1984 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse tournament

The 1984 NCAA Division I lacrosse tournament was the 14th annual tournament hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the team champion of men's college lacrosse among its Division I programs, held at the end of the 1984 NCAA Division I men's lacrosse season.

1984 NCAA Division I men's
lacrosse tournament
DatesMay 16–26, 1984
Teams8
Finals siteDelaware Stadium
Delaware Newark, Delaware
ChampionsJohns Hopkins (5th title)
Runner-upSyracuse (2nd title game)
SemifinalistsArmy (2nd Final Four)
North Carolina (5th Final Four)
Winning coachDon Zimmerman (1st title)
MOPLarry Quinn, Johns Hopkins
Attendance[1]17,671 finals
45,346 total
Top scorerTim Nelson, Syracuse
(11 goals)
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«19831985»

Johns Hopkins defeated previously-unbeaten Syracuse in the championship game, 13–10. This was the third finals where two undefeated champions met for the title and the last time this has occurred.

The championship game was played at Delaware Stadium at the University of Delaware in Newark, Delaware, with 17,253 fans in attendance.

Overview

In the final, the Bluejays snapped Syracuse's 22-game winning streak, holding the Orange top offensive players, including Brad Kotz, in check. Tim Nelson was injured by his own teammate in the second quarter, and he did not play for the remainder of the game. Hopkins scored the first six goals of the contest.

Hopkins was led by goaltender Larry Quinn, attackman Brian Wood (three goals), and senior attackman Peter Scott (two goals and three assists). Hopkins compiled a perfect 14-0 mark and won its fifth NCAA title. Johns Hopkins were under the direction of first-year head coach Don Zimmerman. The Blue Jays returned to the NCAA Championship game for the eighth straight season. This would turn out to be the last undefeated season for Johns Hopkins until 2005.

This game is notable for several outstanding saves from goaltender Larry Quinn who was named the tournament outstanding player. Quinn made one of the most famous stops in NCAA lacrosse history, with Hopkins holding an 11–9 lead in the 4th quarter of the finals and Syracuse gaining momentum. On a fast break, Quinn dove across the goal to save a point blank shot by Tom Nelson. Inspired, Hopkins took control of the game from that point.

Peter Scott, considered one of the best lacrosse players to come out of the Pennsylvania school system, finished his career with four straight NCAA final appearances, made three All-American teams and is currently among the top Johns Hopkins Career Points leaders.[2][3][4]

Bracket

Quarterfinals
May 6
Semifinals
May 19
Championship
May 26
         
1Johns Hopkins10
8Delaware3
1Johns Hopkins14
5North Carolina9
5North Carolina11
4Virginia2
1Johns Hopkins (14–0)13
2Syracuse (15–1)10
3Penn7
6Army8
6Army9
2Syracuse11
2Syracuse8(i)
7Rutgers7
  • (i) one overtime

Box Scores

Finals

Team1234Total
Johns Hopkins (14–0)515213
Syracuse (15–1)025310
  • Johns Hopkins scoring – Brian Wood 3, Peter Scott 2, John Tucker 2, Steve Mutscheller 2, Craig Bubier, Tom Engelke, Del Dressel, Willy Odenthal
  • Syracuse scoring – Tom Nelson 3, Emmett Printup 3, Dave Desko 3, Todd Curry
  • Shots: Johns Hopkins 49, Syracuse 33
  • Saves: Nims Syracuse 17, Larry Quinn Johns Hopkins 13

Semifinals

Team1234Total
Johns Hopkins405514
North Carolina31419
  • Johns Hopkins scoring – Chris Schreiber 3, Willy Odenthal 2, Brian Wood 2, Del Dressel 2, Rich Glancy 2, Lee Davidson 2, John Tucker
  • North Carolina scoring – Gary Seivold 5, Steve Martel 2, Mac Ford, Terry Martinello
  • Shots: Johns Hopkins 55, North Carolina 39
  • Saves: Larry Quinn Johns Hopkins 22, Mealey North Carolina 17
Team1234Total
Syracuse342211
Army14319
  • Syracuse scoring – Tim Nelson 4, Tom Korrie 3, Brad Kotz, Todd Curry, Tom Nelson, Eric Teschke
  • Army scoring – Pete Short 3, Rich Sajkoski 2, P.J. O’Sullivan, Nich Bellucci, Tim Donovan, Eric Korvin
  • Shots: Syracuse 38, Army 28
  • Saves: Syracuse 18, Army 13

First round

Team1234Total
Johns Hopkins433010
Delaware01023
  • Johns Hopkins scoring – Willy Odenthal 2, Steve Mutscheller 2, John Tucker 2, John Krumenacker 2, Peter Scott, Tom Engelke
  • Delaware scoring – Pete Van Bemmel, Dennis Sepulveda, John Moeser
  • Shots: Johns Hopkins 50, Delaware 32
  • Saves: Delaware 21, Johns Hopkins 12
Team1234Total
North Carolina143311
Virginia00022
  • North Carolina scoring – Mac Ford 2, Steve Martel 2, Joey Seivold 2, Randy Cox, Terry Martinello, James Koester, Tim Welsh, Gary Seivold
  • Virginia scoring – Jeff Nicklas, Roddy Marino
  • Shots: North Carolina 54, Virginia 30
  • Saves: North Carolina 15, Virginia 21
Team1234Total
Army11338
Pennsylvania13217
  • Army scoring – Pete Short 2, Doug Shaver 2, Rob Hoynes, P.J. O’Sullivan, Chris Zupa, Mike Riccardi
  • Pennsylvania scoring – Leo Paytas 3, Bill Morrill, Michael Braver, Bill Schreiner, Ron Smolokoff
  • Shots: Pennsylvania 42, Army 21
  • Saves: Army 13, Pennsylvania 10
Team1234OT1Total
Syracuse223018
Rutgers112207
  • Syracuse scoring – Tom Korrie 2, Dave Desko 2, Tim Nelson, Todd Curry, Brad Kotz, Randy Lundblad
  • Rutgers scoring – Ed Trabulsy, Bill Naslonski, Brad Roos, Tim Donovan, John Crowther, Dave Disciorio, Gregg Freid
  • Shots: Rutgers 33, Syracuse 30
  • Saves: Syracuse 25, Rutgers 15

Outstanding players

  • Larry Quinn, Johns Hopkins (Named Tournament's Most Outstanding Player)

Leading scorers

Leading ScorersGPGAPts
Tim Nelson, Syracuse35611
Peter Scott, Johns Hopkins33710
Brian Wood, Johns Hopkins3549
Peter Short, Army2538
Del Dressel, Johns Hopkins3358
Willy Odenthal, Johns Hopkins3527
Brad Kotz, Syracuse3257
Gary Seivold, North Carolina2606
Tom Korrie, Syracuse3516

Notes

  • North Carolina’s 11-2 victory over Virginia is the lowest score in tournament history.

See also

References