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NCAA QUARTER-FINALS
VIDEO CHARGED PRESS RELEASES!
with photos from the southern quarterfinal by John Strohsacker


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Second-Ranked Navy Beats Cornell, 6-5, in NCAA Quarterfinal

Graham Gill Grabs Game-Winning Goal


ITHACA, N.Y. - It's been 23 years since Navy appeared in the NCAA Lacrosse Tournament Semifinals, otherwise known as the Lacrosse Final Four. Navy (14-2) joined Princeton and top-seeded Johns Hopkins as members of the Final Four when it defeated seventh-seeded Cornell (9-5), 6-5, Sunday in quarterfinal action played at Schoellkopf Field in Ithaca, N.Y.

“We are honored to win,” said Navy head coach Richie Meade. “Cornell's goalie was outstanding today, but I thought that two of their goals were the result of our inability to get the ball from defense to offense. That said, Cornell played extremely well today.

“It's a credit to our team to win on their field.”

The Midshipmen looked to utilize their full roster on what turned out to be a steamy day on the turf as many witnessed the steam rising from the carpet. Navy played 28 of its 32 players and seemingly was the difference at the end of the game, running down ground balls with fresher legs.

A sloppily played first quarter by both teams resulted in a scoreless first period. Navy, though, finally put together a flurry of shots with the last of three-consecutive shots making its way past Cornell keeper Matt McMonagle. The montage of shots started with senior middie Ben Bailey (Memphis, Tenn.), whose shot was waved by McMonagle, scooped up by Ian Dingman (Deferiet, N.Y.), who subsequently shot and was once again turned back by McMonagle. The third time was apparently Navy's charm, as junior midfielder Graham Gill (Medford, N.J.) scooped up the loose ball and fired it in (High Bandwidth) for the game's first goal at the 10:13 mark in the second period.

Nearly two minutes to the second later, the Big Red's top goal scorer Sean Greenhalgh (High Bandwidth) curled around the back side of the net and made a diving shot at Navy keeper Matt Russell's (Madison, Conn.) ankles, making its way into the net and knotting the game at one apiece.

Cornell took its only lead of the game with 6:50 to go in the half when former Naval Academy attack Dave Pittard found an open Andrew Collins who threaded in the shot.

The Mids countered 37 seconds later when Dingman took a shot nearly 10 yards out to tie the game (High Bandwidth) at 2-2.

Freshman Billy Looney (Silver Spring, Md.) gave the Mids the lead for good when sophomore attack Jon Birsner (Levittown, N.Y.) threw the ball from behind the cage to Looney (High Bandwidth) who was 15 yards out.

Up 3-2, Looney tried nearly the same shot he had scored upon minutes earlier when he took a cross check to the throat with five seconds remaining in the first half. That penalty set up an extra-man opportunity for the Mids to open the third quarter. Navy ran an unusual set knowing Cornell would be prepared for Navy leading goal scorer Joe Bossi (Skaneateles, N.Y.) to set up in the front of the crease on the right-hand side. Bossi, however, was found five yards out on the left-hand side and the lefty gave Navy a two-goal lead 57 seconds into the second half.

Bossi's goal triggered a second half that saw the two teams trade goals. Perhaps none was more impressive than Dingman's goal with 9:31 to play in the fourth quarter (High Bandwidth). Dingman fought through multiple double teams and muscled his way free to give Navy a 5-3 lead.

Navy owned a 6-4 lead with two minutes to go when Collins produced his second goal of the game (High Bandwidth) at the 1:57 mark to narrow the gap.

Midshipmen rider Trevor Hoselton (Skaneateles, N.Y.) went offsides with 1:28 to play, putting Navy down a man for 30 seconds. Navy weathered the man-down situation and actually gained advantage. The Mids went up a man over the final 18 seconds when Cornell defensemen Kyle Georgalas was called for a cross check.

Both goalkeepers had magnificent performances, particularly early in the game. Cornell's McMonagle produced 12 of his 14 saves in the first half, while Navy's Russell posted six saves in each half of action.

Navy owned Cornell in the face-off circle with junior Chris Pieczonka (Hamburg, N.Y.) winning 12 of the 13 draws. With the 12 wins, he moved up to No. 2 on Navy's career face-offs win list with 191 wins, passing Jay Hull (1995-98) who won 183 during his career. Pieczonka, who led the Mids with five ground balls, set the school record for single-season grounders with 75.

