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・ 1971 NASCAR Winston Cup Series
・ 1971 NASCAR Winston West Series
・ 1971 Nashville 420
・ 1971 National 500
・ 1971 National Challenge Cup
・ 1971 National Invitation Tournament
・ 1971 National League Championship Series
・ 1971 National Society of Film Critics Awards
・ 1971 Navy Midshipmen football team
・ 1971 NBA All-Star Game
・ 1971 NBA draft
・ 1971 NBA Finals
・ 1971 NBA Playoffs
・ 1971 NCAA College Division Men's Basketball Tournament
・ 1971 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
1971 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship
・ 1971 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans
・ 1971 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament
・ 1971 NCAA Men's Soccer Championship
・ 1971 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament
・ 1971 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship
・ 1971 NCAA University Division baseball rankings
・ 1971 NCAA University Division baseball season
・ 1971 NCAA University Division Baseball Tournament
・ 1971 NCAA University Division football rankings
・ 1971 NCAA University Division Men's Cross Country Championships
・ 1971 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team
・ 1971 Nebraska vs. Oklahoma football game
・ 1971 Nemzeti Bajnokság I (women's handball)
・ 1971 New England Patriots season


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1971 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship : ウィキペディア英語版
1971 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship

The 1971 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Tournament was the first Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship tournament. Prior to this the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) had voted for the national champion and, subsequently, awarded the Wingate Memorial Trophy for the College lacrosse title based on regular season records.
Eight NCAA Division I college men's lacrosse teams met after having played their way through a regular season. The tournament culminated with the finals, held at Hofstra University in front of 5,458 fans. For this tournament as well as the 1972 tournament, the Wingate Memorial Trophy was presented to the winner.
College lacrosse at that time was broken into four divisions, so the NCAA tournament games for that year were based on geographical fit rather than seeding. The Tournament teams were selected from 114 schools which sponsored lacrosse at that time. Each division sent one team, two other teams were picked from the northern, southern and western divisions, and then two teams were chosen at large, chosen by a selection committee of five coaches and athletic directors.
==Tournament overview==
The Cornell Big Red, who posted a 13–1 record during the season, were led by coach Richard M. Moran and star players Bob Rule, John Burnap, Bob Shaw, and Alan Rimmer, and defeated the 9 & 3 Maryland Terrapins 12–6 in the finals.
Cornell won 13 straight game en route to the title, losing only their opening game by one goal to Virginia. Goalie Bob Buhmann was credited with 22 saves as the Big Red shut off the potent Maryland attack.
Canadian-born Al Rimmer, the first Canadian born NCAA lacrosse recruit, scored six goals in the finals to lead Cornell. Rimmer, from Toronto, led Cornell with 43 goals and 31 assists for 74 points for the season. He ended his career as the all-time Cornell record-holder in career points with 80 goals and 82 assists for 162 points.
In 1970 in just his second year, Coach Moran’s team was the only squad in the nation to go undefeated with a record of 11-0, but controversy ensued when the USILA named Johns Hopkins, Navy and Virginia as the national champions, while Cornell was voted fifth in the country. The next season, after losing in the season opener to Virginia, 10-9, Cornell rattled off 13-straight victories.
In the semi-finals, Cornell edged Army, 17-16, with Cornell grabbing a 7-4 lead after one period. Army, led by Tom Cafaro who had seven goals and three assists in the game, battled back and by the third period it became a question of who would get the last goal. The lead changed hands twice and the score was tied four times in the final period, before Bob Shaw scored at 12:33 giving Cornell the victory.
This was Cornell's first lacrosse title since winning the USILA championship in 1907. Cornell was 1–4–1 against Maryland, up to this point, in a series that began with Cornell's 2–1 win in 1921. The teams played a 2–2 tie in 1922, and Maryland won by 11–1 in 1929, 14–2 in 1951, 17–10 in 1963 and 13–6 in 1965. Frank Davis' four goals against Army in the semi-finals ensured Cornell's place in the national championship.
Coach Richie Moran was voted the Morris Touchstone Award as the Division I Coach of the Year, while John Burnap won the Schmeisser Award as the nation’s outstanding defenseman and Bob Rule won the Ens. C.M. Kelly, Jr. Award as the nation’s top goaltender, despite the fact that a season-ending knee injury kept Rule from playing in the NCAA tournament.
Al Rimmer fired in six of Cornell's 12 goals, with Cornell never trailing in the game. Rimmer fired in a goal after only 59 seconds and though Maryland was able to tie the score at 2-2, the Terps posed no real threat after the first period. The goal that put Cornell ahead for good was produced by their third midfield. With 7:47 to go in the first period, Bob Wagner, a senior from Newton, Pa., scored off an assist by Craig Bollinger, a junior from Rochester, N.Y. Rimmer then took command and racked up three straight goals. Frank Davis, a junior from Sanborn, N.Y. and Bucky Gunts, a junior from Baltimore, Md. finished up Cornell's string of six goals.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Division I Men's Lacrosse History )〕〔Associated Press. ''Cornell Eyes NCAA Stick Title''. SYRACUSE POST-STANDARD. June 3, 1971. pg. 18〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=NCAA Men's Lacrosse Finals write-up, Lacrosse The First Time Around, July 15, 1971, p. 5 )

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