Blue Jays couldn t quite possess the ball and clear it either. A Duke timeout with 40 seconds remaining gave Pietramala a chance to set up his defense for one final stand in 2007. The Blue Jays kept Duke away from Schwartzman and senior Eric Zerrlaut was glued to Greer, who had burned Hopkins for six goals earlier in the season, but managed just one assist in the championship game. Ross finally managed a sneaky shot from a tough angle with eight seconds remaining that Schwartzman didn t read cleanly, but managed to save off his leg. The loose ball caromed out to midfield, where the Devils came up with the ground ball. A Max Quinzani shot zipped wide as time expired and what seemed improbable in the early evening of April 7 was reality - Johns Hopkins had won its second national championship in three years. As with the pre-game coverage, the post-game media coverage centered more on the loss than the victory. More on the wrong that had failed to be righted. ESPN broadcast the game and had two sideline reporters: one to cover the game and one to cover the story. After searching through the mounds of press clippings about the championship, the headline that summed it up best for the Blue Jays appeared in the Washington Post. It read: Introducing the Program That Needs No Introduction. Can t think of a better summation of a season that started with a one-goal loss and ended with a one-goal win. A one-goal loss? Remember that? The 8-7 shocker in the season-opener against Albany. Didn t seem as bad two months later when the Great Danes, under the guidance of former Pietramala teammate Scott Marr, came within an eye lash of playing in the semifinals. The Blue Jays rebounded from the season-opening loss with consecutive wins over Princeton (7-6 in 2OT), UMBC (15-6), Hofstra (9-8) and Syracuse (17-9). The trip from 4-1 to 4-4 didn t take that long - 15 days NCAA Recaps - 2007 to be exact. A 7-5 loss to Virginia at home and a 13-10 loss at North Carolina dropped the Blue Jays to 4-3 and the 11-9 setback to Duke followed to even the team s record. Fans, alumni and media alike began to question this group, but something happened that paved the way for a remarkable nine-game winning streak that, quite honestly, no one saw coming: The Blue Jays never panicked. Rallying around their 53 and the Band of Brothers bracelets they had made to symbolize their dedication to each other and the team, the Blue Jays jump-started their run with an 8-7 overtime victory at Maryland and held off Navy (10-9) to all but secure a trip to the NCAA Tournament. A tight 9-7 win at Towson, a 15-3 win at Mount St. Mary s and a 12-9 win over Loyola landed the Blue Jays a number three seed in the NCAA Tournament. The reward for the number three seed? A dangerous first round matchup with Notre Dame, which led 4-1 early, but fell in an 11-10 overtime thriller that Kimmel won with an unassisted goal one minute into extra time. The outside feeling that would greet the Blue Jays at the Final Four actually started a week earlier as Hopkins prepared for the NCAA Quarterfinal game against Georgetown. With Maryland and Virginia already eliminated from this half of the bracket, many figured Georgetown to be the sexy pick to not only advance to the Final Four, but make its first appearance in the championship game. Someone forgot to fill in the Blue Jays as they spotted the Hoyas an early 1-0 lead before reeling off six unanswered goals to take a 6-1 halftime lead. An early second-half spurt pulled Georgetown within 7-3, but Hopkins responded with three straight before the end of the third quarter and went on to a not-as-close-as the-scoreindicates 14-6 victory. Hopkins, a team that many thought would miss the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 1971, was heading home with a chance to win the national championship in its backyard. The Blue Jays had beaten Princeton earlier in the season at M&T Bank Stadium in the first game of a doubleheader that featured Virginia and Syracuse in the nightcap. When the Blue Jays, Tigers, Cavaliers and Orange came together for the Inside Lacrosse Face-Off Classic in early March, many thought it could be the first of two times those four teams gathered at the stadium. After Hopkins lost to Albany the week before the Face- Off Classic, most thought Princeton would ease past the Blue Jays in their hometown and go home with a win. Funny thing... most people thought the same thing when the final four teams gathered on Memorial Day weekend at M&T Bank Stadium. Another team would win the national championship in Hopkins backyard. There was the number one team in Cornell, the nation s team in Duke and the Cinderella story in Delaware, Byrne quipped after the national championship game. We were just there. Just what the Blue Jays wanted. 89 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