Navy's man-down defense was impressive weathering four man-down situations. Coming into the game, Cornell was ranked fifth in the nation in extra-man opportunities, scoring on 45.8 percent of its chances. Navy, meanwhile was 2 for 4, scoring one in each half.

The Midshipmen will face Princeton in the NCAA Lacrosse Tournament Semifinals. Game time is set for 2 p.m. at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, Md., home of the Baltimore Ravens. For ticket information, please call (410) 261-7283 or Ticketmaster at (410) 481-SEAT (7328). All session tickets are available for $40, semifinal tickets are $25 and the national championship ticket is $20.

Navy, who beat Penn 11-5 in the NCAA Tournament opener and now Cornell, has never faced three members of the Ivy League in postseason action and it marks the first time since 1989 in which the Mids have face three Ivy teams in a single season.

Friday's semifinal game between Navy and Princeton marks the first time the two have played one another in the NCAA Tournament.


Cornell (G-A-P): Sean Greenhalgh (High Bandwidth) (2-0-2), Andrew Collins (2-0-2), Kevin Nee (High Bandwidth) 1-0-1), Dave Pittard (0-1-1), Justin Redd (0-1-1).

Navy (G-A-P): Ian Dingman (2-0-2), Graham Gill (2-0-2), Jon Birsner (0-2-2), Billy Looney (1-0-1), Joe Bossi (1-0-1).

Shots: Cornell (28) 7-8-6-7; Navy (35) 5-13-8-9

Ground Balls: Cornell (24) 5-9-7-3; Navy (31) 3-10-7-11

Saves: Cornell (14) 3-9-1-1; Navy (12) 4-2-4-2

Turnovers: Cornell (19) 2-4-8-5; Navy (23) 5-3-8-7

Face-offs: Cornell 1 for 13; Navy 12 for 13

Clears: Cornell 16 for 24; Navy 11 for 15

Extra-Man: Cornell 0 for 4; Navy 2 for 4





Boyle Wills Princeton Past Maryland In OT And Back To Final Four

Trombino's OT goal is the game-winner


Charlottesville, Va. - Ryan Boyle wasn't going to let a two-goal deficit and a sizzling goalie end his Princeton career short of the Final Four.

Boyle scored two goals in the final two minutes of regulation to tie the score (High Bandwidth) and then set up Peter Trombino perfectly (High Bandwidth) 1:42 into overtime to will Princeton to a 9-8 win over Maryland in the NCAA quarterfinals in front of 2,869 at Scott Stadium at the University of Virginia.

"The thought that this might be the end of my career never entered my mind," Boyle said.

The victory sent sixth-seeded Princeton into next weekend's Final Four at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, where the Tigers will take on the winner of tomorrow's game between Navy and Cornell in the second semifinal. Princeton, who has won six NCAA championships, is making its 10th Final Four appearance.

The Tigers, 11-3 on the year, improved to 6-1 in NCAA tournament games in overtime and 19-3 in NCAA tournament games decided by one or two goals.

Princeton trailed 8-6 late in the fourth quarter before Boyle simply took over the game. Matched up against Chris Passavia, perhaps the best defenseman in Division I, Boyle finished the game with three goals and two assists, of which two goals and one assist came in the final two minutes of regulation and the overtime.

Boyle made it a one-goal game (High Bandwidth) when he took Passavia one-on-one from behind the cage and beat Tim McGinnis, the Maryland goalie, with 1:55 to go. After Princeton won the face-off, McGinnis made three quick saves, two on Boyle and one on Scott Sowanick, and watched as Jason Doneger hit the pipe as well. Maryland cleared the ball and could have run time off the clock, but Joe Walters (High Bandwidth) took a shot with 30 seconds left that Dave Law saved for the Tigers.

Princeton then cleared the ball again, and Sowanick shot wide with 17 seconds remaining. Princeton maintained possession, and Boyle took the ball behind the net on the restart, again going one-on-one with Passavia. This time, Boyle took Passavia in front of the net and shot high, beating McGinnis to tie it with 12 seconds left.

"There's always more time than you think," Boyle said. "When you're desperate, you can get a lot of shots off. You never want to have to make an all-or-nothing move, but at the end, I had no choice. Luckily, it was all, not nothing."

