It was a weekend that went down to the wire for both Penn State and William and Mary's men's soccer teams.
After each team squeaked out overtime victories in the second round of the NCAA Tournament last week, the third-round matchup between No. 15 Penn State and No. 25 William and Mary boiled over 90 regulation minutes and into overtime yesterday at Jeffrey Field.
The buzzer signaling the end of regulation was bad news for William and Mary (15-8-1) since Penn State (16-7) has seemed to make a routine out of overtime victories. The Lions continued the trend by edging William and Mary 1-0 for their third overtime victory in four games. Just two days earlier, Penn State slipped by defending National Champion North Carolina (14-7-1) in double overtime on the road by the same score.
When asked what three overtime wins in four games says about the team, Penn State head coach Barry Gorman said, "It says that they're giving the coach kittens."
"They should do it [score goals] during regulation."
Though Gorman hasn't actually birthed a litter of kittens just yet, he has plenty to be proud of. It's been quite a turnaround for the Lions since their disheartening 1-0 home loss to Michigan State on Oct. 20. Since that loss, Penn State has won seven games in a row.
"You win in the playoffs and you gain momentum," Gorman said. "It builds on itself."
During the Lions' playoff run, sophomore forward Chad Severs has built on his team-leading 13 regular season goals, nabbing at least one goal in four of Penn State's five playoff games, including both of this weekend's scores.
After Severs tallied seven goals in eight games to start the season, opponents have been like a heavy blanket trying to put out a blazing fire. Though he has often seen double coverage, Severs has managed to muscle through the tight defense.
"Chad doesn't hang his head," Gorman said. "He keeps pegging away for that one chance."