All-Time Series Records First Last Last Current JHU Opponent W L T Meeting JHU Win Opp Win Streak Adelphi 1 0 0 1985 (W/15-9) 1985 (15-9) ----- Won 1 Albany 8 1 0 2002 (W/10-4) 2010 (19-7) 2007 (8-7) Won 3 All-Baltimore 2 0 0 1900 (W/8-0) 1901 (6-1) ----- Won 2 Alumni 20 4 3 1907 (W/11-1) 1947 (3-1) 1935 (3-2) Won 6 Annapolis LC 1 0 0 1949 (W/21-1) 1949 (21-1) ----- Won 1 Army 53 13 0 1921 (W/3-2) 2004 (14-2) 1982 (11-10) Won 5 Australian All-Stars 2 0 0 1962 (W/16-9) 1967 (16-10) ----- Won 2 Baltimore AC 4 1 0 1935 (L/4-5) 1942 (13-3) 1935 (5-4) Won 4 Baltimore LC 0 1 0 1946 (L/7-10) ----- 1946 (10-7) Lost 1 Brown 10 1 0 1970 (W/10-5) 2009 (12-11/OT) 1971 (11-8) Won 9 Canisius 1 0 0 2003 (W/21-5) 2003 (21-5) ----- Won 1 Carlisle Indians 2 4 1 1911 (W/8-5) 1914 (7-2) 1918 (4-1) Lost 1 C.C.N.Y 10 0 0 1893 (W/9-1) 1941 (22-0) ----- Won 10 Columbia 7 0 0 1898 (W/7-2) 1908 (11-0) ----- Won 7 Cornell 16 6 1 1894 (L/0-6) 1987 (11-10) 1978 (16-11) Won 6 Crescent AC 4 7 1 1897 (L/2-5) 1934 (10-6) 1916 (10-4) Won 3 Dartmouth 3 0 0 1935 (W/19-4) 1937 (10-1) ----- Won 3 Delaware 7 0 0 1980 (W/19-6) 2010 (15-7) ----- Won 7 Denison 2 0 0 1975 (W/18-8) 1976 (17-9) ----- Won 2 Denver 1 0 0 1998 (W/19-8) 1998 (19-8) ----- Won 1 Drexel 1 0 0 1947 (W/25-1) 1947 (25-1) ----- Won 1 Druids Club 0 4 1 1883 (L/0-4) ----- 1894 (3-1) Lost 2 Duke 12 5 0 1942 (W/22-0) 2008 (10-9) 2010 (18-5) Lost 1 Georgetown 2 0 0 1993 (W15-10) 2007 (14-6) ----- Won 2 Hartford 1 0 0 1998 (W/21-3) 1998 (21-3) ----- Won 1 Harvard 25 1 1 1896 (T/2-2) 1984 (23-2) 1905 (4-3) Won 21 Hobart 4 0 0 1902 (W/12-1) 1986 (11-7) ----- Won 4 Hofstra 18 5 0 1974 (W/18-10) 2009 (12-7) 2010 (14-6) Lost 1 Lafayette 2 0 0 1928 (W/15-2) 1939 (24-0) ----- Won 2 L Hirondelle Club 2 0 0 1924 (W/11-1) 1925 (4-2) ----- Won 2 Lehigh 24 11 0 1889 (W/6-0) 1925 (3-2) 1921 (12-2) Won 4 Loyola 45 3 0 1939 (W/20-1) 2010 (9-6) 1999 (14-5) Won 11 Manhattan 1 0 0 2010 (W/14-3) 2010 (W/14-3) --- Won 1 Marist 1 0 0 2005 (W/22-6) 2005 (22-6) ----- Won 1 Maryland 67 38 1 1895 (W/10-0) 2009 (10-9) 2010 (10-9) Lost 1 Massachusetts 5 0 0 1976 (W/11-9) 2005 (19-9) ----- Won 5 Mount St. Mary s 4 0 0 2006 (W/19-6) 2009 (12-5) ----- Won 4 Mt. Washington Club 17 35 2 1904 (W/11-1) 1974 (19-12) 1971 (14-3) Won 2 Navy 56 26 1 1908 (W/6-1) 2009 (15-7) 2010 (9-8/OT) Lost 1 North Carolina 23 16 0 1977 (W/16-9) 2006 (11-5) 2010 (11-7) Lost 4 North Carolina State 1 0 0 1979 (W/20-6) 1979 (20-6) ----- Won 1 Notre Dame 4 1 0 1992 (W/15-7) 2007 (11-10/OT) 2001 (13-9) Won 1 Ohio State 4 0 0 1999 (W/17-8) 2002 (12-9) ----- Won 4 Olympic Club 3 0 0 1929 (W/4-0) 1931 (6-0) ----- Won 3 Onondaga Indians 2 0 0 1925 (W/4-1) 1926 (19-0) ----- Won 2 Oxford-Cambridge 3 0 0 1922 (W/11-2) 1961 (12-8) ----- Won 3 Pattersons 1 0 0 1888 (W/6-2) 1888 (6-2) ----- Won 1 Pennsylvania 28 1 0 1890 (W/10-0) 2006 (13-3) 1922 (4-3) Won 13 Penn State 5 0 0 1916 (W/14-1) 1946 (19-4) ----- Won 5 Philadelphia Club 0 0 1 1889 (T/2-2) ----- ----- Tied 1 Princeton 54 26 0 1890 (L/2-3) 2008 (14-9) 2010 (11-10/OT) Lost 2 Providence 1 0 0 2004 (W/15-3) 2004 (15-3) ----- Won 1 Randolph-Macon 2 0 0 1927 (W/11-0) 1929 (8-1) ----- Won 2 Rensselaer Polytechnic 6 0 0 1955 (W/10-6) 1961 (10-5) ----- Won 6 Rutgers 30 4 0 1920 (W/13-0) 1998 (18-9) 1990 (14-10) Won 7 St. John s (MD) 9 4 0 1926 (W/19-0) 1939 (12-8) 1938 (6-4) Won 1 St. Joseph s 1 0 0 1999 (W/31-7) 1999 (31-7) ----- Won 1 Schuykill 3 1 0 1891 (W/6-1) 1893 (4-2) 1891 (3-0) Won 2 Siena 2 0 0 2009 (W/11-3) 2010 (W/8-7) ----- Won 2 Springfield 1 0 0 1941 (W/20-0) 1941 (20-0) ----- Won 1 Stevens Institute 26 4 0 1890 (W/13-1) 1925 (9-0) 1921 (5-1) Won 4 Swarthmore 41 6 0 1897 (W/4-0) 1954 (16-9) 1945 (17-7) Won 4 Syracuse 26 21 1 1921 (T/4-4) 2007 (17-9) 2010 (10-7) Lost 4 Toronto 2 4 0 1902 (L/2-6) 1921 (5-4) 1920 (3-0) Won 1 Towson 35 3 0 1976 (W/15-8) 2010 (13-6) 1996 (13-12) Won 15 UMBC 8 0 0 1983 (W/15-4) 2010 (16-10) ----- Won 8 Union 2 0 0 1941 (W/7-1) 1942 (10-1) ----- Won 2 Varsity Club 1 0 0 1932 (W/14-3) 1932 (14-3) ----- Won 1 Villanova 6 0 0 1997 (W/17-9) 2002 (10-7) ----- Won 6 Virginia 53 28 1 1904 (W/9-0) 2005 (9-8/OT) 2010 (15-6) Lost 6 Washington College 35 1 0 1932 (W/12-0) 1997 (16-4) 1976 (13-11) Won 20 Washington Club 2 0 0 1940 (W/15-5) 1941 (15-0) ----- Won 2 Washington & Lee 10 1 0 1942 (W/17-4) 1974 (11-10) 1975 (11-7) Lost 1 Yale 26 4 0 1927 (W/12-3) 1982 (27-3) 1971 (8-4) Won 11 90 Totals 899 291 15 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

All-Time Results 1883 (0-1) Coach: Elgin R.I. Gould Druids L/0-4 1888 (1-1) Coach: Clinton L. Riggs Druids L/1-4 Pattersons W/6-2 1889 (1-0-2) Coach: Brantz Roszel Lehigh W/6-0 Druids T/3-3 Philadelphia T/2-2 1890 (2-2) Coach: Brantz Roszel Princeton L/2-3 Lehigh L/2-3 Pennsylvania W/10-0 Stevens W/13-1 1891 (5-1) ILA National Champions Coach: Brantz Roszel Lehigh W/5-2 Stevens W/7-1 Pennsylvania W/4-0 Pennsylvania W/6-1 Schuykill W/6-1 Schuykill L/0-3 1892 (1-2) Coach: Brantz Roszel Stevens L/3-4 Lehigh L/3-6 Stevens W/4-2 1893 (4-2) Coach: Brantz Roszel CCNY W/9-1 Druids L/2-4 Schuykill W/6-3 Lehigh L/3-6 Schuykill W/4-2 Stevens W/6-2 1894 (1-3) Coach: Brantz Roszel Lehigh W/6-4 Stevens L/5-7 Druids L/1-3 Cornell L/0-6 1895 (2-1) Coach: Brantz Roszel Maryland W/10-0 Stevens W/6-3 Lehigh L/0-5 1896 (1-2-1) Coach: Brantz Roszel Lehigh L/1-10 Harvard T/2-2 Stevens L/1-8 Maryland W/8-0 1897 (5-2) Coach: William H. Maddren Lehigh L/3-6 Crescent A.C. L/2-5 Stevens W/6-2 Swarthmore W/4-0 CCNY W/2-1 Maryland W/10-0 Maryland W/7-0 1898 (4-1) ILA Nat. Champions Coach: William H. Maddren Swarthmore W/5-3 Columbia W/7-2 Stevens W/8-1 Lehigh W/6-5 Crescent A.C. L/2-8 1899 (4-1) ILA Nat. Champions Coach: William H. Maddren Columbia W/9-1 Harvard W/20-0 Crescent A.C. L/2-5 Stevens W/12-5 Lehigh W/11-3 1900 (6-1) ILA Nat. Champions Coach: William H. Maddren All-Baltimore W/8-0 Pennsylvania W/7-0 Swarthmore W/7-4 Columbia W/5-0 Lehigh W/5-0 Stevens W/4-3 Crescent A.C. L/4-8 1901 (6-1) Coach: William H. Maddren All-Baltimore W/6-1 Pennsylvania W/4-1 Crescent A.C. W/3-1 CCNY W/7-1 Columbia W/7-1 Harvard W/4-0 Swarthmore L/2-4 1902 (6-1) ILA Nat. Champions Co-Coaches: Ronald T. Abercrombie & William C. Schmeisser Pennsylvania W/5-1 Hobart W/12-1 Harvard W/11-1 Lehigh W/9-1 Columbia W/17-1 Swarthmore W/8-2 Toronto L/2-6 1903 (4-2) ILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Hobart W/8-1 Stevens