Maryland then won the face-off, and the Terps caught a huge break when Princeton was whistled for a holding penalty with one second left. That gave Maryland possession of the ball with a man-advantage to start overtime, but a miscommunication on a pass immediately gave possession back to Princeton.

The Tigers then called a timeout, and Sowanick took the ball when play resumed and got it behind the net to Boyle.

Once again, Boyle took Passavia in front of the net, but this time Maryland collapsed on him. Boyle, who assisted on B.J. Prager's goal in overtime to win the 2001 NCAA championship, fed across the crease to Trombino, who drilled it past McGinnis to send the Tigers to the Final Four.

"I don't think nervous is the right word," Trombino said. "Everyone slid to Ryan, and I was just sitting there. I was thinking 'is the ball really coming to me?' I just caught it and didn't think about it. Ryan set it all up."



Maryland led 2-0 early and 3-1 in the second quarter before Princeton took a 4-3 lead at intermission. Maryland would regain the lead at 7-6 on goals by Bill McGlone and J.R. Bordley (High Bandwidth) 15 seconds apart late in the third, and Bordley scored again (High Bandwidth) early in the fourth to make it 8-6. It would stay that way until Boyle's heroics.

"Anyone who doubts the size of Ryan Boyle's heart hasn't been around him for four years," said Princeton coach Bill Tierney. "He's done amazing things every day."

Trombino, the Ivy League Rookie of the Year, had not scored until overtime, but his goal kept alive his streak of having at least one goal in every game this season.

Jason Doneger and Whitney Hayes scored two goals for Princeton while Brendan Healey and Justin Smith joined Bordley with two each for Maryland.

The Terps outshot Princeton 33-27.

McGinnis made 12 saves for Maryland, while Dave Law made 11 for Princeton.

"We feel very fortunate to have beaten a great Maryland team," said Tierney. "I thought we just dug deep down. I think what happens is that you get kids like Peter Trombino who want to come to Princeton and maintain the legacy of players like Ryan Boyle. "

Princeton has defeated Maryland five straight times in the NCAA tournament. Princeton has won six straight NCAA games in overtime after losing the 1991 quarterfinal to Towson, including four wins in overtime in NCAA championship games.

Princeton also returns to the Final Four after missing last year. The last time Princeton went two straight years without going to the Final Four was 1990 and 1991.

"We always make it exciting," Boyle said. "If we get to overtime, usually good things happen."


PRINCETON SCORING:
GOALS: Ryan Boyle 3; Whitney Hayes 2; Jason Donegar 2; Peter Trombino 1; Jim O'Brien (High Bandwidth) 1.
ASSISTS: Ryan Boyle 2; Drew Casino 1.

MARYLAND SCORING:
GOALS: Brendan Healy (High Bandwidth) 2; Justin Smith 2; J.R. Bordley 2; Joe Walters 1; Bill McGlone 1.
ASSISTS: Paul Gillette 1; Brendan Healy 1; Joe Walters 1.





Syracuse Nips Georgetown in NCAA Quarters

Sean Lindsey Scores Winner with :05 Left on Clock


ITHACA, NY -- Senior midfielder Sean Lindsay (Cortlandt Manor, N.Y./Lakeland-Panas) scored with five seconds remaining in the fourth quarter to give No. 4-seeded Syracuse (13-2) an 8-7 victory against Georgetown in the NCAA Division I men's lacrosse quarterfinals at Cornell's Schoellkopf Field. The win sends the Orange to the NCAA semifinals for the 22nd consecutive season. SU will take on the tournament's top seed, Johns Hopkins, at 2 p.m. on Saturday, May 29 at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. It is the second straight season that the Orange and Blue Jays will meet in the national semifinals.

"Once I came off the sideline and realized that there were only five seconds left, I started going crazy - 22 straight final fours became a reality," said Lindsay after the game. "We have a lot of seniors on this team. We have more tournament experience than any other team in the whole tournament. We are a very determined group. We came in here together and know each other real well. We're real focused and determined on what we want to get done. We have a really, really tough mountain to climb next week. We'll enjoy this win until the sun goes down and then Hopkins. It's right in front of us."

