ACC’s Notre Dame and Syracuse Earn Top Seeds in NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship

College Sports (Miscellaneous)

ACC’s Notre Dame and Syracuse Earn Top Seeds in NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship

Downloadable ESPN Images: http://bit.ly/1GFu48P

ESPNU to Televise All First-Round Games

ESPN2, ESPNU and WatchESPN will provide exclusive coverage of the 2015 NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship Presented by Northwestern Mutual beginning with first-round games on Saturday, May 9, and concluding with the national title game on Monday, May 25. The top two seeds in the championship – No. 1 Notre Dame and No. 2 Syracuse, both from the Atlantic Coast Conference – take to the field for first-round action on ESPNU on Saturday, May 9, at 5 p.m. ET and Sunday, May 10, at 7:30 p.m., respectively.

The Lost Trophy, the story behind why the greatest college lacrosse team from Syracuse had its NCAA title vacated in 1990, will debut on Saturday, May 9, at 11a.m. on ESPNU.

ESPN’s top lacrosse commentating team will again be in position throughout the NCAA Championship, led by veteran play-by-play voice Eamon McAnaney, along with analyst Quint Kessenich and sideline reporter/analyst Paul Carcaterra. The trio will call the two quarterfinal games on Sunday, May 17, from Annapolis, Md., in addition to the national semifinals on Saturday, May 23, and the title game on Monday, May 25, from Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia. Calling the quarterfinal games from Denver will be Mike Corey, Matt Ward and Ryan Boyle.

Joining ESPN’s early-round coverage are analysts Carcaterra (All-American at Syracuse), Boyle (four-time Princeton All-American), Ward (Tewaaraton trophy winner and Virginia attackman), as well as Mark Dixon (Johns Hopkins midfielder), Ryan Flanagan (North Carolina defenseman) and Jamie Munro (Brown All-American). Calling game action will be McAnaney (Notre Dame defenseman), Corey, as well as Jason Benetti, Joe Beninati and Booker Corrigan.

Anish Shroff will host ESPN’s studio coverage throughout the championship. He will be joined by Kessenich at ESPNU studios in Charlotte, N.C., for first-round games, followed by Flanagan for the quarterfinals and semifinals. The studio duo of Shroff and Boyle will move to Philadelphia for full analysis of the title game on Monday.

The women’s championship weekend opens from PPL Park, also in Philadelphia, on Friday, May 22, with the national semifinals shown on ESPN3, followed by the title game on Sunday, May 24, airing on ESPNU and WatchESPN. Joe Beninati will have the call of the three games with analysts Courtney Connor (Maryland All-American) and Sheehan Stanwick Burch (Georgetown four-time All-American).

WatchESPN is accessible online at WatchESPN.com, on smartphones and tablets via the WatchESPN app, and streamed on televisions through Amazon Fire TV and Fire TV Stick, Apple TV, Chromecast, Roku, Xbox 360 or Xbox One to fans who receive their video subscription from an affiliated provider.

Join the NCAA lacrosse twitter conversation: #NCAALAX.

ESPN Network’s Coverage of the 2015 NCAA Division I Men’s Lacrosse Championship Presented by Northwestern Mutual (subject to change)

Date Time (ET) Game / Commentators Network(s)
Sat, May 9 Noon First Round: Albany at No. 8 seed Cornell
Eamon McAnaney, Paul Carcaterra
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  2:30 p.m. First Round: Yale at No. 6 seed Maryland
Mike Corey, Matt Ward
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  5 p.m. First Round: Winner of Towson at No. 1 seed Notre Dame
Jason Benetti, Ryan Boyle
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  7:30 p.m. First Round: Ohio State at No. 5 seed Duke
Joe Beninati, Ryan Flanagan
ESPNU / WatchESPN
Sun, May 10 1 p.m. First Round: Johns Hopkins at No. 7 seed Virginia
Mike Corey, Matt Ward
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  3 p.m. First Round: Brown at No. 4 seed Denver
Scott Corrigan, Jamie Munro
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  5:15 p.m. First Round: Colgate at No. 3 seed North Carolina
Joe Beninati, Mark Dixon
ESPNU / WatchESPN
  7:30 p.m. First Round: Winner of Marist at No. 2 Syracuse
Eamon McAnaney, Paul Carcaterra
ESPNU / WatchESPN
Sat, May 16 3 p.m. Quarterfinal (Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver)Mike Corey, Matt Ward, Ryan Boyle ESPNU / WatchESPN
  5:30 p.m. Quarterfinal (Sports Authority Field at Mile High, Denver)
Mike Corey, Matt Ward, Ryan Boyle
ESPNU / WatchESPN
Sun, May 17 Noon Quarterfinal (Navy-Marine Corps Stadium, Annapolis, Md.)
Eamon McAnaney, Quint Kessenich, Paul Carcaterra
ESPN2 / WatchESPN
  2:30 p.m. Quarterfinal (Navy-Marine Corps Stadium, Annapolis, Md.)
Eamon McAnaney, Quint Kessenich, Paul Carcaterra
ESPN2 / WatchESPN
Sat, May 23 1 p.m. Semifinal: Game #1 (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)
Eamon McAnaney, Quint Kessenich, Paul Carcaterra
ESPN2 / WatchESPN
  3:30 p.m. Semifinal: Game #2 (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)
Eamon McAnaney, Quint Kessenich, Paul Carcaterra
ESPN2 / WatchESPN
Mon, May 25 1 p.m. National Championship (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia)
Eamon McAnaney, Quint Kessenich, Paul Carcaterra
ESPN2 / WatchESPN
  National Championship Spider Cam (Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia) ESPNU / WatchESPN

 

ESPN’s Coverage of the 2015 NCAA Division I Women’s Lacrosse Championship Presented by Northwestern Mutual (Subject to change)

Date Time (ET) Game/Commentators Network
Fri, May 22 5 p.m. Semifinal: Game #1 (PPL Park, Philadelphia)
Joe Beninati, Courtney Connor, Sheehan Stanwick Burch
ESPN3
  7:30 p.m. Semifinal: Game #2 (PPL Park, Philadelphia)
Joe Beninati, Courtney Connor, Sheehan Stanwick Burch
ESPN3
Sun, May 24 8:30 p.m. National Championship (PPL Park, Philadelphia)
Joe Beninati, Courtney Connor, Sheehan Stanwick Burch
ESPNU / WatchESPN

 

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Contact: Rachel Margolis Siegal at 860-766-2798 or [email protected]

Rachel Margolis Siegal

A part of the Internal Communications team at ESPN, I began with the network in 2010 as part of the College Sports PR team. Always an avid sports fan and not an athlete – I grew up a huge fan of the Hartford Whalers, while also watching my brother compete at different levels. I became the manager of several high school sports teams and continued that hobby into college. While at Quinnipiac, I worked in the Sports Information Department, which led me to a summer internship at the New Haven Ravens, a AA baseball team, and an eventual job with the Athletic Communications Department at the University of Connecticut. After my five-year stint at Connecticut, I spent six years as Director of Communications at the BIG EAST Conference in Providence, R.I. before joining ESPN.
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