W/13-1 Lehigh W/17-4 Swarthmore W/6-4 Crescent A.C. L/3-10 Toronto L/6-9 1904 (8-1) Coach: Charles MacInnes Columbia W/7-1 Mt. Washington W/11-1 Harvard W/12-1 Cornell W/9-3 Virginia W/12-1 Stevens W/10-0 Lehigh W/13-3 Swarthmore L/3-8 Virginia W/9-0 1905 (3-2-1) Coach: William C. Schmeisser Pennsylvania W/9-0 Harvard L/3-4 Stevens W/15-1 Lehigh W/4-3 Mt. Washington T/2-2 Swarthmore L/4-16 1906 (6-0) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Lehigh W/5-1 Pennsylvania W/11-0 Harvard W/7-1 Cornell W/9-0 Stevens W/4-2 Swarthmore W/5-4 1907 (5-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Alumni W/11-1 Stevens W/9-0 Lehigh W/12-2 Harvard W/7-1 Mt. Washington L/5-8 Swarthmore W/8-1 1908 (8-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Alumni W/8-2 Columbia W/11-0 Harvard W/6-3 Lehigh W/6-2 Stevens W/5-0 Swarthmore W/4-3 Mt. Washington W/7-4 Navy W/6-1 Toronto L/6-9 1909 (6-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Navy W/7-2 Alumni W/6-2 Harvard W/11-1 Lehigh W/6-2 Stevens W/8-3 Swarthmore W/4-3 Mt. Washington L/5-7 1910 (4-3) Coach: Alan Chesney Navy L/6-7 Mt. Washington W/6-3 Lehigh W/6-3 Stevens W/6-1 Swarthmore L/3-16 Harvard W/6-3 Alumni L/2-4 1911 (7-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: G. Pitts Raleigh Cornell W/8-2 Harvard W/3-2 Carlisle W/8-5 Navy W/2-1 Alumni L/1-2 Lehigh W/6-4 Stevens W/9-3 Swarthmore W/11-7 1912 (2-3-2) Coach: G. Pitts Raleigh Alumni T/2-2 Cornell T/2-2 Harvard W/5-4 Carlisle L/4-8 Stevens W/8-0 Swarthmore L/2-4 Lehigh L/3-9 1913 (6-1-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni W/4-2 Cornell W/5-2 Navy T/4-4 Stevens W/11-0 Harvard W/6-3 Lehigh W/6-2 Carlisle L/2-4 Swarthmore W/7-4 1914 (7-2) Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni W/6-3 Harvard W/11-3 Cornell W/3-2 Navy L/2-5 Pennsylvania W/12-1 Lehigh L/4-6 Carlisle W/7-2 Harvard W/5-4 Swarthmore W/11-1 1915 (7-0-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni W/3-2 Carlisle T/3-3 Pennsylvania W/5-1 Navy W/4-2 Harvard W/8-1 Lehigh W/5-4 Swarthmore W/6-2 Toronto W/6-4 1916 (6-2) Coach: Reaney Wolfe Navy W/6-3 Lehigh L/1-3 Alumni W/8-4 Penn State W/14-1 Stevens W/14-2 Crescent A.C. L/4-10 Pennsylvania W/15-4 Swarthmore W/10-4 1917 (1-1) Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni W/10-3 Carlisle L/2-6 91 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

All-Time Results 92 1918 (3-3-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni L/1-5 Navy L/0-12 Carlisle L/1-4 Pennsylvania W/5-4 Swarthmore W/5-0 Lehigh W/5-2 Crescent A.C. T/2-2 1919 (7-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Reaney Wolfe Navy L/3-5 Alumni W/4-1 Mt. Washington W/4-2 Pennsylvania W/10-0 Lehigh W/7-2 Maryland W/17-0 Crescent A.C. W/4-1 Swarthmore W/8-2 1920 (8-4) Coach: Reaney Wolfe Cornell W/7-1 Alumni W/4-2 Maryland W/4-1 Mt. Washington L/2-3 Harvard W/2-1 Rutgers W/13-0 Swarthmore W/12-0 Stevens W/12-0 Pennsylvania W/13-5 Lehigh L/1-5 Toronto L/0-3 Crescents L/3-7 1921 (4-4-2) Coach: Reaney Wolfe Alumni T//6-6 Army W/3-2 Pennsylvania W/9-2 A 30 @ Syracuse T/4-4 Stevens L/1-5 Swarthmore W/6-4 Navy L/0-9 Lehigh L/2-12 Mt. Washington L/5-7 Toronto W/5-4 1922 (7-3) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: John Knipp Alumni W/6-3 Oxford-Cambridge W/11-2 Army W/4-3 Stevens W/3-2 A 29 Syracuse L/1-3 M 6 @ Navy L/1-9 Pennsylvania L/3-4 Swarthmore W/6-5 Lehigh W/3-1 Mt. Washington W/6-3 1923 (6-2) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Alumni W/6-4 Swarthmore W/12-1 Stevens W/14-1 Pennsylvania W/8-3 M 12 @ Navy L/3-6 Maryland W/4-2 Lehigh W/10-3 Mt. Washington L/3-7 1924 (7-2) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: William C. Schmeisser Alumni W/3-2 L Hirondelle W/11-1 Swarthmore W/8-1 A 26 Navy W/5-4 Lehigh W/9-1 Pennsylvania W/7-3 Stevens W/10-2 @ Maryland L/2-4 Mt. Washington L/5-9 1925 (6-3) Coach: William C. Schmeisser L Hirondelle W/4-2 Stevens W/9-0 Onondaga Ind. W/4-1 Lehigh W/3-2 Pennsylvania W/8-1 M 9 @ Navy L/1-8 Swarthmore W/7-3 30 @ Maryland L/1-3 Mt. Washington L/5-6 1926 (9-0) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman Oxford-Cambridge W/14-0 A 14 Virginia W/11-1 St. John s W/19-0 Army W/8-3 Swarthmore W/6-1 Onondaga Ind. W/19-0 Pennsylvania W/12-0 @ Maryland W/10-3 Mt. Washington W/4-3 1927 (8-0) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman A 2 Virginia W/13-1 Yale W/12-3 Randolph-Macon W/11-0 Swarthmore W/15-1 Army W/8-4 St. John s W/11-0 M 7 Navy W/6-5 @ Maryland W/8-2 1928 (9-2) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman A 18 Virginia W/12-1 Lafayette W/15-2 Pennsylvania W/21-5 Army L/3-5 Swarthmore W/17-4 M 12 Navy L/3-5 St. John s W/7-3 Maryland W/6-1 Mt. Washington W/6-4 Yale W/12-3 26 @ Maryland W/6-3 1928 Olympic Games Champions Canada W/6-3 England L/6-7 1929 (4-5) Coach: Ray Van Orman Olympic Club W/4-0 Pennsylvania W/4-0 Army L/1-4 Randolph-Macon W/8-1 Swarthmore W/6-4 Rutgers L/4-5 St. John s L/5-7 M 25 @ Maryland L/2-6 Mt. Washington L/3-7 1930 (7-2) Coach: Ray Van Orman Olympic Club W/3-2 Yale W/9-7 Mt. Washington L/4-7 Swarthmore W/4-2 A 26 @ Syracuse W/8-2 Army W/11-5 Princeton W/7-0 St. John s W/3-2 @ Maryland L/0-6 1931 (8-1) Coach: Ray Van Orman Olympians W/6-0 Yale W/18-2 Swarthmore W/11-0 A 18 Virginia W/15-0 Mt. Washington W/9-3 Princeton W/11-1 M 9 Syracuse W/20-0 Army W/4-1 @ Maryland L/6-8 1932 (11-0) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman Varsity Club W/14-3 CCNY W/14-1 Swarthmore W/16-3 Princeton W/11-0 Army W/4-1 Mt. Washington W/7-3 Washington College W/12-0 Maryland W/7-3 St. John s W/5-3 Crescent A.C. W/10-2 M 21 @ Maryland W/7-5 1932 Olympic