Detroit 9, Wagner 8

Detroit sure knows how to keep it exciting. Mike Birney one-upped his own third-quarter distance shot against Michigan by doing so in the fourth to put in the game-winner.

Tempo Free

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

Wagner 2014
Detroit Wagner
Faceoff Wins 9 Faceoff Wins 12
Clearing 17-21 Clearing 14-16
Possessions 32 Possessions 32
Goals 9 Goals 8
Offensive Efficiency .281 Offensive Efficiency .250

This was about as close as a game can be. The teams were even in possession (albeit doing it in different ways: Wagner won more faceoffs and rode much better, while Detroit had several more clearing opportunities following those Wagner faceoff wins).

Detroit’s dagger with eight seconds on the clock was the deciding blow, and it can’t be much closer. Of course, being that close against Wagner… is probably not a very good thing.

Notes

As has happened with Michigan, Detroit has gone from a decent-to-good faceoff team to a relatively poor one. Wagner’s faceoff unit isn’t bad, so it’s not quite as confusing (plus Detroit’s top specialist, Damien Hicks, was over .500 while Tyler Corcoran went 1/7). Still, the Titans need to be able to dominate possession to a degree until the offense continues rounding into form. When the faceoff game was working well – the odd quarters – Detroit was functional all around. The possession story was, at times, the flow of the game.

Speaking of that offense, Detroit started the game very slowly (three goals through the first two quarters), but rounded into form during the third quarter – four goals on nine possessions – thanks in part to a better faceoff performance (as listed above). Wagner was able to come back in the fourth quarter thanks once again to the possession game. It was such a key in this contest.

Alex Maini and Scott Drummond were the key offensive performers, with Maini scoring four goals and adding an assist (while committing three turnovers – actually an improvement over recent games, at the very least in terms of the ratio) and Drummond notching two of each. Both Brandon Beauregard and Mike Birney added a goal and an assist.

Speaking of Birney, he didn’t have production throughout, per se (his assist came in the third quarter), but the timeliness of his goal was unbelievable. While he’s taken some flak for shooting off the cage at times, and turning it over more than he should, there’s no denying his great sense of timing.

Defensively, Paul Bitetti was a standout – as he has been en route to leading the nation in CTs per game (as the Titans slowly shift back toward that pressure defense with the experience they’re gaining in the early season – with two caused turnovers. He was actually outdone by attackman Alex Maini, who had three CTs, though Maini obviously did it in a different way.

The leader of the defense, however, was freshman goalie Jason Weber, whose 18 saves on 26 SOGs (.692) was part of the weeklong performance that saw him earn MAAC Rookie of the Week honors (a good performance in defeat against Bellarmine was the other half). If the Titans can find consistency between the pipes – and based on early-season returns, they’re expecting it to be Weber – they could be building that momentum that has seen them make late-season runs through the conference in recent years.

All that said, this performance still came against Wagner, which is and has been one of the country’s worst teams. That’s not a squad that you’re stoked to hear “lights-out performance by goalie and last-second (man-down) goal to beat.” The Titans have a lot to work on, and finding that offensive consistency is one of them. I’m confident that the defense will round into form – the offense and possession game will be keys.

Elsewhere

Boxscore. Detroit recap. You can rewatch the whole darn thing on the NEC’s website. Wagner game recap.

Up Next

Detroit welcomes Marquette to the Motor City Saturday afternoon. Assuming reasonable weather, it should be the first home game at Titan Field this spring (after a few previous games at Ultimate Soccer Arenas in Pontiac). It’s also the final non-conference game for the Titans, so a lot of intangible stuff going on here.

Marquette is 1-4 on the year, but is likely to drop to 1-5 with a game against Duke tomorrow evening. Despite that, the Golden Eagles are rated slightly higher by Tempo-Free Lax than are the Titans. It should be a pretty even matchup, and one that the home-field advantage could help equalize.

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Michigan 11, Furman 9

Michigan ended its roadtrip to the Carolinas on a good note with a win over Furman. The final score was just a bit closer than the flow of the game might have indicated, but either way, the Wolverines got the W.

Tempo Free

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

Furman 2014
Michigan Furman
Faceoff Wins 10 Faceoff Wins 13
Clearing 19-21 Clearing 19-22
Possessions 34 Possessions 37
Goals 11 Goals 9
Offensive Efficiency .324 Offensive Efficiency .243

Michigan was a bit behind in the possession game, but was relatively dominant in terms of efficiency. The final two Furman scores (when the game was out of reasonable reach) skewed things a bit, but this really was a dominating game in the 6v6.

