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Alumni News

David Browning makes the Swedish National Team

posted Jan 14, 2010 4:18 PM by TJLAX Admin

TJ alum David Browning has made the Swedish national team as an attackman and will be on the roster for the World Games in Manchester, England. He joins attackman Eric You as the only TJ players (that I'm aware of) to make a national team (Eric was a member of the Korea U-19 team in 2003).

LaxPower Article: Princeton Edges England Again, This Time in Spain

posted Jun 9, 2009 5:16 PM by TJLAX Admin   [ updated Jun 9, 2009 5:19 PM ]


La Manga, Spain - His name is "Buggy," or at least that's what everyone calls him. No one seems to know if that's his real name or not. He's an assistant coach with the English national men's lacrosse team, which has been staying at the La Manga Club resort in La Manga Spain with the Princeton men's lacrosse team the last few days.


"He's the only other Indian goalie in the world," said Princeton goalie Nikhil Ashra.


While the rest of the English coaches and players have been easily befriended by the Princeton contingent here, Buggy is everyone's favorite. And there he was, on the Princeton team bus after the Tigers' 8-7 win over the English team Saturday in the second game of their series, talking about getting "England Lacrosse" gear for the Princetonians.


If the sight of an assistant coach of one of the teams in a hotly contested game as he is warmly greeted on the other team's bus was unlikely, or for that matter impossible to conceive of in a regular game, then that was just fine for this one. Princeton's win, on whatever continent, was an unlikely one.


"We got some things from some unusual places," said Princeton coach Bill Tierney.


Princeton had five stars in the game, none of whom would have been anyone's first choice in the pregame. Yet those five were the reason that the Tigers beat the English for the second straight day, following a 9-7 win Friday in the first game.


The first was Peter Gudmundsen, a walkon who did not appear in a single game for the Tigers this past season, his freshman one. Against the English, Gudmundsen started on attack, and he responded by scoring the first goal of the game.


The English would lead 2-1 after the first quarter before Pete Striebel scored two straight for Princeton. That set the stage for the next key moment of the game.


First, Tyler Moni, Gudmundsen's classmate who played in one game his freshman year, scored on a rocket shot from up top to make it 4-2 more than five minutes after Striebel's second goal.


As unexpected as those two power sources may have been, at least Gudmundsen and Moni were used to scoring goals a year earlier. Princeton's next goal scorer hadn't done so in more than four years, and that was nothing compared to the one that followed.


Andy Kittler, one of the Princeton players who graduated the day before the team left for Europe, picked up the ground ball off the wing with his longstick on the face-off after Moni's goal and sprinted right down the middle before scoring. A former club player at Princeton, Kittler's last goal in a real game was back in high school in Menlo, Calif.


"It'd been awhile," Kittler said. "I got the ball and kept looking for someone to pass to, but no one was open. Finally I said 'hey, I might as well shoot this thing.' "


Princeton would lead 7-3 at halftime, but England stormed back, scoring four times in the third quarter while shutting Princeton out as Jason Carter, the starting goalie for Maryland this past year, played the second half. The game went to the fourth quarter even at 7-7, and Tierney kept to his plan of a goalie rotation of Alex Hewit in the first quarter, Christian Blake in the second, Ashra in the third and then Evan Magruder in the fourth. Magruder, another graduate, had played in one game in his Princeton career.


The only goal of the fourth quarter would come from rising sophomore defenseman Long Ellis, who assisted on the game-winner in Princeton's first win in the series. This time, Ellis and Magruder played catch to start a clear, and Ellis would take the ball across midfield and keep going all the way to the goal, beating Carter high three minutes into the period.


"I have never scored a goal in an actual lacrosse game on any level ever before," Ellis said. "I'm pretty psyched about it."


All that was left was for Magruder to make it stand up, which he did with two big saves in the final eight minutes. England's last chance ended with a turnover, and Princeton was able to run out the clock.


After the game and Buggy's visit to the bus, it was back to the main part of the resort, a short ride that took the team past warmups for a cricket match on an adjacent field. The afternoon was to feature a visit to the ruins of Cartagena, a city that dates to 227 B.C., founded by the Carthaginians and then conquered shortly after that by the Romans.


Perhaps if the Carthaginians could have gotten better production for its unlikely sources, as Princeton did Saturday, it might have put up a better fight.


* * * *


Score by Period       1  2  3  4  Tot

-------------------------------------

Princeton...........  1  6  0  1 -  8

England.............  2  1  4  0 -  7

  

Princeton SCORING:

GOALS: Striebel, Peter 2; Gaudio, Mike 1; Gudmundsen, Peter 1; McBride, Chris 1;

       Moni, Tyler 1; Kittler, Andy 1; Ellis, Long 1.

ASSISTS: Striebel, Peter 1.

 

England SCORING:

GOALS: Gosnay, Tom 2; McGuigan, Simon 2; Humphries, Glen 1; Reynolds, Mark 1;

       Davies, Ian 1.

ASSISTS: Gosnay, Tom 2; Cockayne, Dan 1; Howe, Steve 1; McCollouch, Dave 1;

         Singleton, Joe 1.

