| Four lacrosse players named All-Americans
enior
midfielder Chris Fiore this week was named a first team All-American
by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association.
Fiore is the first UMass
player to be a first team All-America selection since Mark Millon
was picked in 1992 and 1993.
Fiore was joined by
senior midfielder Kevin Leveille on the second team, junior attack
Jeff Zywicki on the third team and sophomore defenseman Matt Garcia,
who earned honorable mention status.
"We are thrilled
to have a player named on each of the four teams," said coach
Greg Cannella. "It's obviously a great achievement for not
only the players, but the entire team. If it wasn't for the team's
success of the past year, this would not have been accomplished."
Fiore earned first-team
recognition after scoring 46 points (35 goals, 11 assists) on the
season. He finished his UMass career with 115 points (83 g, 32 a).
He tallied 92 points (69 g, 23 a) during his final two years in
Amherst. He also was named ECAC Offensive Player of the Year and
was a finalist for the Tewaaraton Award, given to the nation's top
player.
Leveille earned second-team
honors after scoring a career-high 51 points (34 g, 17 a). He is
one of nine players in UMass history to tally 40 points in a season
three times, and was selected as New England Player of the Year.
He finished his UMass career with 159 points, good for 11th all-time.
His 105 goals rank eighth on the all-time UMass chart. Leveille
posted the country's highest single-game point total when he scored
10 points (7 g, 3 a) in a win over Stony Brook. He was also a finalist
for the Tewaaraton Award.
"Chris and Kevin
both had tremendous years," said Cannella. "They were
counted on to lead our team. They were marked men throughout the
entire season, but they kept the team first. They picked their opportunities
selectively, and made the most of them. This is not only a tribute
to their efforts this year, but for the effort and time they have
put forth the last four years."
Zywicki was named to
the third team after recording one of the top single seasons in
UMass history. He led the Minutemen with 62 points, 41 goals and
21 assists. His totals are the most since 1993 when Mark Millon
scored 81 points on 58 goals and 23 assists. He was consistently
near the top of the NCAA in scoring, and will head into next year
with 92 points (58 g, 34 a). His 41 goals rank tied for 13th on
the single-season list.
Garcia was a main reason
why the Minuteman defense was ranked in the top 20 of NCAA scoring
defense, and near the top in NCAA scoring margin. Garcia stepped
into a starting role and scooped up 35 ground balls to rank fifth
on the team in that category. He picked up at least one ground ball
in all but two games, and grabbed a season-high five in the NCAA
tournament victory over Hofstra. He led the Minutemen with 12 penalties.
UMass was one of five
teams with at least three players named to the first three teams.
Johns Hopkins led the
way with seven, while NCAA champion Virginia and Maryland had six
each. |