Games Champions Canada W/5-3 Canada L/4-5 Canada W/7-4 1933 (7-0) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman Washington College W/9-2 Alumni W/12-0 Swarthmore W/14-2 Army W/6-2 Mt. Washington W/8-6 St. John s W/13-1 M 20 @ Maryland W/6-3 1934 (8-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Ray Van Orman Pennsylvania W/12-1 St. John s W/8-2 M 7 Syracuse W/11-6 19 @ Maryland W/8-5 Swarthmore W/11-2 Crescent A.C. W/10-6 Washington College W/12-1 Mt. Washington W/8-6 Mt. Washington L/9-10 1935 (2-5) Dartmouth W/19-4 Baltimore A.C. L/4-5 Rutgers W/7-0 Mt. Washington L/1-6 St. John s L/9-10 M 18 @ Maryland L/2-4 Alumni L/2-3 1936 (5-3-1) Dartmouth W/12-0 Baltimore A.C. W/4-3 Mt. Washington L/4-8 CCNY W/14-8 Rutgers W/12-7 St. John s W/8-7 Army L/5-7 M 23 @ Maryland L/4-9 Alumni T/7-7 1937 (4-4) CCNY W/13-3 Dartmouth W/10-1 Pennsylvania W/14-2 Swarthmore W/12-2 Princeton L/4-7 St. John s L/5-12 M 22 @ Maryland L/6-9 Army L/3-9 1938 (3-4) CCNY W/13-4 Swarthmore W/10-4 Alumni W/9-3 Princeton L/2-5 St. John s L/4-6 Army L/3-9 M 21 @ Maryland L/6-12 1939 (7-2) Lafayette W/24-0 Alumni W/18-2 CCNY W/24-3 Swarthmore W/11-5 Army L/11-12 Loyola W/20-1 Princeton L/3-4 St. John s W/12-8 @ Maryland W/6-3 1940 (8-2) Alumni W/8-3 Baltimore A.C. W/12-3 Washington L.C. W/15-5 CCNY W/13-2 Mt. Washington L/1-7 Loyola W/16-3 Army W/11-4 Cornell W/15-5 Princeton W/10-6 @ Maryland L/6-7 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

All-Time Results 1941 (12-0) USILA Nat. Champions Springfield W/20-0 Union W/7-1 Alumni W/10-0 Washington L.C. W/15-0 Loyola W/9-0 Baltimore A.C. W/16-3 CCNY W/22-0 Swarthmore W/19-1 Army W/7-2 Princeton W/9-3 Maryland W/10-3 Mt. Washington W/7-6 1942 (9-2) Captains: Jack Williams, Charles Thomas Union W/10-1 Alumni W/9-1 Penn State W/10-0 Washington & Lee W/17-4 Duke W/22-0 Baltimore A.C. W/13-3 Swarthmore W/12-4 Princeton L/2-4 Loyola W/23-7 Army L/2-5 @ Maryland W/7-5 A 14 1943 (6-2) Penn State W/11-7 @ Navy L/4-7 Duke W/26-5 Penn State W/12-1 Army W/7-0 Princeton W/11-4 Loyola W/12-4 @ Maryland L/4-5 1944 No Team 1945 (1-1) Swarthmore L/7-17 Princeton W/18-4 A 20 M 25 1946 (4-5) Mt. Washington L/5-11 @ Navy W/12-9 Army L/8-12 Swarthmore W/20-3 Baltimore L.C. L/7-10 Princeton L/8-12 Penn State W/19-4 Loyola W/7-0 Maryland L/6-7 1947 (8-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Howdy Myers Alumni W/3-1 Duke W/12-3 Drexel Tech W/25-1 Princeton W/8-7 Army W/9-6 M 10 Navy W/14-7 Loyola W/19-1 @ Maryland W/15-6 Mt. Washington L/5-6 1974 NCAA Champions 1948 (8-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Howdy Myers Loyola W/15-2 Swarthmore W/17-1 A 17 Virginia W/15-5 Princeton W/12-6 Army W/11-9 M 8 @ Navy W/9-8 Duke W/12-3 22 Maryland W/10-8 Mt. Washington L/2-8 1949 (8-1) USILA Nat. Champions Coach: Howdy Myers Captain: Gordon Wolman A 2 @ Virginia W/17-9 Swarthmore W/24-3 Annapolis L.C. W/21-1 Princeton W/10-4 Army W/10-6 Duke W/16-4 Loyola W/20-6 Maryland W/14-6 Mt. Washington L/4-12 1950 (7-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Oliver Shepard, Jim Adams Loyola W/13-2 A 15 Virginia W/15-6 Princeton W/8-7 Army W/13-9 Duke W/12-5 M 13 @ Navy W/8-4 @ Maryland W/10-4 Mt. Washington L/5-6 1951 (4-4) Coach: Fred Smith Captains: Joe Sollers, Wm. Byron Forbush Loyola W/12-8 A 14 @ Virginia W/14-8 Princeton L/11-13 28 Army W/9-6 Duke L/7-9 M 12 Navy W/13-10 18 @ Maryland L/1-6 Mt. Washington L/8-10 A 12 26 M 10 16 26 1952 (2-4-1) Coach: Wilson Fewster Captain: Robert H. Scott Loyola W/14-5 Virginia L/12-13 Princeton L/4-5 Army W/8-7 @ Navy L/9-10 Maryland T/10-10 Mt. Washington L/7-8 A 11 M 9 16 1953 (3-5) Coach: Wilson Fewster Captain: Emil A. Budnitz Loyola W/16-7 @ Virginia L/8-15 Princeton W/15-11 Swarthmore W/14-13 Army L/7-8 Navy L/4-7 @ Maryland L/6-8 Mt. Washington L/8-13 A 3 10 17 21 24 M 1 8 15 1954 (4-4-1) Coach: Fred Smith Captain: Ray Santamaria Virginia T/8-8 Rutgers W/11-3 @ Princeton L/2-5 @ Yale W/12-5 @ Swarthmore W/16-9 Loyola W/18-1 @ Navy L/3-12 Maryland L/4-17 Mt. Washington L/5-13 1955 (4-6) Captains: Lou Ruland, Herb Williams A 6 Harvard W/14-1 9 Yale L/5-6 16 @ Rutgers L/2-12 23 Princeton L/5-6 30 @ Virginia W/23-9 M 4 Loyola W/13-0 7 @ R.P.I. W/10-6 14 Navy L/3-13 21 @ Maryland L/5-11 28 Mt. Washington L/3-11 1956 (6-4) Captains: Arlyn Marshall, Dick Watts M 31 Yale L/4-5 A 7 @ Princeton L/6-7 14 Virginia W/12-4 21 Washington & Lee W/7-6 25 Loyola W/12-3 28 @ Army W/7-3 M 5 R.P.I. W/10-7 12 @ Navy W/8-6 19 Maryland L/6-13 26 @ Mt. Washington L/5-11 1957 (8-0-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Walter Mitchell, Jerry Bennett M 30 Yale W/12-3 A 6 @ Virginia W/12-4 13 Princeton W/19-6 20 @ Washington & Lee W/15-7 27 Army W/7-5 Loyola W/22-7 M 11 Navy W/15-6 18 @ Maryland W/15-10 Mt. Washington T/11-11 1958 (8-1) Captains: John Jory, Walter Mitchell M 29 Rutgers W/17-5 A 5 Virginia W/16-6 12 @ Princeton W/16-7 19 Washington & Lee W/14-11 26 Loyola W/21-3 M 3 R.P.I. W/19-4 10 @ Navy W/14-7 17 Maryland W/11-10 24 Mt. Washington L/4-10 1959 (8-2) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Emmett Collins, Mickey Webster M 31 Yale W/20-9 A 4 @ Virginia W/12-4 11 Princeton W/24-3 18 Washington & Lee W/22-1 22 Loyola W/29-3 25 @ Rutgers W/17-14 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 93

