kwch.com
  • Home
    •  
  • Weather
    • Storm Team 12
    • Drought
    • Interactive Radar
    • Chaser Radar
    • GameDay Forecast
    • TextMe 12
    • Always on 12.2
  • News
    • Local
    • National
    • Morning Show
    • Klose Up
    • Does it Work?
    • Salina
    • Western Kansas
    • Aviation
    • Gas Prices
  • FactFinder 12
    • FactFinder 12
    • Contact the Investigators
    • Scientific Surveys
    • Better Business Bureau
    • Consumer Reports
  • Blogs
    • Roger's AnswerBack 12
    • Cindy's Desk
    • Bruce's For What It's Worth
    • NASCAR: The Backstretch Blog
    • Ross' Blog
    • Rodney's Blog
  • Sports
    • Sports Home
    • Pro
    • College
    • CatchItKansas.com
    • Work it Out Wednesday
    • Sports Tracker 12 Giveaway
  • KWCH Sites
    • CatchitKansas.com
    • KSCWTV.com
    • Univision.com
    • Fetchtoto.com
  • Xtras
    • NewsBank
    • Contests
    • TextMe 12
    • Mobile TV
    • CBS Shows
    • TV Schedule
    • Community Calendar
    • Enews
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Gardening
    • Bands & Music
    • Kansas Photos
    • One of a Kind
    • The Crew
    • Charities & Giving
    • Food 4 Kids
  • About Us
    • About KWCH
    • Meet the Team
    • Contact Us
    • Employment
    • Internships
    • Advertise on KWCH
    • Schurz
    • Closed Captioning
    • DTV
  • Storm Coverage:
  • What is the Fujita scale?
  • How to Help Moore
  • Avoid Storm Damage Scams
  • Storm Shots
Advanced Search

Advanced Search

X

Quint Kessenich: Previewing the NCAA tournament quarterfinals

The payoff of the playoffs is here.

A record-setting crowd is expected Saturday at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, where Johns Hopkins and Maryland will meet to begin the NCAA men's lacrosse tournament quarterfinals. The largest-ever attendance in this round (17,017) also came at Annapolis, in 2008.

The next day, PPL Park in Chester, Pa. — two hours up Interstate 95 — will host NCAA tournament games for the first time.

For the winners, a berth in the semifinals along with validation of all the work that went into getting this far.

For the losers, well ... nobody remembers a quarterfinal loser.

Here are the keys for each team to move on to Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass., for championship weekend:

— By Quint Kessenich, Special to The Baltimore Sun
Image 1 of 7
  • «2
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • »
<b>MARYLAND</b>
<br><br>
1. Own the loose balls. Ground-ball wins through effort and toughness will determine possession and dictate momentum. Faceoff men Curtis Holmes (McDonogh) and Charlie Raffa must get to 50 percent on Hopkins' Mike Poppleton.
<br><br>
2. Draw on the positive NCAA playoff experiences of 2011 and 2012. Maryland has won four of its past postseason games, beating North Carolina, Syracuse, Duke and Lehigh.
<br><br>
3. Give Hopkins fits with strong midfield defense. Long-stick midfielder Jesse Bernhardt and short-stick defenders Landon Carr and David Miller are superb cover men. They can clamp down on Blue Jays playmakers Lee Coppersmith, Rob Guida and John Ranagan.
<br><br>
4. Set shots are much more accurate than shots on the run. When midfielders Chanenchuk, Snider, Michael Shakespeare and John Haus are able to get their hands free and set their feet, they are accurate shooters. When they are releasing off an alley dodge or sweeping, the Terps' percentage plummets. Dodging with authority and then kicking the ball to the weak side can lead to set shots.

UMBC's Phil Poe, Maryland's Curtis Holmes

( Kenneth K. Lam, Baltimore Sun / March 6, 2012 )
MARYLAND

1. Own the loose balls. Ground-ball wins through effort and toughness will determine possession and dictate momentum. Faceoff men Curtis Holmes (McDonogh) and Charlie Raffa must get to 50 percent on Hopkins' Mike Poppleton.

2. Draw on the positive NCAA playoff experiences of 2011 and 2012. Maryland has won four of its past postseason games, beating North Carolina, Syracuse, Duke and Lehigh.

3. Give Hopkins fits with strong midfield defense. Long-stick midfielder Jesse Bernhardt and short-stick defenders Landon Carr and David Miller are superb cover men. They can clamp down on Blue Jays playmakers Lee Coppersmith, Rob Guida and John Ranagan.

4. Set shots are much more accurate than shots on the run. When midfielders Chanenchuk, Snider, Michael Shakespeare and John Haus are able to get their hands free and set their feet, they are accurate shooters. When they are releasing off an alley dodge or sweeping, the Terps' percentage plummets. Dodging with authority and then kicking the ball to the weak side can lead to set shots.
  • E-mail
  • add to Twitter Twitter
  • add to Facebook Facebook
  • add to StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  •  

Comments (0)

Add comments | Discussion FAQ

Currently there are no comments. Be the first to comment!

Local Sports Headlines

Wingnuts drop a tough one in Gary

Grant's Golf Blog: To ban or not to ban

Wingnuts Take Series on Rainy Sunday

Shockers end season on walk-off win

Wingnuts come back to beat T-Bones

Read more>>

CatchItKansas.com

Heart of the Plains League Catch-All: Spring Week 8

Mid-Continent League Catch-All: Spring Week 8

State Baseball & Softball brackets released

2013 State Track Qualifiers

2013 State Golf Results

Read more>>
7 Day Forecast
Interactive Radar
Text Me 12
Send news tips
Like KWCH
Upload photo
Download apps
    • Terms of Service
    • Privacy Policy
    • Schurz
    • About KWCH
    • Fetchtoto Business Directory
    • Contact Us
    • KWCH FCC Online Public File
A Schurz Communications website, powered by Tribune Digital