Georgetown (11-4) nearly ended Syracuse's remarkable streak. The Hoyas held a 6-4 advantage with 10:07 left in the third quarter after Walid Hajj converted a pass from Sean Denihan (High Bandwidth). They went up 7-6 at the 11:09 mark of the fourth quarter when Denihan (High Bandwidth) registered his game-high fourth goal off a feed from Brian Young.

SU's experienced midfield line of Lindsay and seniors Steve Vallone (Corning, N.Y./Corning East) and Kevin Dougherty (Syracuse, N.Y./Henninger)stepped it up down the stretch. Dougherty created his own shot while isolated on the right side of the cage. He rolled past his defender and sent a shot to the bottom of the net which tied the game at 7-7 with 8:19 remaining in the contest. With less than five minutes to play, Georgetown had possession and took its time working the ball around for a good shot. The Hoyas attempted at least three shots that were either wide or saved by SU goaltender Jay Pfeifer (Towson, Md./Gilman).

The Syracuse defense withstood the pressure in the final five minutes and junior close defender Scott Ditzell (Geneva, N.Y./Geneva) forced Hajj to cough the ball up. Ditzell picked up the groundball and with 1:43 remaining, SU called timeout. The Orange worked the ball behind the cage to Crockett who delivered a pass to senior attackman Brian Nee (Cockeysville, Md./Boys' Latin). Crockett's five-yard shot from the left wing was saved by GU goaltender Rich D'Andrea. Nee was injured on the play and the game was delayed until he was able to leave the field by his own ability.

Georgetown was awarded the ball and within seconds was called off-sides. Possession was given to the Orange with less than a minute and it used its last timeout. Out of the huddle, the SU offense worked the ball around the perimeter until it found its way into Vallone's stick. Vallone felt the sense of urgency to make something happen and delivered the ball to a cutting Lindsay (High Bandwidth) who flashed to the middle with determination. He caught the ball in traffic and just as quickly got rid of it with an overhand bouncer into the Georgetown goal.

Pfeifer had 19 saves against the Hoyas for the second time in 16 days. He tied his career-high with 19 saves in the final regular-season game against Georgetown in Washington on May 7. It was the most saves for Pfeifer in an NCAA playoff game since the 2002 semifinals when he recorded 19 saves against Virginia. Pfeifer upped his NCAA Tournament record to 7-1.

Denihan (High Bandwidth) scored three first-quarter goals for Georgetown, while freshman attackman Trevor Casey added a score to give the Hoyas a 4-2 advantage after the first 15 minutes.

SU sophomore attackman Brian Crockett (Yorktown, N.Y./Yorktown) tallied the game's first goal just 56 seconds into the contest. Dougherty and Lindsay connected for SU's second goal which tied the game at 2-2 with 5:46 remaining in the first quarter. Despite a 30-20 edge in shots in the first half, the Orange went scoreless for a span of 27:24. Crockett hit two pipes and had one shot rattle in and out during that time. Senior attackman Alex Zink (High Bandwidth) (Rowayton, Conn./Darien) ended the drought with his 13th goal of the season off a pass from Dougherty with 3:22 remaining in the second period. Zink blasted the ball into the upper left corner of the net past D'Andrea, who recorded 13 first-half saves and finished the game with 18.

Trailing 4-3 with less than a minute to play in the first half, Syracuse called timeout. In its effort to hold on for the final shot, SU lost the ball in its offensive end. Georgetown quickly recovered and pushed the ball upfield. Star defenseman Brodie Merrill (High Bandwidth) unleashed a shot from 15 yards out with 18 seconds remaining which was good for his third goal of the season. It gave the Hoyas a 5-3 halftime lead.

Syracuse freshman midfielder Danny Brennan (Farmingdale, N.Y./Farmingdale)did an exceptional job at the face-off X against Georgetown's Andy Corno who came into the game leading the nation in face-off winning percentage. Brennan won eight of 19 draws, including 4-of-5 in the third quarter. The rookie is now 39-of-70 (.557) on faceoffs since he attempted his first one of the season in the Loyola game on April 10.

Orange superstar Michael Powell (High Bandwidth) (West Carthage, N.Y./Carthage) finished with a team-high three goals to increase his career point total to 297 points. Powell's first goal of the game came at 11:42 of the third quarter and pulled SU to within 5-4 of the Hoyas. He fired a low blast past D'Andrea at 8:25 of the third period and then stuck a shot from 10 yards out just three minutes later to tie the game at 6-6.

