Scores and Schedule: March 22, 2014

Michigan men take the field, and much more high school action on the boys side.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights 18, Lawrence Tech 13

Collegiate Club Men

Aquinas 17, Wheaton 5
Siena Heights 9, Lindenwood-Belleville 10

Collegiate Club Women

Central Michigan 10, Saginaw Valley 7
Eastern Michigan 1, Michigan-Flint 0 (forfeit)

High School Boys

Belleville 4, Swartz Creek 2
Forest Hills Northern 19, Indianapolis (Ind.) Brebeuf Jesuit 2
Forest Hills Central 11, Warren De La Salle 6
Howell 17, Dexter 2
L’Anse Creuse 18, Utica 0
Rochester Adams 11, Grosse Pointe North 7
Rockford 15, Brother Rice Orange 6
Romeo 11, Utica Stevenson 1
Davison @ Grand Blanc

High School Girls

Grand Rapids Catholic Central 21, Lansing Waverly 2
Dexter 11, East Lansing 10
Farmington @ Livonia Ladywood
Waterford United @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep
Northville @ Walled Lake United

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan v. St. Joseph’s

Division-2 Women

Aquinas v. Lourdes
Davenport v. Urbana

Division-3 Men

Olivet v. Beloit
Adrian @ Brockport
Albion @ Wooster
Calvin @ Methodist

Division-3 Women

Alma v. Defiance
Adrian @ Brockport
Albion @ Loras
Calvin @ Georgetown (Ky.) – scrimmage
Olivet @ Mount Union

Collegiate Club Men

Michigan-Dearborn v. Wheaton
Davenport v. Liberty
Michigan State v. Western Michigan
Siena Heights @ Missouri Baptist
Lawrence Tech @ Northwood

High School Boys

Hartland @ Ann Arbor Skyline
Orchard Lake St. Mary’s @ Ann Arbor Gabriel Richard
Plymouth @ Birmingham
Cadillac @ Comstock Park
Mattawan @ DeWitt
East Grand Rapids v. Brother Rice Orange
South Lyon @ Forest Hills Northern
Forest Hills Central v. Indianapolis (Ind.) Brebeuf Jesuit
Caledonia @ Grand Ledge
Detroit Country Day @ Grosse Pointe South
Muskegon Reeths-Puffer @ Grand Haven
Cadillac v. Grandville
Spring Lake v. Grandville
Rockford @ Holland Christian
Pontiac Notre Dame Prep @ Lake Orion
Ann Arbor Huron @ Oxford
Petoskey @ Battle Creek Pennfield
Zeeland @ Portage Northern
Haslett-Williamston v. Portage Central
Midland @ Rochester Adams
Bloomfield Hills @ Salem
Okemos @ Troy
Holt @ Utica Eisenhower
Warren Cousino @ West Bloomfield
Saginaw Heritage @ Waterford

High School Girls

Oxford @ Grosse Pointe South
Ann Arbor Gabriel Richard @ Plymouth

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments. Also use the comments for discussion of today’s action.

Posted in division 1, division 2, division 3, high school, mcla, wcla | Tagged | Comments Off on Scores and Schedule: March 22, 2014

Scores and Schedule: March 21, 2014

Davenport takes a cross-town win over Aquinas and much more yesterday.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Women

Michigan 12, Winthrop 14

Division-2 Women

Davenport 23, Aquinas 9

Division-3 Women

Olivet 2, Otterbein 16

High School Boys

Utica Eisenhower 11, Pontiac Notre Dame Prep 4
Henry Ford II 8, Utica Stevenson 6
Battle Creek Harper Creek 11, Vicksburg 4
Caledonia @ Comstock Park
Forest Hills Eastern @ DeWitt
Portage Northern @ Grand Haven
Anchor Bay Fairview @ Warren Cousino

High School Girls

Lansing Waverly @ East Grand Rapids
Holt @ Grand Rapids Christian
DeWitt @ Portage Northern
Grandville @ Holland West Ottawa

Today’s Schedule

Division-2 Women

Lawrence Tech @ Siena Heights

Collegiate Club Women

Saginaw Valley @ Central Michigan
Michigan-Flint @ Eastern Michigan

Collegiate Club Men

Aquinas v. Wheaton
Siena Heights @ Lindenwood-Belleville

High School Boys

Swartz Creek @ Belleville
South Lyon @ East Grand Rapids
Dearborn Divine Child @ Farmington North-Harrison
Forest Hills Northern v. Indianapolis Brebeuf Jesuit
Warren De La Salle @ Forest Hills Central
Davison @ Grand Blanc
Dexter @ Howell
Utica @ L’Anse Creuse
Grosse Pointe North @ Rochester Adams
Brother Rice Orange @ Rockford
Romeo @ Utica Stevenson

High School Girls

Lansing Waverly @ Grand Rapids Catholic Central
East Lansing @ Dexter
Farmington @ Livonia Ladywood
Waterford United @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep
Northville @ Walled Lake United

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments. Also use the comments for discussion of today’s action.

