CARY, NORTH CAROLINA – Virginia and Akron advanced to the final of the NCAA Men’s College Cup, as the Cavaliers scored a golden goal early in overtime and the Zips won on penalty kicks after 110 minutes of scoreless play.
The final will pit the Cavaliers, with coach George Gelnovatch trying to win his first national title since taking over the program from Bruce Arena in 1996, against Caleb Porter’s Zips, who technically lose their perfect season after a scoreless draw, but remain undefeated and on the precipice of a dream season.
Virginia’s Brian Ownby ran down a perfect long ball from Jonathan Villanueva and scored 2:44 into overtime to lift George Gelnovatch’s Cavaliers past Wake Forest 2-1 and into the College Cup final.
The Cavs had surrendered a goal late in regulation, but struck quickly in the extra period to advance. Ownby sat out last week and only entered the match late in regulation time due to a sports hernia injury for which he will undergo an operation next Friday. Wake Forest had looked the brighter of the two teams for a good part of the match, but Virginia defended well and benefited on a few occasions from some poor finishing by the Demon Deacons.
The Cavaliers scored at 55 minutes on a rebound goal from Tony Tchani after good work by Villanueva, but Wake equalized in the 70th minute on a good individual effort by Corben Bone.
Villanueva admitted that his play on the winning goal was not necessarily carefully thought out.
“I basically kicked it as hard as I can, as far as I can,” he said. “I knew that he’s faster than anybody else that I know so I figured he’d catch up to it wherever it went.”
The attacking midfielder who played club soccer at Dallas Texans said the team needed to regroup after surrendering it’s first goal in more than 1,100 minutes.
Gelnovatch admitted Wake Forest was the brighter of the two teams at the start of the match, but credited his squad with having a winning attitude throughout.
“The first two times we played them it did not look like that. I think they put us on our heels. I thought they were very sharp to start the game, as share as I have seen them, but I think as the half went on, we found ourselves,” Gelnovatch said. “I thought our demeanor and our resolve to start the overtime right from the start, right from the kickoff, I thought that we believed we were going to win that game. Whether it was overtime, whether it was PKs, it didn’t matter. That’s how we’ve been all season.”
While Wake Forest looked the brighter of the teams as the 2nd half began, Virginia drew first blood. Jonathan Villanueva produced an excellent individual effort, beat two defenders in the area before firing a hard shot on goal. Wake goalkeeper Akira Fitzgerald could only parry the effort and Tony Tchani was on hand to knock home the rebound and put the Cavs up 1-0 in the 55th minute.
While Wake immediately began looking for the equalizer, it was evident that knocking high balls into the UVA box was not likely to be its most effective option. Jay Vidovich’s team prides itself on being able to play on the ground and so the situation in the game proved a great test of the Demon Deacons’ resolve to be patient and play a sophisticated attacking style.
At the 67 minute mark, Wake's Andy Lubahn and Zach Schilawski produced some skillful interplay at the top of the area, before the latter set up Austin da Luz. The ensuing chipped shot clipped the bar on the way over and Virginia dodged the bullet.
After the TV timeout midway through the half, Wake made the first substitution of the match for either team, putting Chris Estridge in for Lubahn. Estridge immediately won a corner and on the ensuing set piece, Corben Bone took a pass from da Luz and beat two players along the end line before hitting a shot from the sharpest of angles that hit Restrepo but went into the back of the net to tie the match.
The goal ended the Virginia shutout streak at 1,176 minutes and 51 seconds.
Virginia’s Villanueva earned a free kick 20 yards out that he took himself, but Fitzgerald was on hand to make the save. With 2 minutes remaining, Villanueva slipped a good pass to late sub Brian Ownby, but Fitzgerald rushed out to smother the sophomore’s shot inside the area. On the other end, Schilawski curled a drive that went just wide and the match went into overtime.
Lightning then struck in the opening minutes of OT as Villanueva played a ball from deep in the Virginia end. Ownby outraced two Wake defenders to the ball and finished perfectly from inside the area to put Virginia in the final.
Virginia Lineup
GK: Diego Restrepo
D: Greg Monaco, Mike Volk, Hunter Jumper, Shawn Barry
M: Neil Barlow, Ross LaBauex, Jonathan Villanueva, Tony Tchani, Ari Dimas
F: Will Bates
Subs: Jordan Evans, Brian Ownby
Wake Forest Lineup
GK: Akira Fitzgerald
D: Anthony Arena, Justin Lichtfuss, Kyle Adams, Ike Opara
M: Austin da Luz, Corben Bone, Sam Redmond, Luke Norman
F: Andy Lubahn, Zack Schilawski
Subs: Chris Estridge
Akron 0, North Carolina 0 (Akron advances on penalties, 5-4)
Caleb Porter’s Zips outlasted the Tar Heels in a slugfest, short on entertainment but long on grit. The drama was mostly saved for the end when Akron's Ben Speas cleared a header off the line in the 2nd overtime, and the Zips converted all five of their spot kicks to advance to the final.
Porter agreed that the match had a slower tempo than he expected and admitted his team was not as effective offensively as he would have hoped, but credited team defense and overall heart and attitude with keeping the Zips’ season alive.
“The tempo was a little slower than I thought it would be. I’m not sure why that was. We had a lot of possession. We got on the ball and they dropped in and we had a tough time breaking it down,” Porter said. “They had a couple of chances that were scary, but other than that it was pretty much us on the ball trying to score a goal and we didn’t.
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POSITION
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| 2 | Marley Canales | MF |
| 3 | Mallory Pugh | F |
| 4 | Nicole Whitley | MF |
| 5 | Zoe Redei | |
| 6 | Samantha Bruder | F |
| 7 | Aerial Chavarin | F |
| 8 | Mia Gyau | MF |
| 9 | Ella Stevens | |
| 10 | Jordan Harr | MF |