 

SHOTS BY PERIOD       1  2  3  4  Tot

-------------------------------------

Princeton...........  6 13  6  7 - 32

England.............  7  3  7  5 - 22

 

GROUND BALLS BY PRD   1  2  3  4  Tot

-------------------------------------

Princeton...........  4 13  4  6 - 27

England.............  4  6 11  9 - 30

 

FACE-OFFS BY PRD       1     2     3     4     Total

----------------------------------------------------

Princeton...........  1-4   4-8   4-5   1-1  - 10-18

England.............  3-4   4-8   1-5   0-1  -  8-18

 

CLEARS BY PERIOD       1     2     3     4     Total

----------------------------------------------------

Princeton...........  2-4   3-3   4-4   7-7  - 16-18

England.............  4-4   1-1   4-4   7-7  - 16-16

 

EXTRA-MAN OPPS         1     2     3     4     Total

----------------------------------------------------

Princeton...........  0-2   0-3   0-1   0-2  -  0-8

England.............  0-0   0-1   0-1   0-0  -  0-2

 

SAVES BY PERIOD       1  2  3  4  Tot

-------------------------------------

Princeton...........  2  1  3  2 -  8

England.............  3  3  1  2 -  9

 

TURNOVERS BY PRD      1  2  3  4  Tot

-------------------------------------

Princeton...........  7  4  7  8 - 26

England.............  6  5  3  6 - 20

 

PENALTIES - Princeton 3/1:30; England 9/7:00.




2008-06-07


Article at LaxPower

YaleBullDogs: Casertano, DuBoff Help North Beat South

posted Jun 9, 2009 3:16 PM by TJLAX Admin   [ updated Jun 9, 2009 3:17 PM ]

Report filed by Steve Conn, Yale Sports Publicity Director

May 23, 2008

Yale seniors Tyler Casertano (Millbrook, N.Y.) and Gregory DuBoff(McLean, Va.) were part of a collection of the best college lacrosse players in the nation today when they played in the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association's North-South All-Star Game at Harvard Stadium.

Despite being held pointless, the two Bulldogs were offensive catalysts in a 31-goal game as the North won 20-11.

Casertano was very excited about playing with and against the best players in the nation, but was concerned that the South might be too strong for his team.

"I was wrong about that, but I really thought they would be better than us" said the Eli attacker whose North squad jumped out to an early lead it never relinquished. "I was a little rusty after not playing for a couple of weeks," said Casertano, who may have been a little hard on himself after today's effort.

"After four years of lacrosse networking, it was nice to play with guys you've been playing against. Today was a great celebration of lacrosse," said Casertano, who played with an attack unit that was on the field for the first and third quarters.

DuBoff, who will attend law School in the fall across the river from the stadium, shared the North's faceoff duties (9 wins in 17 attempts) and often stayed on the field as a midfielder.

"It was an honor to be picked for this event. I had a great time. It was fun to play with different guys and in a different style," said DuBoff.

It was a glorious, sunny, 70-degree day along the banks of the Charles River. The 1,000 or so fans may have been dwarfed by the 32,000-seat venue, but there was a special feeling being inside the historic, 105-year-old stadium whose stands tightly hug the playing field and resemble a roman coliseum.

Casertano and DuBoff were two of five Ivy League participants on the 30-man North Team roster that included three Division II players. Defenseman Dan Cocoziello and goalie Alex Hewit of Princeton and Brown defenseman Reed DeLuca were the others.

None of the players from Syracuse, Virginia, Johns Hopkins and Duke could take part as they prepared for tomorrow's NCAA Championship semi-finals at nearby Gillette Stadium. The USILA event kicked off a big lacrosse weekend that included a Division III all-star contest. Both all-star games were hosted by the Major League Lacrosse Boston Cannons, who played the nightcap of the Harvard Stadium tripleheader.

The North coaches were Quinnipiac's Eric Fekete and Joe Breschi of Ohio State.

Alumni News as of May 2004

posted Jun 9, 2009 3:14 PM by TJLAX Admin   [ updated Jun 9, 2009 3:18 PM ]

Nate Whitaker (TJ 2002) scored five goals in the season finale for Penn State to earn a 12-11 overtime win at Georgetown. The win helped PSU earn its second trip to the post-season in three years. The Nittany Lions will travel to the University of Maryland to play this weekend. Currently, Nate has scored a goal or an assist in 41 consecutive games for the Lions.

Greg DuBoff (TJ 2004) has earned significant playing time at Yale this year working primarily as a faceoff man and defensive midfielder. Last week, Greg held his own against the best faceoff man in the country when Yale visited the University of Delaware. This is impressive for a true Freshman.

Jeff Donlea (TJ 2001) has finished his senior season at Swarthmore and is preparing to start graduate school.

Steve Henry (TJ 2001) and Steve Crenshaw (TJ 2002 - surprise to all of us!!!) are running UVA's club lacrosse program this year. They are also joined by another TJ alum Paul Emery (TJ 2004) who is playing defense for the squad.

Wade Barnes (TJ 2000) is floating around the Pacific Ocean on a destroyer now that he has graduated from the Naval Academy. He has settled down with his new wife in La Jolla, CA.

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