Posted in division 1, division 2, division 3, high school, mcla, wcla | Tagged | 5 Comments

Michigan 5, Maryland 13

After an unintended delay in getting this post up, let’s talk Michigan’s chance against the No. 1 team in the country.

Tempo Free

From the official box score, a look at the tempo-free stats:

Maryland 2014
Maryland Michigan
Faceoff Wins 11 Faceoff Wins 9
Clearing 15-17 Clearing 16-20
Possessions 32 Possessions 31
Goals 13 Goals 5
Offensive Efficiency .406 Offensive Efficiency .161

Against the best possession team in the country, Michigan managed to stay just about dead even. Maryland had a slight edge on faceoffs and rode a bit better, but Michigan had a couple more clearing opportunities.

Where Maryland won the game (duh) was on both ends of the field. Shocker of the century: Michigan doesn’t yet have the horses to hang with one of the best offenses and the best defense in the country. Shrug.

Notes

The flow of this game was interesting to me. Michigan actually managed to stay within 2-1 at the end of the first quarter, and though there was never a real threat after that point that they’d be winning the game, it didn’t feel like they were getting blown out until an 8-4 Maryland advantage stretched a few goals and eventually reached 13-4 before Michigan got the game’s final goal. Given that the scoring margin was about what I expected, but the way that margin came about was not (I though UMd would blow the doors off early, than give plenty of time to their depth players), it’s an overall positive result.

Starting somewhere that I usually don’t in the notes with Maryland’s ride. I was expecting some super-aggressive schemes out of the Terps, and was interested to see that they really don’t operate that way. Of course they’re not vanilla, to say the least, but it’s more of an effort and attitude thing than any fancy tactic. They know they have better athletes than the opposition, and they believe there’s no reason not to exploit that advantage. Given Michigan’s history (in the club days and even from time-to-time in the first three years of the varsity program) with heavy rides, you have to imagine that’s the endgame for this program as well.

Some of Michigan’s failed clears were simple execution errors as well – a midfielder had his stick checked from behind and the ball rolled out of bounds, a backup defenseman thrust into duty missed his pass to an open midfielder a couple times – so even against the best ride they’ll see, Michigan didn’t perform to poorly. They actually moved Maryland’s numbers slightly down by hitting 80% clearing on the day.

The other aspects of possession (Michigan rode heavy a few times late when the game was already out of hand, but it didn’t have a huge effect) lay mostly with faceoffs. I’m a couple more up-and-down performances from labeling this unit “mercurial.” Brad Lott can win most clamps – and often comes away with the ball cleanly – but was having trouble against Maryland’s aggressive wing players moving the ball before the Terps could take it away. With the great sticks Maryland has though, Lott’s single turnover is the only downside from the performance.

On offense, Michigan came out firing early, launching shots – accurate or not – at the goal. That was the right move, but unfortunately even their good shots were saved by goalie Niko Amato, who not only is really good, but played out of his mind (unless Michigan’s shooters are just that much worse than most he faces – which I don’t believe to be the case). Once Maryland was able to settle down and control possession, U-M chances in the box were few and far between, and the team struggled to get into the same rhythm through the second and third quarters.

As for personnel, Ian King continues to establish himself as a threat on attack, but against Maryland’s stout defense, he was the only one at that position group making a huge difference. Midfielder Mikie Schlosser (who, like King, had two goals and no assists) showed that he’s a star in the making. He had a couple dodges – one simply a straight sprint in transition – that showed he could have suited up for either team. Michigan’s talent is arriving, and by the time these guys get some experience, the offense will come.

Defensively, Michigan actually did a much better job than you might expect against a potent offense. Even with starting defenseman Mack Gembis out with injury, they took away more of the passing and shooting angles than they have in a while, and they weren’t getting beat as often as you’d expect in one-on-one situations. The rotation on defense also seemed much smoother than usual. Matt Rambo did end up with four goals for the Terps, but they all came with the game out of reach. Just about nobody expected that (or that Mike Chanenchuk would also be held to four points, on two goals and two assists, almost all after the game was out of reach) coming in, so chalk it up a win.

Robbie Zonino had a good day. He was facing probably the best shooters he’ll see all year – and the intimidation factor of that allowed him to get the lacrosse version of a five-hole Panenka from Jay Carlson at one point – and he stood up reasonably well.

Elsewhere

Michigan recap. Maryland recapPhoto gallery. The Diamondback game recapTestudo Times game recap.

Up Next

Saturday afternoon, Michigan welcomes St. Joseph’s – its lone victim from last season – to Michigan Stadium. While the Hawks are an improved squad over last year, the fact that Michigan has several players who have beaten them before suiting up should at least instill some confidence.

The TFL numbers give Michigan a 42% chance of winning, even with the home-field advantage, so playing up to competition (a la Cornell, and to a certain extent, this Maryland game) rather than down to it (Furman, duh) will allow them to have a chance for win No. 5.

