From
Omaha.com...
The last time Creighton saw Tulsa, the Golden Hurricane were on their heels, on the verge of suffering a third straight shutout loss.
The Jays had shut Tulsa out for the first 85 minutes on that Oct. 11 night and looked to close out a 1-0 win.
But with 4:11 left, Tulsa got the equalizer on an Alejandro Chavez goal. Less than three minutes later, Matthew Puig added a goal of his own, and suddenly the Hurricane left their home field with an improbable 2-1 victory.
That win turned the fortunes for Tulsa’s season as the Hurricane have gone 4-0-3 since then.
Now the teams will square off again in the first round of the NCAA tournament Thursday at 7 p.m. at Morrison Stadium.
“They’re very athletic. Individually, they have very good players,” Creighton coach Elmar Bolowich said. “A very attack-minded team. They like to use their athleticism to get behind the defense, so we have to be anticipating that and be proactive.”
Tulsa coach Tom McIntosh said he liked how his team played the first time against the Jays, even if it didn’t score until the 86th minute.
“More than the result, we created a lot of chances in the game. We scored those two goals late in the game, but we created chances throughout the game,” McIntosh said. “I think that was the biggest improvement we needed at that point of the season.
“We’ve been creating chances ever since that game.”
During its eight-game unbeaten streak, Tulsa (10-4-5) is averaging 2.1 goals per game.
“I think we’re playing well,” said McIntosh, whose team won the American Athletic Conference tournament in a shootout over South Florida on Sunday. “We’re not conceding too many good chances. I think we’ve been playing pretty good defensively during the past eight games.”
Creighton (11-6-3) is coming off a 2-1 loss to Butler in the Big East final, a game in which Bolowich said the Jays “ran out of juice” playing a second road game in four days.
But the Jays have been better at producing offensive results in recent weeks. They have 10 goals in four November games.
“Overall, the team is together, united, which is important. The confidence is there,” said Creighton senior Ricardo Perez, who had an assist on Sunday’s goal. “Overall, I think the mentality is positive.”
There were a lot of scoring chances for both teams in the first Tulsa-Creighton meeting — the Hurricane took 18 shots, the Jays 15.
And as far as playing for the second time this fall, McIntosh said that isn’t a major factor. Tulsa and Creighton have played in each of the past five years, going 2-2-1.
“Elmar’s teams play a certain way, so I think we certainly have an understanding of how they want to play. And they have an understanding of how we play,” McIntosh said. “It just comes down to who executes the best on Thursday night.”
Both teams have gotten solid goalkeeping as Tulsa’s Jake McGuire has a 0.99 goals-against average, while Creighton’s Alex Kapp’s average is 0.77.
Riggs Lennon leads CU with 10 goals this season, while Ricky Lopez-Espin has seven of his nine goals in the last 11 games. Puig, a freshman, leads Tulsa with eight goals.
“I think their midfield is really, really good,” McIntosh said. “They caused us problems in the last game, so we have to find a way to neutralize their midfield.”