SU won its eighth straight game against Georgetown and now controls the all-time series 11-2. On May 7, Syracuse defeated the Hoyas, 13-9, in Washington, D.C.

The Orange has a chance to avenge one of its two losses this season when it meets Johns Hopkins (13-1) in the semifinals next week. The Blue Jays defeated Syracuse, 17-5, on March 20 at Homewood Field. They have outscored SU, 36-13, in the past two meetings. In last year's semifinals, Hopkins posted a 19-8 victory against the Orange at M&T Bank Stadium.

The other national semifinal next week will pit No. 2-seeded Navy (14-2) against No. 6-seeded Princeton (11-3) at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 29. Both games will be televised LIVE by ESPN2.


Syracuse Goals: Michael Powell (High Bandwidth) 3, Sean Lindsay 2, Brian Crockett 1, Kevin Dougherty 1, Alex Zink 1.

Syracuse Assists: Brian Crockett (High Bandwidth) 2, Kevin Dougherty (High Bandwidth) 2, Steve Vallone (High Bandwidth) 2.

Georgetown Goals: Sean Denihan 4, Walid Hajj 1, Trevor Casey 1, Brodie Merrill 1.

Georgetown Assists:Sean Denihan 1, Neal Goldman 1, Brian Young 1.

Shots: Syracuse 49, Georgetown 41

Groundballs: Georgetown 39, Syracuse 27

Faceoffs: Georgetown 11-19, Syracuse 8-19

Clears: Georgetown 20-26, Syracuse 16-23

Extra-man: Georgetown 1-5, Syracuse 0-7

Saves: Syracuse 19 (Jay Pfeifer), Georgetown 18 (Rich D'Andrea)

Penalties: Georgetown 8/6:00, Syracuse 5/3:30 Attendance: 11,480





Blue Jays Roll Past Carolina, 15-9

Ford Ties Career High with Five Goals


CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. -- Senior attackman Conor Ford tied his career high with five goals and the top-ranked Johns Hopkins men's lacrosse team used an 8-2 run midway through the game as the Blue Jays rolled past eighth-seeded North Carolina, 15-9 in the NCAA Quarterfinals at Virginia's Scott Stadium Saturday afternoon. The Blue Jays, who improve to 13-1 and advance to the national semifinals for the third straight year, will meet the winner of tomorrow's game between fourth-seeded Syracuse and fifth-seeded Georgetown in next week's semifinals. North Carolina had its three-game winning streak snapped and ends the season at 10-5.

"When we drew North Carolina we knew it would be a very difficult game," Johns Hopkins head coach Dave Pietramala noted in the post-game press conference. "We thought for us to have a chance to win we'd have to hold them in single digits. I'm very proud of the way our team played today and I'm very happy for our seniors. We didn't recruit them, but they have bought into everything we have preached."

The Blue Jays trailed 2-1 late in the first quarter before junior midfielder Matt Rewkowski jump-started the 8-2 run with back-to-back goals. His first, with 3:51 remaining in the first quarter, capped a long possession and came off an assist from senior Kevin Boland (High Bandwidth), who found Rewkowski eight yards in front of the cage. Rewkowski gave the Blue Jays the lead for good just over a minute into the second quarter when he drove the left side and beat North Carolina goalie Paul Spellman high to the far side.

After Joe McDermott and UNC's Ryan Blair traded goals to give JHU a 4-3 lead with just under 12 minutes to play in the second quarter, Ford took over as he scored the next five Blue Jay goals in a span of just over 11 minutes to give JHU an 8-4 lead at the half.

Ford's first two goals came just 54 seconds apart. Junior midfielder Kyle Harrison drew a double team for a split second and found Ford , who beat Spellman with a low-to-high shot at the 10:41 mark. Less than a minute later sophomore Greg Peyser worked the same play and Ford wasted no time beating Spellman again to give JHU a 6-3 lead.