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Scores and Schedule: March 20, 2014

First high school games are in the books. We on.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-3 Men

Adrian 8, Oberlin 5

Division-3 Women

Hope 12, Puget Sound 15

Collegiate Club Women

Michigan State 11, Central Michigan 9
Michigan 17, Oakland 6

High School Boys

Detroit Country Day 19, Ann Arbor Greenhills 0
Holland Christian 16, Zeeland 5
Hartland 14, Lake Orion 8
Bloomfield Hills @ Midland

High School Girls

Portage Northern @ Caledonia
Ann Arbor Gabriel Richard @ Detroit Country Day
Tecumseh @ Dexter
Canton @ Farmington
Sacred Heart Academy @ Ann Arbor Skyline
Swartz Creek @ Lansing Waverly

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Women

Michigan v. Winthrop

Division-2 Women

Aquinas @ Davenport

Division-3 Women

Olivet v. Otterbein

High School Boys

Clarkston @ Brother Rice Orange
Caledonia @ Comstock Park
Forest Hills Eastern @ DeWitt
Rochester Hills Stoney Creek @ Grosse Pointe North
Portage Northern @ Grand Haven
Hudsonville @ Holland West Ottawa
Utica Eisenhower @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep
Utica Stevenson @ Henry Ford II
Battle Creek Harper Creek @ Vicksburg
Anchor Bay Fairview @ Warren Cousino

High School Girls

Bloomfield Hills Marian @ Ann Arbor Pioneer
Lansing Waverly @ East Grand Rapids
Holt @ Grand Rapids Christian
DeWitt @ Portage Northern
Grandville @ Holland West Ottawa

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments. Also use the comments for discussion of today’s action.

Posted in division 1, division 2, division 3, high school, wcla | Tagged | Comments Off on Scores and Schedule: March 20, 2014

Scores and Schedule: March 19, 2014

Can it be true? A high school game on the docket? Spring is coming…

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Men

Michigan 5, Maryland 13

Division-2 Women

Lawrence Tech 23, Oklahoma Baptist 8
Aquinas 20, Olivet 6
Siena Heights 18, Lourdes 8

Division-3 Men

Hope 21, Centenary (La.) 3

Division-3 Women

Aquinas 20, Olivet 6
Hope 9, George Fox 13
Adrian 18, Wittenberg 23

High School Boys

Davison @ Oxford – postponed

Today’s Schedule

Division-2 Women

Aquinas @ Siena Heights

Division-3 Men

Adrian v. Oberlin

Division-3 Women

Hope @ Puget Sound

Collegiate Club Women

Central Michigan @ Michigan State
Michigan @ Oakland

High School Boys

Ann Arbor Greenhills @ Detroit Country Day
Zeeland @ Holland Christian
St. Clair United @ L’anse Creuse
Hartland @ Lake Orion
Bloomfield Hills @ Midland
Salem @ Walled Lake Northern

High School Girls

Portage Northern @ Caledonia
Ann Arbor Gabriel Richard @ Detroit Country Day
Tecumseh @ Dexter
Canton @ Farmington
Sacred Heart Academy @ Ann Arbor Skyline
Swartz Creek @ Lansing Waverly

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments. Also use the comments for discussion of today’s action.

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The Next Level: March 18, 2014

Our weekly look at Michigan natives’ performances in the world of Division-1 lacrosse…

Air Force 15, Jacksonville 12

  • Senior attack Tommy McKee (Holt) – Started, scored two Goals on seven Shots, added an Assist, and picked up two ground balls. Also committed two turnovers and one penalty for 0:30.

Bellarmine 10, Michigan 11 (OT)

  • Freshman attack/midfield Graham Macko (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.

Boston University 12, Lafayette 7

  • Freshman midfielder Greg Marzec (Brother Rice) – Took one Shot.

Canisius 10, Hobart 11
Canisius 5, Monmouth 4

  • Freshman midfielder Steve Wizniuk (Warren De La Salle) – Did not see game action.

Delaware 9, Hofstra 11

  • Junior midfielder Bennett Packer (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.

