Men’s Lacrosse: No. 3 UVA takes care of No. 10 North Carolina, 19-12
Courtesy UVA Media Relations
In wet and rainy conditions, No. 3 Virginia cruised to a 19-12 victory over No. 10 North Carolina at Dorrance Field Friday evening.
The win marked Cavaliers’ fifth straight over the Tar Heels in the series and fifth consecutive victory at Dorrance Field. Virginia’s 19 goals are the most by a UNC opponent this season. North Carolina entered Friday’s contest as the No. 3 scoring defense in the nation, holding opponents to an average of 8.50 goals per game.
Virginia (8-2, 2-1 ACC) also improved to 18-0 in games following a loss (within the same season). UVA has not suffered back-to-back losses since 2017, Lars Tiffany’s first year as Virginia head coach.
The Cavaliers dominated the ground ball game, 42-28. For the eighth game this season, Petey LaSalla (2g, 17-33 FO, 9gb) finished above .500 at the faceoff X. Captain and short-stick defensive midfielder Grayson Sallade collected four ground balls and dished out one assist.
Offensively, Payton Cormier scored a game-high five goals on eight shots and added two assists. Xander Dickson (3g, 1a), Thomas McConvey (2g, 2a), Peter Garno (2g) and Petey LaSalla (2g) also finished with multiple goals for UVA.
Goalie Matthew Nunes (8-2) earned the win in the crease and made 12 saves, while allowing 11 goals in 56:08 of action. UNC’s Collin Krieg (7-4) made just seven saves in his fourth loss of the year.
HOW IT HAPPENED
Despite three called penalties in the opening period, the Cavaliers leaped out to a 6-1 lead after the first 15 minutes of action. Virginia dominated the ground ball game in the first period, collecting 13 of the periods 17 total balls on the ground. After the Tar Heels kicked off the scoring on a man-up goal, Virginia fired off six straight goals in less than 6:00 of play. After Dickson struck first for UVA, Cormier scored three consecutive goals to give the Cavaliers a 4-1 lead by the game’s first media timeout. Evan Zinn and Garno capped the UVA scoring run. Garno’s goal in the first marked his third straight game with a score.
North Carolina (7-4, 1-2) scored three of the first five goals to start the second before UVA closed out the half with four straight goals, including Cole Kastner’s third career goal on an open net from below UVA’s own restraining line amid the Tar Heels’ 10-man ride. Cormier tallied his fifth goal of the game on a UVA man-up chance with 46 seconds left in the half to conclude scoring for both sides.
Coming out of the intermission, UVA ripped three consecutive goals, stretching its scoring run to seven straight goals. In his first career start, attackman Truitt Sunderland tallied his fifth goal of the season on an assist from Dickson two minutes in. After Cormier found McConvey for Virginia’s 16th goal of the game, the Tar Heels closed out period No. 3 by scoring four of the last five goals as UVA comfortably held a 17-8 lead by the end of the third.
UVA received goals from Griffin Schutz and Dickson in the fourth as the Cavaliers started to mix in some of their reserves toward the back half of the period. Dickson’s goal in the fourth quarter marked UVA’s second extra-man score of the game and his seventh hat trick of the season. After the Tar Heels trailed by as many as 10 goals [19-9] in period No. 4, UNC scored three straight to close out the game.
FROM HEAD COACH LARS TIFFANY
“It was a great night for Virginia Lacrosse. What really typified it was the way we played the ground balls. We were chopping. We were running through ground balls, highlighted by Grayson Sallade’s ground ball early in the game. We were going to slide, dive, fight – whatever we could. We have a great history of being tenacious off the ground and we certainly demonstrated that today to give us those extra opportunities.”
WITH THE WIN…
- Virginia improved to 58-32 in the all-time series against the Tar Heels, which began in 1938, and has now won eight of the last nine meetings in the series, including the last five.
- UVA’s 58 wins in the series are the most over a single opponent in program history.
- The Cavaliers also tallied their fifth consecutive win at Dorrance Field, a streak that began in 2018.
- Virginia improved to 18-0 in games following a loss (within the same season). UVA has not suffered back-to-back losses since 2017, Lars Tiffany’s first year as Virginia head coach.
- The Cavaliers won their fourth game of the season away from Klöckner Stadium, including their third true road game.
- Lars Tiffany tallied his 75th win as Virginia head coach. Tiffany is now 75-28 at UVA.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
- With two goals and two assists, Thomas McConvey extended his point streak to 62 games. Having registered at least one point in all 62 career games, McConvey’s streak is the longest among all active Division-I players. For his career, McConvey has amassed 147 goals and 62 assists.
- With five goals and two assists, Payton Cormier extended his point streak to 37 games. During his streak, Cormier has registered 115 goals and 24 assists.
- With 141 career goals in 48 games, Cormier moved to No. 4 on UVA’s all-time goals list. Cormier entered Friday’s game tied for eighth.
- After being held scoreless in UVA’s last six games, Petey LaSalla finished with two goals. UVA is now 23-3 all-time when LaSalla registers at least one goal, including 4-0, in 2023.
- Virginia posted a 7-0 run in the span of 9:29 between the second and third periods.
- Attackman Connor Shellenberger missed the first game of his career due to a lower-extremity injury. Prior to Friday’s contest, Shellenberger had competed in the Cavaliers’ last 43 games, including 41 starts.
- Freshman Truitt Sunderland made his first career start at attack. Sunderland is the only freshman to start in a game for the Cavaliers so far this season.
- Midfielder Peter Garno made his first start of the season, the ninth of his career.
UP NEXT
The Cavaliers return to the Old North State to take on Duke on Saturday. Opening faceoff from Koskinen Field is set for 12 p.m. on ACC Network.