Cornell men's lacrosse wins national title behind CJ Kirst's huge game - Newsday
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. – After CJ Kirst, the all-time leading goal scorer in NCAA history, was held without a goal for Cornell in the semifinal round of the Division I men’s lacrosse tournament this weekend, he was asked how he felt about it.
“I feel great!” he exclaimed.
Imagine his exhilaration, then, after scoring six in Monday’s 13-10 championship game win over Maryland at Gillette Stadium, all in the last 31:49 of the game, to give the Big Red their first title in 48 years.
After etching his name alongside the greats of program history such as Eamon McEneaney and Mike French. After tying the Division I single-season goal scoring record with 82 this year, the last of them an open-netter with 50 seconds remaining which he tossed into the goal as casually as he did with the cage in his backyard growing up in New Jersey.
“It was just a big day for Big Red,” the graduating senior said with a smile.
And its biggest star rose to the occasion.
It took a little coaxing. During the break between the first and second quarters, with Kirst still scoreless, Cornell coach Connor Buczek pulled him aside and told him to “play your game” and “have some confidence.” In other words, go win the darn game. And so he did.
“With those words of wisdom I was able to do it,” Kirst said.
Plenty of players score plenty of goals in these tournaments, but few have resounded like the one that got Kirst off the schneid. It came with 1:49 remaining in the second quarter on an overhand bounce shot that was fired with the ferocity of so many Gronk spikes that this building has witnessed in the past.
The Cornell stands, the bench, and a half century of students and alumni all erupted with palpable relief.

Cornell head coach Connor Buczek is covered in ice water after Cornell defeated Maryland 13-10 in the NCAA Division I men's lacrosse championship game at Gillette Stadium on Monday. Credit: Jon Ratner
“We knew if 15 got going we were going home with hardware and by God if he didn’t find it and find it in a big way,” Buczek said.
Kirst scored the next three goals for Cornell throughout the third quarter, all unassisted. He assisted on one to Ryan Goldstein to start the fourth, then added two more in the final 6:42 to ice the game. His fifth came after Maryland had scored two in a row to close to 10-9 and ghosts of Cornell heartbreaks past started to swirl around the field. Kirst exorcised those.
“He’s our leader,” long-stick middie Brendan Staub (Garden City) said of Kirst. “He’s one of the best of all time. So when he settles into a game it makes everyone else feel a lot more comfortable and gives us the confidence we need.”
Added senior midfielder Hugh Kelleher (MacArthur): “The momentum starts turning every time he gets the ball. It was great to see him today.”
Cornell (18-1) set a school record for wins and was, in retrospect, an overtime loss to Penn State back in March away from posting a perfect season.
“They’ve been the best team all year and they showed it today,” said Maryland coach (and Cornell grad) John Tillman. “Hats off to Cornell. They are very worthy champions.”
Cornell was never able to truly pull away from Maryland (14-4), but they never trailed in the game, either.
While Kirst awoke in time to carry Cornell to Championsville, there were others who contributed. Brian Luzzi (Bethpage) scored the opening goal for the Big Red on a lefty rip. Staub corralled several key ground balls in the fourth quarter as Maryland got sloppy in its clears. Freshman Michael Melkonian (South Side) won two very important faceoffs in the fourth quarter.
“Nerves of steel,” Buczek said of Melkonian who, at 5-11 and 175 pounds, looks as if he is half the size of regular faceoff specialist Jack Cascadden (6-3, 220, from Garden City). “So much poise. He got that thing to open space . . . His ability to come in and spell Jack and win some big ones was massive to our success today.”
Those are the “hard hat” plays Cornell preaches, the ones that honor George Boiardi, the former midfielder who was hit in the chest with a shot ball and died on the field in 2004. It was not lost on anyone that this championship came 21 years after his death, 21 having being Boiardi’s since-retired jersey number.
And before Kirst got going it was Ryan Goldstein, the 5-9 attacker, who was stoking the Cornell scoring. It took two generations of Goldsteins to bring the trophy back to Ithaca; Ryan’s father, Tim, was a star for Cornell out of Ward Melville in the 1987 and 1988 championship games that the Big Red lost. His mother, Tina, also played lacrosse at Cornell and both are in the school’s athletic hall of fame.
“I’ve been going to Final Fours for as long as I can remember,” Ryan Goldstein said. “My dad is definitely fired up for this one. It’s a really special moment.”
Tillman said it was a “pick your poison” choice on how to defend Kirst and Goldstein. “One guy is the Player of the Year,” he said, “and the other guy down the road could be.”
Few programs have the kind of history Cornell does to draw from and honor and live up to, but Monday was as much about the present as the past. It was about a group of players who came together for a common goal, a graduating class of seniors who lost in the title game to Maryland as freshmen and ended their careers by beating that same team.
“I didn’t know how it would feel, but it feels great,” said Kelleher, one of those who played his final college lacrosse game. “I’m just enjoying all of these moments. Enjoying this a lot.”
There was, though, hat tips to the past, too. Kirst said he spent time this week thinking about McEneaney, the Sewanhaka graduate, star of that 1977 team that won Cornell’s most recent title before this one, and a hero who died in the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. Buczek made several references to Richie Moran, an Elmont product, who coached Cornell to its first three titles in the 1970s.
“Cornell is a special place and Coach Moran built an incredible program,” said Buczek, who played for the school in the 2010s. “We stand on the shoulders of giants. Everything he built we are fortunate enough to be the stewards of.”
Moran, who died in 2022, had a catchphrase he echoed so often it became the title to his autobiography.
“It’s great to be here,” he would say.
After 48 years of waiting the new saying for Cornell should be: It’s great to be back.
Tom Rock began covering sports for Newsday in 1996 and became its NFL columnist in 2022. He previously was Newsday's Giants beat writer beginning in 2008.