Detroit 10, Marquette 15

  • Junior attack Brandon Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep) – Started, recorded an Assist, and took two Shots.
  • Freshman attack Kyle Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Mike Birney (Detroit Catholic Central) – Started, scored four Goals on 12 Shots (seven on goal), added an Assist, and picked up two ground balls. Also comitted two turnovers.
  • Junior defenseman Matt Burnett (Clarkston) – Did not see game action.
  • Redshirt senior midfielder Tyler Corcoran (South Lyon) – Went 2/7 on faceoffs, picking up one ground ball.
  • Sophomore LSM Nick Demattia (Clarkston) – Caused one turnover.
  • Junior midfielder Scott Drummond (Birmingham Seaholm) – Started, scored a Goal on two Shots (one on goal), and picked up four ground balls. Also committed two turnovers.
  • Redshirt freshman goalie Connor Flynn (Rockford) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior midfielder Nick Garippa (Notre Dame Prep) – Went 0/1 on faceoffs.
  • Junior defenseman Joe Gifford (Notre Dame Prep) – Started, but only made the scoresheet by committing one penalty for 1:00.
  • Freshman attack Alec Gilhooly (Detroit Catholic Central) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman midfielder Ben Gjokaj (Walled Lake Central) – Went 0/1 on faceoffs.
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Brad Harris (Saline) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Sophomore midfielder Andy Hebden (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder JD Hess (Birmingham Seaholm) – Caused two turnovers and picked up one ground ball.
  • Senior midfielder Joe MacLean (Detroit Country Day) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Freshman defenseman Bryan Matney (Ann Arbor Pioneer) – Did not see game action.
  • Sophomore attack Nick Melucci (Northville) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Senior LSM Tim Robertson (Notre Same Prep) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Senior midfielder Drew Schupbach (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Thomas Sible (Forest Hills Central) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Sophomore midfielder Mike Spuller (Dexter) – Played, but only made the scoresheet by committing one turnover and one penalty for 1:00.
  • Senior attack Tyler Staruch (Brighton) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman attack Adam Susalla (Birmingham Seaholm) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior D/LSM Mike Wenderski (UD-Jesuit) – Did not see game action.
  • Sophomore defenseman Jordan Yono (Detroit Catholic Central) – Started, went 0/1 on faceoffs, and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnover.

Georgetown 16, Furman 9

  • Senior midfielder Grant Fisher (Brother Rice) – Recorded one Assist, took one Shot, and picked up one ground ball.

Georgetown 7, St. John’s 15

  • Senior midfielder Grant Fisher (Brother Rice) – Took two shots. Also committed two turnovers.

Hartford 6, Quinnipiac 3
Hartford 12, Sacred Heart 10

  • Freshman defenseman Bennett Dipzinski (Forest Hills Northern) – Did not see game action.

Marquette 15, Detroit 10

  • Redshirt sophomore midfielder K.C. Kennedy (Brother Rice) – Went 1/4 on faceoffs.
  • Sophomore attack Henry Nelson (Brother Rice) – Took one Shot on goal and committed one turnover.

Michigan 11, Bellarmine 10 (OT)

  • Freshman midfielder Brian Archer (Brighton) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior defenseman Mack Gembis (Cranbrook) – Started, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Sophomore attack Riley Kennedy (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior attack Will Meter (Brother Rice) – Scored a Goal on five Shots (four on goal) and added an assist.
  • Junior midfielder Thomas Orr (Detroit Catholic Central) – Picked up two ground balls.
  • Senior midfielder Tom Sardelli (Notre Dame Prep) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior LSM Dakota Sherman (Cranbrook) – Picked up one ground ball.
  • Sophomore defenseman Chris Walker (Brother Rice) – Started and picked up one ground ball.
  • Redshirt junior defenseman Max Zwolan (Ann Arbor Pioneer) – Did not see game action.

Notre Dame 18, Virginia 9

  • Freshman midfielder Sergio Perkovic (Brother Rice) – Started, scored two Goals on seven Shots (four on goal), and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnoevr and one penalty for 0:30.

Ohio State 5, Denver 9

  • Senior midfielder Nick Diegel (Northville) – Did not see game action.

Penn 12, Princeton 15

  • Freshman goalie Ahmed Iftikhar (Detroit Country Day) – Did not see game action.

Richmond 4, St. Joseph’s 7

  • Freshman attack J.P. Forester (Brother Rice) – Started, scored two Goals on four Shots (three on goal), and picked up one ground ball. Also committed two turnovers.

Richmond 7, Rutgers 10

  • Freshman attack J.P. Forester (Brother Rice) – Started and scored two Goals on five Shots (four on goal). Also committed two turnovers.

Robert Morris 10, Siena 9
Robert Morris 6, Hobart 8

  • Freshman attack Kento Nakano (Rockford) – Did not see game action.

Rutgers 12, Providence 6

  • Sophomore midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids) – Recorded an Assist and took one Shot.

Rutgers 10, Richmond 7

  • Sophomore midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids) – Took one Shot on goal. Also committed one turnover.

Sacred Heart 13, Stony Brook 14

  • Junior midfielder Joe Kemp (Troy Athens) – Started, but did not accrue any statistics.

Sacred Heart 10, Hartford 12

  • Junior midfielder Joe Kemp (Troy Athens) – Started, recorded two Asssists, took one Shot (on goal), and picked up seven ground balls. Also committed two turnovers.

St. John’s 15, Georgetown 7

  • Freshman midfielder David Stafford (Mattawan) – Did not see game action.

VMI 3, Mercer 8

  • Junior midfielder Andrew Erber (Dexter) – Took four shots and picked up two ground balls. Also committed three turnovers.