All-Time Results 94 M 2 @ R.P.I. W/19-7 9 Navy L/11-13 16 @ Maryland W/20-8 23 Mt. Washington L/11-13 1960 (7-2) Captains: Larry Becker, Mike Byrne M 26 Mt. Washington L/4-11 A 9 @ Princeton W/8-4 16 Virginia W/17-6 23 @ Rutgers W/12-2 27 Loyola W/20-0 30 @ Washington & Lee W/17-5 M 7 R.P.I. W/19-4 14 @ Navy L/7-15 21 Maryland W/13-7 1961 (8-3) Captains: Mike Byrne, Jim Greenwood M 25 @ Mt. Washington L/6-10 A 1 Yale W/14-1 8 Princeton W/19-6 15 @ Virginia W/13-4 22 Rutgers W/9-7 26 Loyola W/22-4 29 @ Washington & Lee W/17-2 M 6 @ R.P.I. W/10-5 13 Navy L/9-15 20 @ Maryland L/7-12 Oxford-Cambridge W/12-8 1962 (8-3) Captains: Henry Ciccarone, Phil Sutley M 24 Mt. Washington L/12-16 31 Yale W/15-7 A 3 Australian Stars W/16-9 7 @ Princeton W/15-9 14 @ Virginia W/12-8 24 @ Loyola W/18-7 28 Army W/9-7 M 5 @ Rutgers W/13-11 12 @ Navy L/11-16 19 Maryland L/15-16 Washington & Lee W/15-4 1963 (6-4) Captain: Dick Webster M 23 @ Mt. Washington L/4-13 30 Syracuse W/10-7 A 6 Princeton W/15-8 13 Virginia L/7-10 20 @ Washington College W/12-9 27 @ Army W/10-9 30 Loyola W/19-1 M 4 Rutgers W/14-8 11 Navy L/5-10 18 @ Maryland L/11-13 1964 (5-5) Captain: Homer Schwartz M 24 @ Mt. Washington L/12-15 28 Yale W/9-8 A 4 @ Princeton W/8-6 11 @ Virginia W/15-5 15 Loyola W/12-1 18 Washington College W/16-6 25 Army L/10-13 M 2 @ Rutgers L/10-11 9 @ Navy L/3-15 16 Maryland L/12-17 1965 (9-2) Captains: Frank Szoka, Chip Giardina M 23 Mt. Washington L/8-13 27 Yale W/7-4 A 3 Princeton W/10-6 6 Loyola W/10-6 10 Virginia W/17-6 14 Rutgers W/15-9 17 Washington College W/13-8 24 @ Army W/6-3 M 1 @ Syracuse W/21-6 8 Navy (HC) L/6-15 15 @ Maryland W/11-8 1966 (5-6) Captains: Stephen Mallonee, Mike Oidick M 19 @ Mt. Washington L/5-11 26 Yale L/10-12 A 2 @ Princeton L/1-7 9 @ Washington College W/11-5 12 Loyola W/17-2 16 @ Virginia W/10-1 20 Rutgers W/8-7 30 Army L/3-6 M 7 Syracuse W/14-1 14 @ Navy L/7-12 21 Maryland (HC) L/8-12 1967 (11-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Jerry Schnydman, Bill Deitrick M 18 Mt. Washington W/10-4 25 Yale W/16-6 A 1 Princeton W/12-2 8 Washington College W/10-6 15 Virginia W/10-3 19 @ Loyola W/18-3 22 @ Pennsylvania W/14-3 29 @ Army W/12-9 M 2 Australian Nationals W/16-10 6 @ Syracuse W/17-9 13 Navy (HC) W/9-6 20 @ Maryland L/5-9 1968 (10-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Wes Bachur, Geoff Berlin M 23 @ Mt. Washington L/14-16 27 Yale W/20-1 30 @ Washington College W/15-7 A 6 @ Princeton W/11-4 13 @ Virginia W/17-9 17 Loyola W/22-4 20 Pennsylvania W/20-5 27 Army W/15-8 M 4 Syracuse W/20-7 11 @ Navy W/11-3 18 Maryland (HC) W/10-8 1969 (9-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Mike Clark, Joe Cowan M 22 Yale W/14-4 29 Mt. Washington W/10-4 A 2 Washington College W/13-6 5 Princeton W/12-9 12 Virginia W/15-4 17 @ Loyola W/23-4 26 @ Army W/14-11 M 3 Rutgers W/20-5 10 Navy L/6-9 17 @ Maryland W/14-8 1970 9-1) USILA Nat. Champions Captains: Doug Honig, Russell Moore M 21 Yale W/8-3 28 Brown W/10-5 A 4 @ Princeton W/13-7 7 @ Washington College W/16-10 11 @ Mt. Washington W/11-10 18 @ Virginia L/8-15 25 Army W/9-8 M 2 @ Rutgers W/13-5 7 @ Navy W/9-7 14 Maryland W/7-4 1971 (3-7) Captains: Ken Dauses, Doug Fuchs M 21 Yale L/4-8 28 Mt. Washington L/3-14 A 3 Princeton W/13-8 7 Washington College W/11-1 10 Brown L/8-11 17 Virginia L/8-9 24 @ Army L/10-16 M 1 Rutgers W/21-9 8 Navy (N - Houston, TX) L/6-9 15 @ Maryland L/5-8 1972 (11-2) NCAA Finalists Captain: Gary Handleman M 25 Yale W/9-8 A 1 @ Mt. Washington W/9-5 8 @ Princeton W/16-8 11 @ Washington College W/15-7 15 Brown W/11-4 18 @ Rutgers W/12-5 22 @ Virginia W/13-8 29 Army W/13-5 M 6 @ Navy W/17-3 13 Maryland (HC) L/12-13 20 Wash. & Lee (NCAA QF) W/11-5 27 @ Maryland (NCAA SF) W/9-6 J 3 Virginia (N - NCAA F) L/12-13 1973 (11-2) NCAA Finalists Captains: Les Matthews, Jim Ferguson M 24 Yale W/22-4 27 Washington College W/13-9 31 Princeton W/14-6 A 7 @ #8 Cornell W/17-8 14 #2 Virginia W/14-9 17 #8 Rutgers W/14-9 21 @ #9 Brown W/18-7 28 @ #5 Army W/13-7 M 5 #6 Navy W/12-7 12 @ #1 Maryland L/4-17 19 Army (NCAA QF) W/11-5 26 Virginia (NCAA SF) W/12-9 J 3 Maryland (N - NCAA F) (2OT) L/9-10 1974 (12-2) NCAA Champions Captains: Rick Kowalchuk, Jack Thomas M 16 @ #3Virginia L/10-15 23 #17 Yale W/19-6 26 @ Washington College W/20-10 30 @ Princeton W/21-7 A 6 Cornell W/13-8 12 Mt. Washington W/19-12 16 @ Rutgers W/13-10 20 @ Brown W/21-7 27 #12 Army W/17-4 M 4 @ #6 Navy L/12-13 11 #1 Maryland (HC) W/17-13 18 Hofstra (NCAA QF) W/18-10 25 Wash. & Lee (NCAA SF) W/11-10 J 1 Maryland (N - NCAA F) W/17-12 1975 (9-2) NCAA Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Dale Kohler, Kevin Mahon M 22 #4 Virginia (2OT) W/10-9 26 Denison W/18-8 29 #19 Yale W/16-4 A 1 Washington College W/17-9 5 #6 Princeton W/22-11 19 @ #2 Cornell W/16-9 26 #7 Brown W/13-10 M 3 @ #12 Army W/13-10 10 #3 Navy (HC) W/16-11 17 @ #5 Maryland L/11-19 21 Wash. & Lee (NCAA QF) L/7-11 1976 (9-4) NCAA Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Dale Kohler, Jim Moorhead M 20 Yale W/19-5 23 Denison W/17-9 27 Towson State W/15-8 30 @ Washington College L/11-13 A 3 @ #11 Princeton W/16-10 10 @ #6 Virginia W/14-9 17 #2 Cornell L/7-15 23 #9 Brown (N - Hofstra) W/20-10 M 1 #12 Army W/12-8 8 @ #3 Navy W/18-10 15 #2 Maryland L/13-21 19 Massachusetts (NCAA QF) W/11-9 22 @ Cornell (NCAA SF) L/5-13 1977 (11-2) NCAA Finalists Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Tom Myrick, Kevin Mahon, Bob Maimone M 19 Yale W/15-4 26 @ Towson State W/10-9 29 Washington College W/19-8 A 2 #11 Princeton W/15-10 9 #4 Virginia W/15-9 16 @ #1 Cornell L/11-12 23 #19 Brown W/17-8 30 @ #11 Army W/13-8 M 7 #4 Navy (HC) W/17-11 14 @ #2 Maryland (OT) W/21-20 18 North Carolina (NCAA QF) W/16-9 21 Maryland (NCAA SF) W/22-12 28 Cornell (N - NCAA F) L/8-16 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

