Wide: | yes |
Johns Hopkins–Virginia lacrosse rivalry | |
Team1logo: | JHU "H" logo.png |
Team2logo: | University of Virginia text logo.svg |
Firstmeeting: | 1904 Johns Hopkins 9, Virginia 0 |
Mostrecent: | May 19, 2024 #5 Virginia 11, #3 Johns Hopkins 102OT |
Total: | 98 |
Series: | Johns Hopkins leads, 62–35–1 |
Trophy Series: | Virginia leads, 13–8 |
Largestvictory: | Johns Hopkins, 15–0 (1931) |
Longeststreak: | Johns Hopkins, 10 (1904–1951, 1980–1986) |
Currentstreak: | Virginia, 1 (2024–Present) |
Trophy: | Doyle Smith Cup |
The Johns Hopkins–Virginia lacrosse rivalry is an intercollegiate lacrosse rivalry between the Johns Hopkins Blue Jays and Virginia Cavaliers. The teams compete for the Doyle Smith Cup, which was first awarded in 2006. Edward Doyle Smith Jr., the only inductee to the U.S. Lacrosse Hall of Fame to have never competed in the sport,[1] was a team manager and statistician at Johns Hopkins for five years before becoming UVA's first assistant sports information director, which he held for 31 seasons.[2] Smith is also credited with the standardization of game statistics for lacrosse at the national level, twice receiving the USILA Man of the Year Award.[3]
The rivalry features two of the three most dominant programs in lacrosse history, with the Jays and Cavaliers winning nine and seven national titles respectively since the creation of the NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship. The series has contained 16 NCAA postseason matchups, with Hopkins leading those matches 10–7.[4] An annual fixture from 1948 to 2019, Johns Hopkins leads the series 62–35–1 through 2024 thanks largely to its early dominance, but Virginia has held the upper hand, 23–14, since 1994.[5]
These rivals have met three times to decide national titles, with the Cavaliers defeating the Blue Jays for their first and third NCAA championships (in 1972 and in 2003[6]) in hotly contested matches, and Johns Hopkins narrowly defeating Virginia in 1980 (in two overtimes) for their third consecutive and fourth overall NCAA championship.
The teams first squared off in 1904, meeting twice during the season. At this time, lacrosse was not recognized as a varsity sport at Virginia.[7] A 22 year gap would follow before playing again during the second "official" year of lacrosse for the Cavs. These six early games all resulted in large Hopkins victories, as the Jays outscored UVA by a margin of 72–4. The series would resume in 1948 and become an annual game.[8] In 1952, the Cavaliers beat Hopkins for the first time, winning a narrow 13–12 game. Virginia would claim its first national championship that season, heralding the programs arrival at the top of the sport.[9] After the win in Baltimore, the teams met the following season in Charlottesville for the inaugural match at home for the Cavs against the Jays. Virginia would again triumph, but would not notch another win until 1963. Through the 1969 season, the series was firmly under Hopkins' control, as they held a 24–3–1 advantage against their southern rival.
The 1972 season was a crucial one in the history of the rivalry. Hopkins had taken the regular season matchup but the teams would meet again for the first time in the NCAA Division I Championship. This would be one of an NCAA-record 16 games played between the programs in the tournament. This game would take place with high stakes as the second-ever national title championship. Led by head coach Glenn Thiel, the Cavaliers knocked off favored Johns Hopkins by a 13–12 score before 7,000 spectators at Byrd Stadium.[10] Outshooting the Jays 44 to 33 over the course of the contest, Virginia led at halftime 7 to 5. After a strong third quarter by the Blue Jays, the Cavs used a five goal performance in the final 15 minutes to prevail. However, Jack Thomas had a chance to tie with 12 seconds remaining but JHU coach Bob Scott called time out with six seconds to go, costing the Jays' one-on-one opportunity. A key element of the bitterness felt by the defeated Hopkins players was that UVA should not have been selected for the tournament in the first place, as they had already lost thrice in the regular season, including to the Jays.[11] The following year, the teams would again meet for a postseason rematch, this time won by Johns Hopkins in the Final Four,[12] [13] by way of four goals from Rick Kowalchuk and three from Franz Wittelsberger. The regular season meeting was also significant as the first between the schools when ranked #1 and #2, incidentally, in the inaugural year of the polls.
Another important period began in 1979, as JHU and UVA played in four consecutive tournaments. The 1979 contest went to Hopkins, as they surged for a seven goal third quarter to down UVA in the Final Four. The next year they met in the national title for the second time. This contest would go the way of JHU this time. In a thrilling affair, Hopkins won from a Jeff Harris finish after two overtimes,[14] the only championship game to extend beyond a single overtime period in NCAA history. The 1981 and 1982 bouts would be similar affairs, as both Final Four games ended with four goal Hopkins victories.[15] Three years later, JHU would again end the Cavaliers' season in the Final Four, overcoming an early 5 to 0 deficit.[16] In 1988, UVA would end a six game postseason losing streak to Hopkins, upsetting them in the quarterfinals behind five Chase Monroe goals.[17] A mid-game confrontation between Monroe and teammate Quint Kessenich, a future ESPN and ABC sports analyst, was also noted.