Yale 10, Lehigh 2

  • Freshman midfielder John Lazarsfeld (Ann Arbor Greenhills) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.

Yale 9, Cornell 11

  • Freshman midfielder John Lazarsfeld (Ann Arbor Greenhills) – Did not see game action.

Share corrections, comments, discussion, and statlines from other divisions in the comments.

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Michigan Preview: Maryland

I predict this game does not go well for Michigan. Just a hunch.

Maryland

Maryland Terps Terrapins Lacrosse

I don’t have a joke to make about this logo :/

March 18, 2014. 4 p.m. EDT
Michigan Stadium
Ticket info and promotions.
Live Stats. Live video ($).
@UMichLacrosse. @UofMLaxManagers.
@GreatLaxState. @MDTerpsLacrosse.
Michigan week preview. .pdf notes.
Maryland game preview. .pdf notes.

Tempo-Free Profile

The TempoFreeLax.com numbers displayed here are up to date for this season, since there’s enough data nationally that the numbers are pretty meaningful. The figures are also adjusted for strength of schedule, and Maryland has… the No. 7 slate nationally. Plus they’re undefeated, dominating basically everybody, etc. Yay.

Maryland 2014
Pace 57.00 (60)
Poss% 55.09 (2)
Off. Eff. 43.93 (6)
Def. Eff. 19.94 (1)
Pyth% 95.61 (1)

These Terp guys might just make it, folks. They are nationally elite in… everything. The only thing in that handy chart that doesn’t look good is pace, but given that it’s a style mark, not a quality one, that Maryland has been able to play such slow games while consistently scoring double-digits means that they’re also really good at slowing things down, too.

They’re the No. 6 offense in the country, which is like terrible for them. It would be really good for everybody else (except like Albany and Loyola, I guess), though. They’re scoring on more than two out of every five possessions, a great mark.

It’s all the more impressive because they get the lion’s share of possessions, as well (more through the transition game than by dominating faceoffs, but we’ll get to that in a moment). Maryland plays so slowly because that means the opponent hardly has a chance to get the ball at all.

When the opponent does end up getting the ball, however, they ain’t doin’ much with it. The UMd defensive unit is the best in the land, and it’s hasn’t built up that reputation against scrubs (well, not only against scrubs, given that they have indeed played the worst offense in the country, from Mount St. Mary’s, but they’ve also played one of the best, UMBC).

Offense

Prepare for doom. This offense scores a lot of goals. In fact, Maryland hasn’t been held to single digits once (Duke was the closest, holding them to ten scores).

Senior midfielder Mike Chanenchuk leads the way with 19 goals and six assists, freshman attack Matt Rambo isn’t far behind with 13 goals and four assists, junior attack Jay Crlson has 11 and two, freshman attack Connor Cannizzaro has nine and three, and junior midfielder Joe LoCascio has just four goals and three assists. That quintet has started every game thus far.

Just attack Kevin Forster has four starts in four games played, and Tim Rotanz has two starts in two games played. That appears to be because Rotanz coincidentally returned to the lineup as Forster exited it, though I don’t see anything about Forster’s injury (Rotanz’s was a “lower body” injury). Look for the freshman Rotanz to round into form as he gets healthier and more comfortable in the offense.

This is a pretty balanced unit thanks to Chanenchuk, but without him it would be very attack oriented (there is no “without him,” so that’s somewhat irrelevant, but whatever). He’s one of the more assist-oriented offensive players thus far, and this is a Maryland team that does not rely much on passing to score the rock, with only about 40% of their goals assisted. When you have the best players, you can probably win a lot of one-on-one matchups.

Michigan’s close defense has been incapable of slowing down scoring attackmen through three years, so… pain.

Defense

The defense is even better for Maryland. Senior goalie Niko Amato is an important part of that, and he was behind only Penn State’s Austin Kaut in Inside Lacrosse‘s preseason All-American honors. He’s saving .608 of shots faced thus far in 2014.

The defense in front of Amato is really good, as well. Opponents’ Shots on Goal percentage isn’t a huge feather in Maryland’s cap (.573 on cage is above the national average), so clearly the accuracy is OK and Amato is stopping some good shots, but opponents are hardly getting opportunities to shoot, thanks to the slow play, possession percentage… and a really talented defense.

Pole Mike Ehrhardt is living up to his selection as a first-team All-American in the preseason with 14 caused turnovers and 25 GBs. The senior is also physically intimidating at 6-5 and 215 pounds… and isn’t listed with a start yet this year. Something’s fishy there. Junior Goran Murray hasn’t quite lived up to his second-team selection (from an individual statistical standpoint with four GBs and CTs, since it counts for something that he’s been a six-game starter for the best D in the country). Junior Casey Ikeda has been the third starter, and he has seven caused turnovers and ning GBs on the year.

