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Tufts men's lacrosse started the season under a cloud of controversy. It finished with perfection.
Tufts men's lacrosse started the season under a cloud of controversy. It finished with perfection.

Boston Globe

time29-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Boston Globe

Tufts men's lacrosse started the season under a cloud of controversy. It finished with perfection.

What followed was the most dominant season in the program's history. Tufts finished 23-0, capping the year 'I think our guys really didn't have a choice but to move on and be focused,' said coach Casey D'Annolfo, a Tufts alumnus. 'I think if anything at all, it kind of made us more more resilient, and sort of more exclusive to the outside. I think it made us a tighter-knit group and a more resilient group.' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The Jumbos' success started in midfield with junior Jack Regnery, the Division 3 Player of the Year, who led the NESCAC with 103 points. Tufts overwhelmed opponents with its scoring, firing in 418 goals — more than 100 more than any other NESCAC team. Advertisement Tufts junior Jack Regnery was the Division 3 Player of the Year. Daniel Murphy/Melrose High School Tufts had a couple of scares — mainly in overtime wins over No. 3 Christopher Newport University in March, and No. 10 Wesleyan and No. 6 Bowdoin (both double OT) in April — but nobody could get one over on the Jumbos. Advertisement 'When we encountered things during the season that were challenging, or in years past would have been considered as adversity … it sort of paled in comparison to what we went through in the fall,' D'Annolfo said. 'So I think it calloused us in a way, and I think it made us more resilient in the springtime." By the time the postseason arrived, any thought that Tufts would be seriously challenged vanished. The Jumbos romped through the NESCAC tournament, winning each game by at least nine goals, including a 12-goal demolition of Wesleyan for the championship. Then came the NCAA Tournament. Rhodes College was first, victim of a 15-7 defeat. Next was No. 17 St. Lawrence, whose 14-8 loss was the closest any team would get to dethroning the champion. No. 7 Gettysburg College went down, 17-8, in the quarterfinals. Fifth-ranked Bowdoin perhaps looked likeliest to give Tufts a real challenge in the semifinals, having come closest to an upset this season. Instead, the Polar Bears were subjected to a 26-11 demolition. All that was left to do was finish the job in Sunday's title game at Gillette Stadium, and the Jumbos did it convincingly. Tufts scored the first 10 goals and led, 14-3, at halftime, never being challenged by No. 11 Dickinson College in the final stretch of the Jumbos' road to perfection. Tufts set records for goals and margin of victory in a Division 3 championship game. Casey D'Annolfo, a 2006 Tufts graduate, has guided his alma mater to two national titles. Daniel Murphy/Melrose High School The final calculus on the Tufts postseason: eight games, eight wins, a combined margin of victory of 90 goals, and a dominant fifth national championship for the program. 'When we were playing those games, after the first couple minutes, we're like, 'OK, we're dialed, we're ready to go,' ' D'Annolfo said. 'So, you know, was I surprised? No, I wasn't totally surprised, but I guess I was just happy that they were ready to answer the call.' Advertisement For a group of 16 seniors (including five Massachusetts natives), four seasons in Medford finished with a record of 82-7, three NESCAC titles, two national championships, and one perfect season. 'The senior class is incredible,' D'Annolfo said. 'They're incredibly resilient. We were wire to wire, No. 1 in the country, so you're getting everybody's best shot, the expectations from everybody are super high. And every time their best was needed, they provided it ... Certainly, statistically, the most successful group to ever come through the program and they just answered every call at every turn.' Amin Touri can be reached at

Tufts, Colby, Middlebury to represent New England in Division 3 women's lacrosse Final Four
Tufts, Colby, Middlebury to represent New England in Division 3 women's lacrosse Final Four

Boston Globe

time22-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Boston Globe

Tufts, Colby, Middlebury to represent New England in Division 3 women's lacrosse Final Four

Three-time reigningchampion Middlebury will face Colby Friday at 4 p.m. at Roanoke College, in Virginia, while the Jumbos will take on Gettysburg (Pa.) at 7 p.m. Both semifinal games on Friday will be available to stream on The winners will advance to the championship game, set for Sunday at noon. Advertisement Bedford's Allie Zorn leads Tufts (20-1) in points (82) and is second on the team in goals (59). The junior was a 2022 Globe All-Scholastic and girls' lacrosse player of the year during her senior year at Bedford High. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Tufts beat its first two NCAA Tournament opponents by a combined 20 points before eking out an 8-7 win over Salisbury (Md.) to advance to the national semifinals. On the other side of the bracket, Colby (17-3) will face powerhouse Middlebury (19-1), which has lost just two games in the last four years: against Tufts in the 2022 NESCAC tournament final, and against Wesleyan in this season's NESCAC semifinals. The Panthers have won three straight NCAA titles and are led by former Globe All-Scholastic Hope Shue, a graduate of Dover-Sherborn High School. Now a senior, Shue was Advertisement The attacker leads the Panthers in goals (76) and points (107) and is second in assists (31). She's the program's all-time leading goal scorer (296) and this season broke Middlebury's all-time points record with 379 and counting (the previous record was 347, which Amy DiAdamo set from 1994-97). Gillette Stadium will Emma Healy can be reached at

Division II's Daemen, the last unbeaten NCAA men's team this season, takes its 1st loss
Division II's Daemen, the last unbeaten NCAA men's team this season, takes its 1st loss

Associated Press

time17-03-2025

  • Sport
  • Associated Press

Division II's Daemen, the last unbeaten NCAA men's team this season, takes its 1st loss

AMHERST, N.Y. (AP) — There are no unbeaten teams left in NCAA men's college basketball — at any level. Daemen University, located in the Buffalo, New York, suburb of Amherst, lost in the Division II men's tournament on Sunday night. The Wildcats were defeated by St. Thomas Aquinas in the second round of the East Regional, 79-74. Daemen (28-1) was 3-0 against St. Thomas Aquinas this season before the season-ending loss on Sunday. Tennessee was the last remaining Division I men's unbeaten this season at 14-0 before falling to Florida on Jan. 7. Wesleyan was the last remaining Division III men's unbeaten at 26-0 before it lost to Trinity in the NESCAC championship game on March 2. The only remaining unbeaten NCAA basketball team left this season is NYU's women's team -- which takes a 29-0 record — and a 60-game winning streak — into Thursday's Division III national semifinals against Wisconsin-Stout in Salem, Virginia. NYU's women are seeking a second consecutive national championship.

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