The Blue Jays generally held the advantage during this stretch of the rivalry's history, only dropping two games between UVA's 1972 title win and a 1987 regular season victory by Virginia. However, the series was a must-see fixture, with both teams ranked in the Top 10 of the polls, and often the Top 5. The first game since the introduction of the weekly polls in 1972 to not feature Top 10 teams was in 2004, in which Virginia entered the game ranked #17. Indeed, each game of the rivalry's modern history has occurred between two ranked teams, as of 2020.
Legendary UVA head coach Dom Starsia arrived in Charlottesville by way of Brown in 1993.[18] His first season ended the way of many recent Cavaliers teams – a loss to Hopkins in the postseason, this time in the quarterfinals.[19] The next year, Starsia would earn his first against the Jays, one of 19 that he would notch against his Baltimore foe. His 19–13 record in the rivalry marks him as the only UVA coach to end his tenure with a winning percentage against JHU. In 1996, Starsia's Cavs, led by tournament Most Outstanding Player Michael Watson, downed Hopkins in the Final Four.[20] The 1999 UVA team would win its first national championship in 27 years[21] after beating the #2 Jays by a score of 16–10 in the Final Four.[22] The Cavaliers would also triumph in each of the next three games, pushing their winning steak to a then-record four. In 2003, the two would square off in their first title game matchup since 1980.[23] Playing at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, #2 Virginia would beat #1 Johns Hopkins in their own backyard by a 9–7 score. Goalie Tillman Johnson, UVA's all-time saves leader at 204, was named tournament MOP after saving 13 Hopkins shots.[24]
In addition to the annual regular season game, the programs would meet in two additional postseason games before the end of the decade. In the 2005 NCAA tournament, JHU would beat their rivals 9–8 in overtime to advance to the national title game,[25] which they would win over Duke to claim their first championship in 18 years. Four years later, the Cavaliers routed Hopkins 19 to 8 behind five Shamel Bratton goals for the worst postseason defeat in Blue Jays history.[26] Virginia advanced to their fourth Final Four in five years and secured the 300th career victory for Starsia. The first game played for the Doyle Smith Cup occurred in 2006,[3] won by a 12–6 score by #1 Virginia. Since the introduction of the trophy,[3] UVA leads the series 13 to 8. Beginning in this period, the increasing importance of recruiting rankings in collegiate lacrosse added a new dimension to the rivalry, due to the national brand presence for the historic powers.[27]
In 2011, Johns Hopkins snapped a six game skid to Virginia with a 12–11 victory. One new element of the rivalry began in 2014, when attackman Wells Stanwick, younger brother of former Cavaliers star Steele Stanwick, signed with the Blue Jays.[28] In both the 2014 and 2015 tournaments, unseeded Hopkins defeated the Cavaliers in Charlottesville in the first round.[29] The 2014 postseason contest enabled JHU head coach Dave Pietramala to tie former coach Bob Scott for the most career victories at the university.[30] In 2018, Hopkins overcame a seven goal halftime deficit to stun UVA at Klockner Stadium.[31] The most recent meeting in 2019 was the 94th of the rivalry's history. A five goal victory[32] for the Cavaliers stretched their recent advantage to 19 of the last 31 meetings.[33] The Blue Jays ended the 2010s with a 7–5 advantage, including five overtime games in eight meetings[31] with four straight in regular season games.[34] In 2020, the series was scheduled for interruption for the first time since it became an annual fixture in 1948. After Johns Hopkins joined the Big Ten Conference for men's lacrosse in 2015,[35] [36] it has had increasing difficulty to maintain all of its historical rivalries in conjunction with a slate of conference games; Hopkins also had to temporarily cancel its series with Navy for the 2018 and 2019 seasons for similar reasons.[37]
The following summarizes the accomplishments of the two programs.[38]
Team | Johns Hopkins Blue Jays | Virginia Cavaliers | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
NCAA National Titles | 9< | --As of the 2021 season--> | 7< | --As of the 2021 season--> | |
Pre-NCAA National Titles | 35 | 2 | |||
NCAA Final Four Appearances | 29< | --As of the 2021 season--> | 24< | --As of the 2021 season--> | |
NCAA Tournament Appearances | 47< | --As of the 2021 season--> | 40< | --As of the 2021 season--> | |
NCAA Tournament Record | 71–38< | --As of the 2021 season--> | 55–33< | --As of the 2021 season--> | |
NCAA Tournament Winning Percentage | < | --As of the 2021 season--> | < | --As of the 2021 season--> | |
Conference Tournament Titles | 2< | --As of the 2020 season--> | 7< | --As of the 2020 season--> | |
Conference Championships | 1< | --As of the 2020 season--> | 25< | --As of the 2020 season--> | |
Tewaarton Award Recipients | 1< | --As of the 2019 season--> | 3< | --As of the 2019 season--> | |
Lt. Raymond Enners Award Recipients | 11< | --As of the 2019 season--> | 4< | --As of the 2019 season--> | |
Consensus First Team All-Americans | 184< | --As of the 2019 season--> | 70< | --As of the 2019 season--> | |
All-time Program Record | 993–346–15< | --As of the 2020 season--> | 661–372–6< | --As of the 2020 season--> | |
All-time Winning Percentage | < | --As of the 2020 season--> | < | --As of the 2020 season--> |