The dangerman after Ehrhardt is Brian Cooper, who is listed as a defenseman on the roster but is second among non-Ehrhardt poles in production, so is likely your starting LSM. He has nine CTs and 17 ground balls on the year thus far. Sophomore Matt Dunn is also listed as a six-game starter, so… Maryland just has so many good poles that they rotate a lot? It might not be relevant for Michigan’s purposes. Maryland is really good on defense, and can run out tons of highly skilled players at various longpole spots.

Hardly any short-sticks on the team have several ground balls without racking up some serious offensive production, so it’s tough to say who the d-middies are there. Frehsman John Belz seems to be one, but beyond that, your guess is as good as mine (maybe better if you’ve seen Maryland play more than a game or two this year!).

For Michigan, a team that commits a lot of turnovers, an aggressive and talented defense is a nightmare. U-M should have trouble even getting it to the attack at times – more on that in a sec – and a very aggressive Maryland defense with 54 caused turnovers on just 149 opponent possessions (through six games!) should continue that. Michigan has really decreased its reputation as a volume-shooting team, or at least is doing so accurately enough to score and justify it this year, but shooting when the slightest opening arises will be the key.

Special Teams

Maryland’s faceoff game isn’t among the country’s best, but that’s more due to giving a few backups some run (non-starters are 7/26 on the year) than the starter not being good. Charlie Raffa, in fact, is quite good, one draw short of clearing 60% on the year. Faceoffs are actually a strength for Michigan as well, and the battle between the No. 11 (Brad Lott) and No. 16 (Raffa) specialists in the country should be a good one.

The other parts of the possession game are a nightmare, as listed above. Whereas most teams with elite talent are content to let the opposition clear, Maryland is one of the hardest-riding teams in the country (albeit with not many attempts because of the faceoff disparity and the Terps’ propensity for scoring damn near every time they get the ball). Maryland is also one of the best clearing teams in the country, no surprise given that they can go out and recruit the best sticks every year, and usually succeed in landing them.

Maryland, as you might expect from their style of play, is a somewhat penalty-prone team. They’ve committed 20 penalties on the year, with plenty of them greater than the 30-second technical variety. Surprisingly for a team that’s really good in 6v6 defense, the Terps’ man-down is just OK, with opponents converting eight of 17 EMO opportunities this year. Less surprisingly, the Maryland man-up seems to be just as lethal as the regular offense, converting 11 of 19 EMO opportunities thus far this year. Michigan has been a good man-down D and not particularly penalty prone, so they should be able to avoid that stinging them too much.

Big Picture

Michigan’s program has clearly made strides – and big ones. Competing on an even level with this Maryland team… that’s a few more strides (and a few more years) down the road. Michigan’s not going to win, and staying closer than expected is a far more reasonable goal.

U-M should look to breaking as close to even as possible in the possession game (something not many teams are able to do), and work toward achieving personal goals when it comes to efficiency. It’s more a man-vs.-self battle than a reasonable opportunity to win. It is a good glimpse at what an elite program looks like – and something to aim for in the future.

Previews from the Maryland angle, and the Michigan angle. (Team blog preview pieces? Mama, we’ve made it).

Predictions

There should be good and bad in this one for Michigan, and even some of the would-be “bad” might count as something of a moral victory against this Maryland team.

  • Brad Lott is prone to playing up or down to his competition, and facing one of the best specialists in the country should coax a strong performance out of him. He has been better than Raffa on a week-to-week basis, so breaking the .500 mark is a reasonable and attainable goal.
  • Maryland is going to score a lot of goals. This is a game where you can’t really fault Robbie Zonino for that. The key is to avoid giving up softies (if there are even any opportunities for that) and at the very least make Maryland earn what they get, because they will.
  • I would count on Michigan clearing surprisingly well against a heavy ride. The Wolverines’ clear is on the verge of a top-ten unit nationally, so the bygone days of fretting out every attempt are gone. That said, Maryland is still really good at riding. Expect somewhere between U-M’s standard 90% offensive clear rate and Maryland’s standard 77% opponent clear rate.
  • The Wolverines will not have as accurate a day as the average Terp opponent has this year. That’s partially because the Wolverines are neither UMBC nor Duke, and also because it probably behooves Michigan to fire away more frequently than they normally would. Playing an aggressive defense like Maryland’s is not a time to probe and look for the best shot.

All told, there’s a reason this UMd team is the best in the country. There are also many reasons Michigan isn’t ready to compete in that tier. I think Maryland calls off the dogs to a certain degree in the second half, letting the final score look a little closer than it would otherwise be. Michigan loses to Maryland, 18-7.

Share your predictions, discussion, etc. in the comments.

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Michigan 11, Bellarmine 10 (OT)

This is probably the biggest win to date in U-M’s program history. Bellarmine has been pretty good, and though they’re on a two-game losing streak now, I doubt they’re going to finish as one of the worst five programs in the country (as the single victim the last two years did), or behind Mercer, Detroit, or Furman.