North Carolina's Dave Duffy trimmed the deficit to 6-4 as he drove to the goal and beat sophomore goalie Scott Smith with 3:42 remaining in the period. Ford, however, wasn't finished as he tallied twice in the final 3:10. Junior short-stick defensive middie Benson Erwin came up with a loose ball in the Hopkins defensive zone and raced the length of the field, where he fed Ford for his third goal of the game to make it 7-4. Rewkowski did the dirty work on Ford's fourth goal as he drove inside and drew a double team before flipping the ball to Ford (High Bandwidth), who bounced a five-yard shot past a defenseless Spellman.

"He's (Ford) is the best All-American no one talks about," Pietramala noted. "I'm amazed at the way he puts the ball in the goal -- he didn't waste many shots today, he put the ball on the goal.

When Ford capped his personal five-goal run with an extra-man goal less than two minutes into the third quarter, it appeared the Blue Jays might run away with the game. However, the Tar Heels fired off a quick three-goal run to pull within 9-7 with more than eight minutes left in the third. Lance Zimmerman opend the spree when he scored his only goal of the game off an assist from junior Jed Prossner. (High Bandwidth) Prossner then scored his second goal of the game off an assist from Duffy, while Andrew Lucas backed in his defender and fired a shot past Smith just inside the far post to cap the run. UNC scored the three goals in just 2:13.

Harrison (High Bandwidth) finally stopped the run when he tallied his second goal of the game 46 seconds after Lucas' goal and Erwin scored his first goal of the season less than two minutes later to give the Blue Jays an 11-7 lead at the end of the third quarter.

The Blue Jays pushed the lead to 12-7 at the 12:54 mark of the fourth quarter when Boland scored the first of his two fourth-quarter goals. The 'Heels had a chance to make it interesting in the final 10 minutes as Mike McCall scored an extra-man goal with 11:03 remaining and UNC had another extra-man opportunity when JHU's Corey Harned was called for slashing with 8:29 remaining. However, Smith came up with a save and Erwin broke out and fed Harrison, who scored his second short-handed goal of the season with 7:48 remaining to all but seal the victory.

Boland (High Bandwidth) and Rewkowski (High Bandwidth) scored late goals before UNC's Bryant Will closed the scoring with an extra-man goal in the final minute.

Ford score five goals in a game once in his first 51 career games, but has now done it three times in his last five games. He moved into a tie for 14th on JHU's career goal-scoring charts as he now has 99 in his career. He is tied with Del Dressel (1983-86) and Peter Scott (1981-84) on the list.

Harrison (High Bandwidth) and Rewkowski both had three goals and one assist , while Boland (High Bandwidth) had two goals and two assists. Boland's two assists give him 79 in his career, which moves him into 10th on JHU's career list. He also now has 18 career assists in the NCAA Tournament, which is tied for second best on JHU's career NCAA charts. Smith had 12 saves in goal for the Blue Jays, the second-highest total of his career. His top two career save totals both have come against North Carolina.

The story offensively for the Blue Jays, after Ford, was Erwin, who entered the game with career totals of three goals and six assists for nine points and never had a multi-point game before the three-point showing against the Tar Heels.

The Tar Heels had eight different players score goals, but only Prossner (High Bandwidth) had more than one. He had two goals and one assist to lead the Heels with three points. Ryan Blair (High Bandwidth), Zimmerman, Duffy and Andrew McElduff all had one goal and one assist to lead the balanced attack for UNC.



North Carolina once again got an outstanding effort from senior Kevin Frew, who won 17-of-28 faceoffs and had 13 ground balls. Spellman added 13 saves, but he was under constant pressure from the start as JHU outshot UNC, 26-13 in the first half and 42-37 for the game (UNC held a 15-6 advantage in third quarter).

Johns Hopkins will be making its 25th appearance in the national semifinals and fifth in the last six years. This is the first time the Blue Jays have advanced to the semifinals for three straight years since 1985-87.


Goals: N: Prossner-2, A. McElduff, Blair, Duffy, Zimmerman, McCall, Lucas, Will. J: Ford-5, Harrison-3, Rewkowski-3, Boland-2, Erwin, McDermott.

Assists: N: Blair, Duffy, Frew (High Bandwidth), A. McElduff, Prossner, Zimmerman. J: Boland-2, Erwin-2, Byrne, Harrison, Peyser, Rewkowski.

Saves: N: Spellman-13. J: Smith-12.

EMO: N: 2-for-3. J: 2-for-2.






5/26/04

(High Bandwidth)