 Night one of the Mustang Classic caps with a thrilling 15-14 win for Stevenson over Dickinson, a head coach, Paul Cantabene, a coach. I don't know, what a night, what a day, what a game, what a win, where do you even begin after something like that? Yeah, it was a great day of lacks here, five games and everything, but it's good to get a W here, be the top 10 team. It's been a little while since we've done that, but I thought maybe in the fourth quarter, we kind of gave them a few and kind of get the lead away. We made the big plays in the end to get Jack the goal and Cam made a big boy play to help us win it there in the end, and so we actually made the plays to win the game, but a great day for us, good win. We get to play a great RIT team tomorrow, but we like what we did today, and I think that we took a big step forward about winning some of these close games and making the plays to win those games. Coach, you referenced in the fourth quarter. This was eerily similar to the situation a year ago when you were up one against this team, and they came back and took the lead. What did you do differently? What did these guys do differently? How did you avoid suffering the same thing? Well, you got to remember a year ago, Jack Scalotti was a freshman in that situation, trying to make those plays. Now we drew up a play for him. He got it. He's a sophomore. He understands the situation better. Made the tough play. Ryan Coleman got it. Did a great job getting himself together more, and it was really a factor all around, but I think the guys are learning what our team is, we're building through the process, right? So, we had a tough loss the first one. We didn't play great. We played really hard against CNU, but we made some a lot of mistakes. We got better against Gettysburg. We got a little bit better against Lynchburg. Today, and then we're starting to make those plays, those tough plays, but there's a lot of things we've got to work at. But when you're trying to win, and the team has downed itself a little bit, now you're starting to come back and make those plays. So, now we got to stack it. We got one today. We got to try to stack one tomorrow. That's what we're going to try to do with that. Your goalie, Justin Scorris, you needed him to come up with a big one there and overtime, and he came up with a bunch throughout the course of the day. Stepping into the starting role this season, he's been really good all season long. How impressed have you been? He's good. He's been solid. He makes the save he should. And I think that's the big part of it, and he makes a few he shunned. And so that's all you can ask for out of a goalkeeper. And I think Justin's doing a great job stepping up, being a leader. He's not used to that as much in the past. And I think he's doing a good job stepping up and making those saves. And he's solid with it. And so that's all you need. I think we got a good enough defense in front of him to help him. And as long as he's solid, that's awesome. Can you go to clearing practice when you only have one day to turn around? Yeah. I think this is a confidence thing. Those guys are there. We got to make some plays to help. You know what I mean? Like Josh has long play. You got to catch the pass. Good teams make those plays, right? And we got to do a better job of that, making those little plays. And I think we just get a little tense and got a lot of new guys playing for us. So sometimes they get in those situations. And games are different. Tim tells me all the time, clearing is only one part of the game. It's a big part of the game, but it's only one part of the game. But I think we're getting better there. We did some great things at times, clearing the ball, made some really great passes. Unfortunately, we just made some unforced little silly errors. I think we got to get rid of them and it will be tight. Every team is going to turn it over in the clear, whether one way or another. We just have to do a better job of making the tougher plays in the middle of the field. Describe for me out of the timeout what Cam did there as the shot clock of his expiry. Well, we just had a little play. We were going to run there. We had a little slip pick there. We tried to get at the jack behind. We're going to set a pick inside for Cam, which we ran, but they covered it pretty well. And then we tried to bang it up top, the Coleman, against the short stick to go down the alley. They did a great job getting it, but then Cam, being the leader, first came back in four games there. He didn't get a lot of looks, but he made a great play. And that's what kind of seniors do. We need them to step up, to make a play. And he made a big one and a tough play. And that's what he's all about, toughness and doing things the right way. And if you do things the right way daily in and out, you're going to get rewarded for it. And he made the tough play for us to win. But that's what you need an upperclassmen to do. That's why you have them. And that's good teams do that. And the upperclassmen lead them. And he led us today, for sure. Just some final thoughts on what this day, I mean, you got to do it again in another five games tomorrow. But a day like this, atmosphere, everybody was fired up the night, great crowd participation. What this means to the program? What this means to the sport? Well, I just think it's a great event that we're able to build up. We started, I think it was 10 years ago, with two teams. Then we went to four teams. Then we went to six teams. Then we went to eight teams. Then we went to 10 teams. And I really got to give credit to the coaches. The coaches that make this happen, are the ones that bring their teams here and bring all their fans here to do this. And it's been awesome. So today was a great thing. And we got all the media here. Can't thank the inside lacrosse guys enough for everything they do to support Division III Lacrosse. And that's awesome. And so it's just really one of the best events in lacrosse. We had a guy call us from Dickinson a minute earlier. And he's like, when's the games? We come to an annual trip to Stevenson to watch the Mustang Classic. Who would have thought, when we started that, hey, you've got people making annual trips for this to hang out with their buddies to do that. So it's just been one of the main streams of events in lacrosse nowadays. And it's awesome. And the coaches that come here make it because they're all invested. And they don't have to do that. Playing these games back-to-back are extremely strenuous on your teams. They beat you up. You've got your players going day in and day out. So it's so hard on them. And it cooters to them. But I think the players love it. You're watching a game before then. Then the game's over. And you play your game. And you're watching another game, two great teams battle for it. And that's what it's all about. Guys, these D1 guys are like, oh, we take a week to play a game. We got to get ready. And oh, my guys got to get exactly 10 and 1 1⁄2 hours of sleep. And we've got to eat at four hours beforehand. And these guys here are like, let's play lacs. Let's go. Let's play some great games. Let's get after it. Let's have a lot of fun. Let's play lacs instead of coaching the hell out of these kids. Let them play. Let them be fun. Let them get after it. And that's what they want. They want to play in front of great crowds. They want to see each other play, see all their teams play. That's what they want. And this is why this event is so great, because I think all the coaches that come to this understand that. And they want to be a part of this. That's what's great about it. Don't let them fool you. He was a D1 guy once upon a time, too. Hey, coach. It was for a long time. But again, they just overcoached the guys. Let them play. Let them play. Hey, coach, congratulations on a massive win. We'll see you back here tomorrow night. Thanks a lot.