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Team USA Throttles Australia; Canada Looms
by Matt DaSilva | Lacrosse Magazine Online Staff | Game Blog
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Team USA attackman Brendan Mundorf sets up a dodge Friday during a three-goal, two-assist performance against his former team, Australia. Mundorf and Max Seibald (5g, 1a) combined for 11 points in a convincing 21-5 victory. © John Strohsacker/LaxPhotos.com |
MANCHESTER, England -- Sure it felt good. Four
years of build-up and preparation, reliving the anguish of 2006 and
clamoring to reclaim the gold medal had the U.S. men’s
national team chomping at the bit.
Just like that, though, it was over. Team USA throttled an older,
slower Australia, 21-5, in its Federation of International Lacrosse
(FIL) World Championships opener Friday. Max Seibald had a hat
trick less than 10 minutes into the game en route to a five-goal,
one-assist performance.
It wasn’t long before talk turned to Canada. The U.S. will
meet the team that wrested the world title from its possession four
years ago in what’s expected to be a sold-out showdown
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. Manchester time.
“Guys, enjoy this for about 45 minutes,” goalkeeper
Brian Dougherty said to his teammates after beating Australia.
“Then it’s on to the team in red.”
Team USA has taken a business-like, almost cold approach to these
world games. Coaches and team officials shooed players back to
their dorm immediately after their big victory, one in which they
seized a 7-1 lead in the first quarter and never looked back.
No on-field interviews. No autographs. Just a late dinner and a
midnight curfew.
“It feels really good to come out of all the work
we’ve been doing to come out and have the ball roll our
way,” said attackman Brendan Mundorf, who had three goals and
two assists in the win over Australia. “We’re really
excited for Canada tomorrow. I think it’s a good thing we
have those guys early on. We’ll be ready tomorrow, but
we’ll get some rest first tonight.”
Mundorf and Seibald deserved it. Major League Lacrosse teammates
with the Denver Outlaws, they were unstoppable early. Team USA head
coach Mike Pressler drew up a give-and-go play before opening
faceoff, on which Seibald capitalized just 11 seconds into the
game.
Seibald added another goal just over a minute later. Mundorf made
it 3-0 less than five minutes into the fourth quarter.
“All of a sudden we’re up 3-, 4-, 5-1 and then 7-1. It
felt like we were obviously in control,” Pressler said.
“We kept our foot on the gas.”
After Anson Carter put Australia on the board seven minutes in,
Mundorf helped bookend a four-goal run – assisting on a goal
to, yes, Seibald and scoring on a lefty blast from his favorite
spot on the right wing – that put the U.S. up 7-1 in the
first quarter.
Carter struck again on an Australian extra-man opportunity to
pull within 7-2, but Mundorf’s behind-the-back finish of a
feed from his UMBC and Outlaws wingman Drew Westervelt squelched
any thoughts of a comeback. Team USA held Australia scoreless over
the final 19:35 of the second quarter while building a 13-2
halftime lead.
From there, Dougherty got into a groove, finishing with eight
saves in three quarters before yielding to Adam Fullerton.
Carter, who finished with four goals, said Australia did not have
the firepower to keep up.
“What can you say? This is the U.S. lacrosse team,” he
said. “They’re just a bunch of dudes that are freaking
good at what they do.”
Pressler lauded the play of Team USA defenseman DJ Driscoll and
long stick midfielder Kyle Sweeney, who scored two goals and
assisted on a pole-to-pole tally by Eric Martin that sealed the
21-5 win. He also praised the offensive balance that saw
Westervelt, Ned Crotty and Mike Leveille net two goals apiece
despite Australia shifting between zone and man-to-man
defenses.
“The thing about this USA team is we’ve been together
now for a while. We’re very comfortable in our own skins and
certainly with each other,” Pressler said. “Did I
expect any jitters tonight? No. Did they show any? No.”
That could change Saturday.
“Canada adds a whole different emotion to this group,”
Pressler said. “The emotion of ’06, the four years of
talking about a silver medal when our goal is gold – I think
it appeals to their emotions in a little different way.”
News & Notes
Team USA’s final 23-man roster submitted Friday had the
exact same look of the 23-man roster it unveiled last November.
That included defenseman Shawn Nadelen, who started Friday’s
opener just five months after knee surgery that required radical
rehabilitation. Nadelen tore his ACL in January playing for the
Philadelphia Wings. The U.S. carried Parker McKee and Lee Zink as
alternates to Manchester, but gave Nadelen the nod. Zink and
attackman Kevin Leveille (Mike’s brother) remained with the
team as supporters Friday… Mundorf played for Australia in
the 2006 world championships when they finished third. “I
talked to a lot of the guys during the game and when I see them on
campus,” he said. “We know each other…”
Pressler said specialist Alex Smith “cold do better on the
faceoff.” Team USA’s answer to 2006 world championship
MVP Geoff Snider went 13-for-25 against Australia.
FIL WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS - BLUE DIVISION ROUND
ROBIN
Manchester, England
Team USA 21, Australia 5
USA 7-6-3-5...21
AUS 1-1-1-2...5
Goals: USA - Seibald 5, Mundorf 3, Westervelt 2,
Leveille 2, Crotty 2, Sweeney 2, Smith, Striebel, Rabil, Martin,
Peyser; AUS - Carter 4, Garnsworthy
Assists: USA - Mundorf 2, Boyle 2, Rabil 2,
Crotty, Cassese, Dixon, Zash, Leveille, Westervelt; AUS -
Pickett, Perham
Saves: USA - 10 (Dougherty 8, Fullerton 2); AUS -
12
Faceoffs: USA - 15 (Smith 13-of-25; Peyser
2-of-2); AUS - 12
BLUE DIVISION RESULTS
England 12 Germany 3
Canada 17 Japan 4
United States 21 Australia 5
ORANGE DIVISION RESULTS
Ireland 21 Korea 3
Slovakia 10 Swizterland 4
RED DIVISION
Czech Republic 17, Italy 3
Sweden 20 Mexico 2
PLUM DIVISION
Hong Kong 10 Norway 8
TURQUOISE DIVISION
Scotland 20 Latvia 4
New Zealand 18 France 3
GREY DIVISION
Wales 10, Netherlands 9
Austria 16, Argentina 5
YELLOW DIVISION
Finland 14 Denmark 2
Poland 16, Bermuda 2
RELATED HEADLINES
» Inside September Issue of Lacrosse Magazine
» U.S. Indoor Team to Play Iroquois Nationals
» World Champs: Team USA's Road to Gold
» Photos: Team USA vs. Canada (FIL Final)
» Video: Team USA Wins Back World Title
» Five Things Team USA Needs to Beat Canada
» Video: Sights and Sounds of World Games
» Video: U.S. Well-Equipped with John Jez
» Crotty Surfaces, Then Rises to the Occasion
» Golden Boys: Team USA Rules World Again
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