Tempo Free

From the official box score, a look at the tempo-free stats:

Bellarmine 2014
Michigan Bellarmine
Faceoff Wins 21 Faceoff Wins 3
Clearing 17-18 Clearing 20-21
Possessions 40 Possessions 25
Goals 11 Goals 10
Offensive Efficiency .275 Offensive Efficiency .400

Even though Michigan ran out to leads of 3-0 and 5-2, Bellarmine’s comeback to eventually take the lead gave them a pretty good efficiency mark on the day. The Wolverines absolutely dominated possession though, and that led to the win.

This was a medium-paced game, but Michigan’s possession edge (61.5% of possessions, in fact) was the decisive factor.

Notes

Hello, Brad Lott. Welcome home. I was a few days off in my prediction that Lott would return to form soon, because he did it in a big way against BU. The Knights did not win a faceoff in the first half, which allowed U-M to focus on its settled offense and defense, rather than scraping to earn possessions as we’d seen in recent weeks. Lott’s rebound puts him back among the nation’s best faceoff specialists (even with the struggles in the Carolinas to his name), and 21/24 is a fine day. He did commit five turnovers and didn’t engineer much fast-break offense, but even then, you’re sort of splitting hair for a FO specialist.

The other aspect of the possession game was mostly a draw. Bellarmine had more clearing attempts than Michigan on account of U-M winning all the faceoffs, and each team had just one failed clear. I would have expected more riding, but Michigan likely didn’t feel the need to given how strong they were on faceoffs, and Bellarmine probably didn’t feel like potentially compounding something that was an issue.

Mikie Schlosser got the overtime game winner. Mike Francia (with help from Kyle Jackson) may have gotten the highlight of the game:

No Wolverine player recorded more than three points: Francia added two assists to the above goal, Jackson added a goal of his own, Will Meter had one of each, and Thomas Paras had two goals and an assist. When this Michigan offense is clicking, there are a ton of options to score the ball. It’s still a little lacking in consistency (which will come with experience), and sure as hell isn’t going to repeat the feat against Maryland, but its progress is moving smoothly.

Despite dominating the ball for the most part, Michigan only managed five more shots than Bellarmine (45 to 40). In non-FO ground balls, U-M was actually somewhat dominated, 20-13, and that explains how Bellarmine managed to keep things close despite the possession deficit. What Michigan did with those shots, however, was far better. 24/45 were on cage (.533), with 11 of them of course getting past Will Haas. Bellarmine put only 16 of 40 (.400) on cage, with 10 beating Zonino.

That disparity is a positive for Michigan’s offense, but not a strong positive for Zonino, who didn’t face too much rubber but saved only .375 of shots faced. When the possession game and offense are working well, you can win with a mark like that. More often than not, at least one of the other units will falter, and Zonino will have to step up. He’s been making progress this season – the Bellarmine performance may not be the best example of that – but it’s still tough to think what Michigan doesn’t have in terms of ball-stopping ability with Gerald Logan out for the year.

Even though Michigan’s defense prevented Logan from seeing many shots on cage, it wasn’t because they were forcing turnovers – only four all game (one each from Jeff Chu, Chase Brown, Josh Stauffer – who also got his first career goal – and Kyle Jackson). Bellarmine still managed to commit 15 TOs, so like the shooting accuracy, it appears Michigan was helped out by an opponent that wasn’t doing a whole lot to help itself out.

Coming the other way, Michigan committed 21 turnovers – not a great number – but 15 were forced by a Bellarmine defense that 1) is really good until the past couple weeks, and 2) thrives on forcing turnovers. As much as you could say that 11 unforced TOs buried Bellarmine, Michigan keeping its own number down to six is a strong positive.

One more interesting note from the boxscore: No matter who actually walks onto the field first, typically the first offensive midfield is listed as starting. That wasn’t the case for Michigan Saturday, with Lott, Brown, and Chu (FO specialist, LSM, and short-stick D-middie) listed as the starters. Not sure if there was a motivational or reward element to it, but it’s definitely something that’s a rarity for Michigan.

Elsewhere

IL’s Eamon McAnaney lists is as one of his impact games from the weekend. Maize n Brew recaps the game. Michigan game recapBoxscore. Bellarmine recap.

Up Next

Later today (4 p.m., to be exact), Michigan will take on the No. 1 team in the country in Maryland. The game is at Michigan Stadium, and the first 150 fans get some form of door prize. The Terps are the best team to play a road game at Michigan in program history.

…that’s a blessing and a curse, because it shows that Michigan lacrosse is becoming a capital-B capital-D Big Deal, but also because the game will probably not go so well for the Maize and Blue. Keeping the margin of defeat reasonable is probably the best-case scenario.

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Scores and Schedule: March 18, 2014

Can it be true? A high school game on the docket? Spring is coming…

Yesterday’s Results

Division-2 Women

Aquinas @ Calvin – postponed
Davenport 27, Oklahoma Baptist 5

Division-3 Men

Hope 14, Millsaps 6

Division-3 Women

Aquinas @ Calvin – postponed

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan v. Maryland, 4 p.m. @ Michigan Stadium

Division-2 Women

Lawrence Tech v. Oklahoma Baptist
Aquinas @ Olivet
Siena Heights v. Lourdes

Division-3 Men

Hope @ Centenary (La.)