All-Time Results 1978 (13-1) NCAA Champions Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captain: Mike O Neill M 15 Yale W/16-7 18 Washington College W/21-11 21 @ Harvard W/11-4 25 Towson State W/22-5 A 1 @ Princeton W/14-7 8 @ #6 Virginia W/17-7 15 #1 Cornell L/11-16 22 @ #5 Army W/13-3 29 #2 Maryland (HC) W/19-13 M 6 @ #4 Navy W/22-11 9 @ Brown W/21-6 17 Hofstra (NCAA QF) W/20-8 20 Maryland (NCAA SF) W/17-11 27 Cornell (N - NCAA F) W/13-8 1979 (13-0) NCAA Champions Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Steve Wey, Dave Huntley M 14 @ Towson State W/16-8 17 @ Yale W/15-3 20 Washington College W/15-5 24 #13 Harvard W/18-7 31 #11 Princeton W/14-2 A 7 #4 Virginia W/13-8 14 @ #3 Cornell W/13-5 21 #6 Army W/12-7 28 @ #2 Maryland W/13-12 M 5 #5 Navy (HC) W/17-10 16 N. Carolina St. (NCAA QF) W/20-6 19 Virginia (NCAA SF) W/16-7 26 @ Maryland (NCAA F) W/15-9 1980 (14-1) NCAA Champions Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Jim Bidne, Mike Federico M 15 Yale W/23-3 22 #14 Harvard W/13-3 25 @ Washington College W/18-1 29 Princeton (N - Manhasset HS) W/8-4 A 1 #11 Brown W/16-11 5 @ #8 Virginia L/9-12 12 #13 Cornell W/16-9 19 @ #10 Army W/11-10 26 #6 Maryland (HC) W/15-6 M 3 @ #5 Navy W/13-8 9 Delaware W/19-6 13 Towson State W/23-7 21 Harvard (NCAA QF) W/16-12 24 Syracuse (NCAA SF) W/18-11 31 Virginia (N - NCAA F) (2OT) W/9-8 1981 (13-1) NCAA Finalists Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captains: Brendan Schneck, Jim Zafutto, Ned Radebaugh M 14 Yale W/25-6 22 Harvard (N - Manhasset HS) W/17-4 24 Washington College W/24-11 28 Princeton W/19-4 A 4 #3 Virginia W/15-13 11 @ #8 Cornell W/17-6 18 # 14 Army W/17-5 25 @ #15 Maryland W/12-8 M 2 #6 Navy (HC) W/9-6 9 @ Delaware W/18-9 12 @ Towson State W/24-8 20 Maryland (NCAA QF) W/19-14 23 Virginia (NCAA SF) W/10-6 30 North Carolina (N - NCAA F) L/13-14 1982 (11-3) NCAA Finalists Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captain: Dave Black M 13 Yale W/27-3 20 Harvard W/19-2 23 @ Washington College W/19-7 27 @ Princeton W/13-5 A 3 @ Virginia (OT) W/12-11 10 North Carolina (OT) L/12-13 17 @ #3 Army L/10-11 24 #6 Maryland (HC) W/14-6 M 1 @ #8 Navy W/12-7 7 Delaware W/22-6 11 Towson State W/17-6 19 Maryland (NCAA QF) W/14-9 22 Virginia (NCAA SF) W/13-9 29 North Carolina (N - NCAA F) L/5-7 1983 (12-2) NCAA Finalists Coach: Henry Ciccarone Captain: William Cantelli M 12 UMBC W/15-4 16 Washington College W/12-4 19 Harvard W/11-3 26 Princeton W/12-6 A 2 #4 Virginia W/12-6 9 @ #8 North Carolina (OT) L/13-14 16 #6 Army W/9-6 23 @ #9 Maryland W/14-7 30 #10 Navy (HC) W/13-8 M 4 @ Delaware W/15-10 7 @ Towson State W/11-9 18 Cornell (NCAA QF) W/7-6 21 North Carolina (NCAA SF) W/12-9 28 Syracuse (N - NCAA F) L/16-17 1984 (14-0) NCAA Champions Coach: Don Zimmerman Captain: Willy Odenthal M 10 UMBC W/10-8 17 Harvard W/23-2 20 @ Washington College W/8-4 24 @ Princeton W/16-6 31 @ #3 Virginia W/16-9 A 7 #3 North Carolina W/4-3 14 @ #5 Army W/12-7 21 #9 Maryland W/16-10 28 @ #8 Navy W/9-6 M 2 #6 Rutgers W/21-10 5 #15 Towson State (HC) W/18-7 16 Delaware (NCAA QF) W/10-3 20 North Carolina (NCAA SF) W/14-9 26 Syracuse (N - NCAA F) W/13-10 1985 (13-1) NCAA Champions Coach: Don Zimmerman Captains: Guy Matricciani, John Krumenacker, Larry Quinn M 9 Syracuse W/8-6 16 @ Hobart W/10-6 19 Washington College W/16-4 23 Princeton W/12-6 30 #4 Virginia W/12-5 A 6 @ #13 North Carolina L/10-11 13 #9 Army W/12-8 20 @ # 7Maryland (OT) W/8-7 27 #13 Navy (HC) W/24-10 M 1 Rutgers W/13-8 4 @ Towson State W/10-8 15 Adelphi (NCAA QF) W/15-9 19 Virginia (NCAA SF) W/11-8 25 Syracuse (N - NCAA F) W/11-4 1986 (10-2) NCAA Coach: Don Zimmerman Captains: Del Dressel, John DeTommaso M 8 Syracuse L/10-11 15 @ Hobart W/11-7 18 @ Washington College W/16-10 22 @ Princeton W/19-7 29 @ #7 Virginia W/8-7 A 5 #3 North Carolina W/16-4 12 @ #14 Army W/8-6 19 #3 Maryland (HC) W/14-9 26 @ #6 Navy W/14-11 M 3 #14 Towson State W/13-5 18 Massachusetts (NCAA QF) W/13-6 24 N. Carolina (N - NCAA SF)_(OT) L/9-10 1987 (10-3) NCAA Champions Coach: Don Zimmerman Captains: Craig Bubier, Bruce Chanenchuk M 7 @ Syracuse L/14-15 14 @ Rutgers W/10-7 17 Washington College W/23-7 21 Princeton W/21-6 28 #11 Virginia L/7-9 A 4 @ #4 North Carolina W/11-10 11 #13 Army W/11-9 18 @ #1 Maryland L/7-11 25 #3 Navy (HC) W/10-9 M 2 @ #9 Towson State W/13-7 17 North Carolina (NCAA QF) W/11-10 23 Maryland (N - NCAA SF) W/13-8 25 Cornell (N - NCAA F) W/11-10 1988 (9-2) NCAA Coach: Don Zimmerman Captains: Jack Crawford, Mike Morrill M 5 Syracuse L/7-19 12 @ Washington College W/12-8 19 Rutgers W/13-9 26 @ Princeton W/9-0 A 2 @ #3 Virginia W/11-10 9 #3 North Carolina W/6-5 16 @ Army W/9-5 23 #11 Maryland (HC) W/11-7 30 @ #7 Navy W/10-7 M 7 Towson State (OT) W/9-8 22 Virginia (NCAA QF) (OT) L/10-11 1989 (11-2) NCAA Finalists Coach: Don Zimmerman Captain: Brendan Kelly M 4 Syracuse W/14-13 11 Washington College W/12-1 18 @ Rutgers W/10-6 25 Princeton W/11-5 A 1 #9 Virginia W/12-3 8 @ #5 North Carolina W/16-10 15 Army W/17-4 22 @ #4 Maryland W/10-9 29 #8 Navy (HC) W/7-5 M 6 @ #13 Towson State (OT) L/8-9 21 Massachusetts (NCAA QF) W/9-4 27 North Carolina (N - NCAA SF)_ W/10-6 29 Syracuse (N - NCAA F) L/12-13 1990 (6-5) NCAA First Round Coach: Don Zimmerman Captains: Jim DeTommaso, Quint Kessenich M 3 Princeton W/20-8 10 @ Washington College W/17-11 17 Rutgers L/10-14 24 @ #5 Syracuse L/10-18 31 @ #10 Virginia L/7-12 A 7 #5 North Carolina L/6-11 14 @ Army W/16-7 21 #11 Maryland (HC) W/17-11 28 @ #10 Navy W/6-4 M 5 #7 Towson State W/12-9 20 Princeton (NCAA 1st Rd.) L/8-9 1984 NCAA Champions 95 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide

All-Time Results 1991 (8-4) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Bill Dwan, Seth Tierney, Brian Voelker M 2 #5 Princeton L/10-15 5,000 9 Washington College W/22-5 3,500 16 @ Rutgers W/13-5 23 @ #6 Syracuse W/18-12 10,936 30 #1 Virginia W/16-6 9,572 A 6 @ #1 North Carolina L/6-11 5,700 13 #9 Army W/18-8 1,582 20 @ #6 Maryland L/8-11 5,100 27 #15 Navy (HC) W/15-11 9,705 M 1 @ #19 Hofstra W/20-11 4,729 4 @ #9 Towson State W/12-9 14 Syracuse (NCAA QF) L/8-11 10,723 1992 (8-5) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Brian Lukacz, Nick Shevillo, Scott Giardina M 7 Princeton W/15-14 4,490 14 Rutgers W/18-3 1,650 21 Syracuse W/15-14 5,580 28 @ #10 Virginia L/9-15 3,200 A 4 #4 North Carolina (HC) L/8-14 7,432 11 @ #10 Army W/16-10 1,497 18 # 7 Maryland L/9-13 5,211 25 @ #7 Navy W/22-12 5,873 29 Hofstra W/15-4 2,234 M 2 #8 Towson State L/13-14 7,411 10 Notre Dame (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/15-7 1,794 16 @ Towson State (NCAA QF) W/15-8 7,812 23 Syracuse (N - NCAA SF) L/16-21 18,640 1993 (11-4) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Tom Sullivan, Steve Vecchione M 6 #2 Princeton L/11-13 5,793 10 Washington College W/24-14 1,569 13 Georgetown W/15-10 511 20 @ Rutgers W/15-10 2,287 27 #3 Virginia W/11-9 3,208 A 3 @ #1 North Carolina L/9-14 10 #10 Army W/17-9 1,790 16 @ #11 Maryland W/19-11 3,850 21 #9 Loyola W/16-11 2,995 24 #8 Navy (HC) W/11-8 6,324 28 @ #6 Hofstra W/11-5 7,238 M 1 @ #14 Towson State W/11-9 7 @ #3 Syracuse L/17-21 9,138 22 Virginia (NCAA QF) W/14-10 5,293 29 North Carolina (N - NCAA SF) L/10-16 21,529 1994 (9-5) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Brian Piccola, Todd Cavallaro M 5 #3 Princeton L/11-20 5,711 9 @ Washington College W/21-12 700 12 @ Rutgers W/11-7 1,345 19 Syracuse W/19-14 8,312 26 @ #5 Virginia L/8-11 2,254 A 2 #6 North Carolina L/9-11 6,014 9 @ Army W/15-8 1,761 16 # 8 Maryland W/12-10 9,524 22 @ #11 Navy W/12-11 5,826 26 @ #15 Hofstra W/15-7 5,274 30 #10 Towson State W/13-9 6,996 M 7 @ #3 Loyola L/15-17 5,618 14 Towson State (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/22-16 4,203 21 @ Princeton (NCAA QF) (OT) L/11-12 4,796 1995 (13-1) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Peter Jacobs, Terry Riordan, Chris Steer M 4 #4 Princeton W/15-14 5,017 8 Washington College W/18-6 275 11 Rutgers W/16-5 2,525 18 @ Syracuse (OT) W/14-13 8,370 25 #1 Virginia W/22-13 8,024 A 1 @ #11 North Carolina W/13-9 2,000 8 Army W/23-8 3,542 15 @ #3 Maryland W/16-15 12,200 22 #17 Navy W/16-8 7,504 25 @ #16 Hofstra W/15-11 5,348 29 @ #15 Towson State W/24-13 5,410 M 6 #8 Loyola W/12-11 7,595 20 Loyola (NCAA QF) W/18-5 4,966 27 @ Maryland (NCAA SF) L/8-16 30,327 1996 (8-6) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Dave Marr, Jon Marcus, Werner Krueger M 2 #3 Princeton L/9-12 4,623 6 @ Washington College W/10-3 476 16 #3 Syracuse W/14-10 5,977 22 @ #1 Virginia L/9-14 2,635 30 #4 North Carolina W/9-8 3,789 A 6 @ #15 Army (OT) W/13-12 1,732 13 #1 Maryland (HC) L/9-12 9,150 19 @ Navy W/18-11 4,404 23 @ #18 Hofstra L/7-9 5,347 27 #19 Towson State L/12-13 4,445 M 4 @ #7 Loyola W/12-10 5,376 12 Notre Dame (N - NCAA 1st Rd.) W/12-7 6,089 19 Maryland (NCAA QF) W/9-7 9,346 27 Virginia (N - NCAA SF) L/10-16 27,066 1997 (10-4) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Werner Krueger, Billy Evans, Aaron Van Horn M 1 @ #1 Princeton (OT) L/6-7 2,349 5 Washington College W/16-4 1,187 8 #19 Rutgers W/22-8 2,357 15 @ #3 Syracuse L/13-14 9,511 22 #3 Virginia L/12-16 5,584 29 @ #10 North Carolina W/15-7 1,329 A 2 Villanova W/17-9 1,027 5 #15 Army W/23-5 2,123 12 @ #4 Maryland W/13-9 3,150 19 #13 Navy W/24-5 3,976 22 @ #14 Hofstra W/8-5 8,873 26 @ #16 Towson State W/16-14 1,836 M 3 #6 Loyola W/14-12 4,066 18 Duke (N - NCAA QF) (OT) L/11-12 9,011 1998 (10-4) NCAA Coach: Tony Seaman Captains: Dudley Dixon, Andrew Godfrey, Rob Doerr F 28 #1 Princeton L/10-17 5,914 M 4 Denver W/19-8 522 7 @ #20 Rutgers W/18-9 1,236 14 #1 Syracuse L/13-14 4.234 21 @ #3 Virginia W/13-10 2,135 28 #9 North Carolina (HC1) W/16-9 4,589 A 1 Hartford W/21-3 420 4 @ Villanova W/19-6 400 11 #1 Maryland W/10-6 10,219 17 @ #18 Navy W/15-14 2,075 22 #9 Hofstra W/16-10 916 25 Towson State (HC2) W/18-7 3,007 M 2 @ Loyola L/7-10 4,517 17 @ Maryland (NCAA QF) (OT) L/10-11 11,261 1999 (11-3) NCAA Coach: John Haus Captains: Dylan Schlott, Rob Doerr, Paul LeSueur M 6 @ #1 Princeton W/12-11 2,389 12 #4 Loyola L/5-14 3,125 20 #2 Syracuse W/12-10 6,120 27 #4 Virginia W/16-15 3,523 A 3 @ #14 North Carolina W/21-12 1,773 7 Villanova W/16-5 867 11 Ohio State W/17-8 422 16 @ #7 Maryland W/13-3 5,829 21 St. Joe s W/31-7 560 24 #13 Navy (HC) W/11-1 5,383 M 2 @ #10 Towson W/20-10 2,166 8 @ #7 Hofstra (OT) L/8-9 7,476 22 @ Hofstra (NCAA QF) W/11-7 12,292 29 Virginia (N - NCAA SF) L/11-16 27,586 2000 (9-4) NCAA Coach: John Haus Captains: Dan Denihan, A.J. Haugen, Dave Rabuano M 4 #4 Princeton L/11-15 6,292 11 @ #10 Hofstra W/12-6 1,000 17 @ #1 Syracuse L/12-13 7,711 25 @ #2 Virginia L/8-16 3,248 A 1 #8 North Carolina W/10-8 3,799 5 Villanova W/17-7 661 8 Ohio State W/12-7 1,591 15 #7 Maryland W/20-11 5,395 22 @ #10 Navy (OT) W/7-6 5,462 29 Towson (HC) W/10-8 4,276 M 6 @ #3 Loyola W/16-12 6,142 21 Notre Dame (NCAA QF) W/15-11 4,916 27 #1 Syracuse (N - NCAA SF) L/12-14 24,105 2001 (8-4) NCAA Captains: Shawn Nadelen, Brendan Shook, Brandon Testa M 3 @ #2 Princeton L/4-8 4,125 10 #16 Hofstra W/7-6 2,100 17 @ #1 Syracuse W/11-10 7,422 24 #9 Virginia (4OT) L/8-9 2,280 31 @ #14 North Carolina W/12-4 1,825 A 3 Villanova W/11-7 653 7 Ohio State W/17-7 2,097 14 @ #5 Maryland L/9-10 7,219 21 #13 Navy (HC) W/13-11 6,136 28 @ #10 Towson W/14-13 4,073 M 5 #7 Loyola W/13-10 3,970 20 #5 Notre Dame (N - NCAA QF) L/9-13 10,118 2002 (12-2) NCAA Captains: Bobby Benson, P.J. DiConza, Adam Doneger, Matt Hanna, Nick Murtha M 2 #1 Princeton W/8-5 4,631 9 @ #11 Hofstra W/9-8 4,531 16 #1 Syracuse W/9-8 6,276 23 @ #4 Virginia L/6-12 5,196 26 Albany W/10-4 460 29 #7 North Carolina W/12-11 5,677 A 2 @ Villanova W/10-7 3,571 6 @ #15 Ohio State W/12-9 1,730 13 #6 Maryland (HC) (OT) W/9-8 8,642 20 @ #14 Navy W/9-8 15,271 27 #15 Towson W/14-11 3,572 M 4 @ #11 Loyola W/8-4 4,116 19 #8 UMass (NCAA QF) (OT) W/13-12 7,468 25 #4 Princeton (N - NCAA SF) L/9-11 23,123 96 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s