Division-3 Women

Aquinas @ Olivet
Hope @ George Fox
Adrian @ Wittenberg

High School Boys

Davison @ Oxford

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments. Also use the comments for discussion of today’s action.

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Detroit 10, Marquette 15

I just don’t know, man. Losing to Marquette is a totally reasonable outcome. To be slightly better than non-competitive is en extreme disappointment.

Tempo Free

From the official box score, a look at the tempo-free stats:

Marquette 2014
Marquette Detroit
Faceoff Wins 21 Faceoff Wins 8
Clearing 9-9 Clearing 14-17
Possessions 33 Possessions 25
Goals 15 Goals 10
Offensive Efficiency .455 Offensive Efficiency .400

This was an extremely close game, especially by Detroit’s standards (they’ve been one of the fastest teams in the country since time immemorial, it seems). Marquette managed to clear cleanly and dominate on faceoffs, and that allowed them to run up a nice advantage in possession.

Both offenses had great days (probably just as much as a function of playing against bad defense as their own steps forward), and Marquette’s number is the best in their program history.

Notes

I slightly teased this a second ago, but the offenses were outstanding, and that’s because they were facing weak defense… it’s tough for a defense to stand strong when it’s playing with fewer guys than the opposing offense. UDM had eight(!) EMO opportunities, converting on five of them. Marquette had six, and scored on four. That’s a lot of man-down defense trying its best but not succeeding.

Most of Marquette’s offense came from four players. Everybody knows Tyler Melnyk is either going to get his or open things up for his teammates, but Detroit could neither slow him down nor prevent his teammates from going off. You have to do one (stop Melnyk) or the other (make him be the one to beat you), and Detroit walked a fine line of… letting him destroy everything in sight while his teammates did the same. He had five and one, Bryan Badolato had four goals, Conor Gately had two goals and an assist, and midfielder Ryan McNamara had two goals and three helpers. That’s eighteen of MU’s 23 points on the day.

Detroit’s offense was also pretty prolific, though not as much as Marquette’s (obviously) and quite a bit more reliant on the EMO. Seven of 17 points came on the man advantage. Mike Birney and Shayne Adams led the way with five points apiece, four goals and an assist for Birney (on 12 shots, just seven on goal) and two goals and three helpers for Adams. Alex Maini had two goals and an assist, and Tom Masterson had one of each.

Defensively, it was not a day of great performances. Paul Bitetti and JD Hess each caused a pair of turnovers, but no defensive player aside from goalie Jason Weber had more than a single GB. Marquette had 32 ground balls to Detroit’s 18, so it’s easy to see where that might have been one of the differences in the game.

Weber actually had a solid performance in defeat, especially since his defense wasn’t doing him a whole lot of favors. He saved 14 shots while allowing 15 goals, just below .500, which isn’t spectacular but Melnyk and Co. will do that to some teams, especially with plenty of EMO time. Still, Weber’s performance didn’t solidify him as the permanent starter yet, either.

The possession game… at this point I don’t know. Detroit’s FOGOs are capable of playing really well, but it’s clear at this point that they’re going to be back to the status from a couple years back where it just doesn’t seem like it will go right for them. Since I said this, they’ll naturally come out and dominate to the end of the season, and that’s just fine. Damien Harris was 6/18 and Tyler Corcoran was 2/7, and every one else who took a draw or three was 0-fer.

There is always a bit of noise in the stats, but nearly every Detroit possession ended with either a goal or a Titan turnover (Jimmy Danaher’s six saves say otherwise). Turnovers are still a bit of a problem for the Titans, but they’re getting much better in that respect. Nine of their 15 TOs were forced by Marquette players. Continuing to clean that up will help them take the next step.

As expected, Marquette cleared the ball just fine, but I think there’s some disappointment in UDM failing three clears in limited opportunities. Especially when the faceoff thing just isn’t going to happen, you have to value those possessions that you do get.

Elsewhere

Boxscore. Detroit game recap. Postgame press conference. Photo gallery. Marquette recap.

Up Next

The Titans transition from playing zero conference games to playing only conference games for the rest of the season. They open MAAC play in Buffalo against Canisius.

With the disappointing way the non-conference schedule went, this is a chance for UDM to wash their hands of that part of the year and get a fresh start. They have a six-game season now, and they have to do well enough against that competition to make the MAAC Championships in order to have a chance at a second-straight NCAA Tournament.

Canisius has really struggled early in the year, with a 3-3 record, but against a really weak slate (two of those wins were against first-year programs and the third, a head-scratcher over Air Force). They’re two spots behind Detroit in the national rankings at No. 55. They started conference play over the weekend with a win against Monmouth.

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