2003 (14-2) NCAA Finalists Captains: Bobby Benson, Adam Doneger, Michael Peyser, Greg Raymond, Rob Scherr M 1 @ #2 Princeton W/10-8 3,103 4 Albany W/16-7 850 8 Pennsylvania W/14-5 1,872 15 @ #4 Syracuse L/14-15 8,024 22 #1 Virginia W/8-7 7,241 29 @ #8 North Carolina (OT) W/11-10 2,953 A 5 #10 Duke W/19-6 2,086 12 @ #5 Maryland (OT) W/6-5 8,183 14 Canisius W/21-5 512 19 Navy W/17-3 3,280 26 @ #10 Towson W/17-9 4,025 M 3 #19 Loyola (HC) W/17-6 5,580 10 #20 Army (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/14-2 1,408 18 @ #9 Towson (NCAA QF) W/14-6 4,416 24 #6 Syracuse (N -NCAA SF) W/19-8 37,823 26 #2 Virginia (N - NCAA F) L/7-9 37,944 2004 (13-2) NCAA Captains: Kevin Boland, Conor Ford, Corey Harned Greg Raymond, Chris Watson F 28 Pennsylvania W/10-9 2,372 M 6 #5 Princeton W/14-5 6,386 9 Albany W/17-6 630 13 @ #11 Hofstra W/13-6 4.208 20 #3 Syracuse W/17-5 6,519 27 @ #17 Virginia (OT) L/8-9 4,910 A 3 #5 North Carolina W/10-9 2,982 10 @ #13 Duke W/6-5 1,631 17 #3 Maryland W/14-10 10,555 24 @ #2 Navy (OT) W/10-9 18,694 M 1 #11 Towson (HC) W/13-8 5,955 8 @ Loyola W/11-7 2,157 15 Providence (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/15-3 1,213 22 #8 N. Carolina (N-NCAA QF) W/15-9 2,869 29 #4 Syracuse (N-NCAA SF) L/9-15 46,923 2005 (16-0) NCAA Champions Captains: Kyle Harrison, Peter LeSueur, Greg Raymond, Matt Rewkowski, Chris Watson M 5 @ #3 Princeton W/9-6 6,325 8 UMBC W/9-6 674 12 Hofstra W/11-5 1,204 18 @ #7 Syracuse (OT) W/12-11 5,137 26 #2 Virginia W/9-7 8,321 A 2 @ #17 North Carolina W/7-5 3,128 5 #14 Albany W/19-6 550 8 #2 Duke (2OT) W/11-10 7,136 15 @ #9 Maryland W/11-6 10,117 23 #5 Navy (OT) W/9-8 6,308 30 @ #12 Towson W/8-4 2,015 M 7 Loyola (HC) W/12-6 7,356 14 Marist (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/22-6 1,175 21 #8 Massachusetts (NCAA QF) W/19-9 6,504 28 #4 Virginia (N- NCAA SF) (OT) W/9-8 45,275 30 #2 Duke (N - NCAA F) W/9-8 44,920 2006 (9-5) NCAA Captains: Jake Byrne, Matt Feild, Greg Peyser, Matt Pinto F 25 #18 Albany W/10-8 1,847 M 4 #10 Princeton L/4-6 5,636 7 #17 UMBC W/12-7 976 11 @ #15 Hofstra L/6-11 6,448 18 #10 Syracuse W/14-9 2,836 25 @ #1 Virginia L/6-12 7,440 A 1 North Carolina W/11-5 2,804 3 Mount St. Mary s W/19-6 250 15 #6 Maryland L/4-11 9,778 22 @ #4 Navy W/9-8 13,857 29 #12 Towson (HC) W/11-10 4,826 M 6 @ #20 Loyola (OT) W/7-6 4,812 13 #12 Pennsylvania (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/13-3 1,964 20 #5 Syracuse (N- NCAA QF) L/12-13 8,335 2007 (13-4) NCAA Champions Captains: Jake Byrne, Drew Dabrowski, Brendan Skakandi F 24 Albany L/7-8 1,760 M 3 #3 Princeton (M&T Bank Stad.) (2OT) W/7-6 20,180 6 @ UMBC W/15-6 1,427 10 Hofstra W/9-8 1,503 17 @ #8 Syracuse W/17-9 7,408 24 #5 Virginia L/5-7 4,784 31 @ #15 North Carolina L/10-13 3,582 A 7 #4 Duke L/9-11 4,802 14 @ #7 Maryland (OT) W/8-7 5,121 21 #9 Navy (HC) W/10-9 6,856 28 @ #15 Towson W/9-7 4,427 30 @ Mount St. Mary s W/15-3 778 M 5 #12 Loyola W/12-9 3,742 12 #11 N. Dame (NCAA 1st Rd.) (OT) W/11-10 2,548 19 #4 Georgetown (N- NCAA QF) W/14-6 8,123 26 #15 Delaware (N - NCAA SF) W/8-3 52,004 28 #2 Duke (N - NCAA Final) W/12-11 48,443 2008 (11-6) NCAA Finalists Captains: Michael Doneger, Stephen Peyser, Paul Rabil, Eric Zerrlaut F 23 #11 Albany W/10-5 1,993 M 1 #9 Princeton (M&T Bank Stad.) W/14-9 19,165 4 UMBC W/10-8 921 All-Time Results 8 @ Hofstra (OT) L/7-8 2,741 15 #5 Syracuse (OT) L/13-14 3,563 22 @ #2 Virginia (OT) L/12-13 7,579 29 #9 North Carolina L/8-13 4,250 A 5 @ #2 Duke L/6-17 4,291 12 #7 Maryland W/10-4 8,626 19 @ #10 Navy W/12-5 16,042 23 Towson W/16-7 2,741 28 Mount St. Mary s W/12-1 675 M 3 @ #17 Loyola W/9-6 3,410 11 #16 Hofstra (NCAA 1st Rd.) W/10-4 2,864 17 @ #14 Navy (NCAA QF) W/10-4 17,017 24 #1 Duke (N - NCAA SF) W/10-9 48,224 26 #3 Syracuse (N - NCAA F) L/10-13 48,970 2009 (10-5) NCAA Captains: Michael Evans, Andrew Miller, Josh Peck F 20 Siena W/11-3 1,740 28 #9 Princeton (M&T Bank Stad.) L/8-14 17,119 M 3 @ #6 UMBC W/14-11 931 7 #9 Hofstra W/12-7 2,560 14 @ #2 Syracuse L/11-14 9,197 21 #1 Virginia L/15-16 5,475 28 @ #12 North Carolina (OT) L/9-10 4,535 A 4 #18 Albany W/14-9 1,832 11 #12 Maryland (M&T Bank Stad.) W/10-9 20,732 18 #11 Navy W/15-7 6,925 22 @ Towson (2OT) W/11-10 3,509 27 @ Mount St. Mary s W/12-5 1,258 M 2 #13 Loyola (OT) W/11-10 2,732 9 #11 Brown (NCAA 1st Rd.) (OT) W/12-11 2,491 17 #5 Virginia (NCAA QF) L/8-19 12,142 2010 (7-8) NCAA 1st Round Captains: Michael Kimmel, Tom Duerr, Sam DeVore F 19 Manhattan W/14-3 1,400 23 #13 Delaware W/15-7 575 28 Siena W/8-7 1,750 M 6 #7 Princeton (OT) L/10-11 19,742 9 UMBC W/16-10 1,129 13 @ #10 Hoftra L/6-14 1,245 20 #2 Syracuse L/7-10 6,504 27 @ #1 Virginia L/6-15 6,366 A 3 #3 North Carolina L/7-11 4,012 10 Albany W/19-7 4,508 17 #4 Maryland L/9-10 20,911 24 @ Navy (OT) L/8-9 10,128 28 #11 Towson W/13-6 1,318 M 8 @ #8 Loyola W/9-6 2,926 15 @#5 Duke (NCAA 1st Rd.) L/5-18 1,813 All-Time Record: 899-291-15 (.752) 123 seasons of competition 44 National Titles 9 NCAA Titles 97 39 Straight NCAA Tournaments 9 NCAA s 2011 Johns Hopkins Men s Lacrosse Guide