Notes

For the second game in a row against a mediocre-to-poor faceoff specialist, Michigan struggled to get wins. It’s a total head-scratcher after good or great games against some of the best specialists in the country. Brad Lott did come out a bit quicker in this one, so the possibility of an injury looks more likely. Either way, Michigan has just a few days to refocus and get back to where things were before this week. The team isn’t good enough to win many games the rest of this year without a possession advantage.

Robbie Zonino had yet another good performance in goal, though he gave up at least one softie (to Furman’s faceoff specialist on a clean FO win – to really tie two things together). As we’ve seen over the course of the year, he’s improving and will be a solid performer, but not one who will steal a game.

The Michigan defense looked better than against High Point, giving up fewer looks right on the crease. Sophomore Chris Walker caused three turnovers and picked up five ground balls for a great day on close D. While Furman did have one high-producing attackman (Zach Coker had two goals and two assists), it wasn’t to the degree that we’d seen in the past.

Michigan’s offense was very good, with an accurate day shooting the ball. Some of the shots were too easy to save, making things easier on keeper Jake Gavin, but they weren’t sprayed all over, either. The room for improvement is there (albeit against a new team), so Michigan’ efficiency number can even be improved without too much change.

Thomas Paras led the way offensively with three goals and an assist, fellow midfielder Mike Hernandez had two goal, and attack Ian King had three goals. Dan Kinek rounded out multi-point scorers with a goal and an assist. As you’d assume from the previous bullet, there was not a whole lot of volume-shooting.

What there were plenty of Sautrday afternoon were unforced turnovers. After committing zero against High Point (albeit with 11 turnovers that the Panthers caused), Michigan gave the ball away eight times, with five more forced by the Paladins. Bringing together the positives from the offense across both games – no unforced turnovers from High Point, good shooting from Furman – would continue increasing the potency of the O.

Michigan rode Furman pretty heavy, including a 10-man on several occasions. The Paladins generally chose to launch long shots when Michigan’s keeper was out of the cage, and none of those hit (with even a stolen backup for Michigan mixed in, as well). The other side of that is Michigan’s ride only forced three failed clears out of Furman, and you’d hope for more success with extreme tactics in play, especially against a less-skilled team.

This had the flow of a game that was more like 12-7, but Michigan gave up a couple at the end to draw things closer on the final margin. If Furman had been able to get one more settled possession leading to a goal, things might have become suddenly interesting. As it was, U-M gave up an early lead but was the far stronger team from then until the final three minutes.

This was a pretty dirty game, with eight total extra-man opportunities. Furman received five of those, sort of an uncharacteristic number of penalties for Michigan to commit. They didn’t convert on any, while Michigan scored on one of three chances.

Elsewhere

Boxscore. Tempo-free boxscore. Michigan game recap. Furman game recap. Clark Bell photo gallery. Maize n Brew trip decompression. Michigan Daily talks about the team’s motivation – playing for Miles Root, who passed away prior to the game.

Up Next

Michigan doesn’t have a midweek game (thankfully) and will open ECAC conference play next Saturday in Louisville against Bellarmine. Michigan has improved dramatically from last year, but Bellarmine is pretty good, as well.

The early Tempo-Free Lax numbers say that the Wolverines have about a 20% chance of stealing a road win, and that feels about right at this point. The Knights are an elite defense and a mediocre offense this year, and they’re doing very well in the possession game. It could be an interesting matchup.

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Scores and Schedule: March 10, 2014

UDM women with a heartbreaker yesterday, and limited action today. Fortunately, high school season starts soon (with practices rolling today).

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Women

Detroit 11, Robert Morris 12

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights v. Indiana Tech – canceled

Division-3 Women

Kalamazoo 11, Aurora 6

Collegiate Club Men

Aquinas 22, Wofford 4

Today’s Schedule

Division-3 Men

Olivet @ Baldwin Wallace

Collegiate Club Men

Aquinas @ UNC-Charlotte

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

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Michigan 7, High Point 9

For the second year in a row, Michigan headed down to High Point, N.C. thinking about a win, and for the second year in a row the Wolverines couldn’t convert. How the defeat came about was – in a lot of ways – similar to the previous year’s loss, but different in some key ways, as well.

Tempo Free

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

High Point 2014
Michigan High Point
Faceoff Wins 6 Faceoff Wins 14
Clearing 17-18 Clearing 11-14
Possessions 27 Possessions 29
Goals 7 Goals 9
Offensive Efficiency .259 Offensive Efficiency .310

This was one of the slowest games in Michigan’s program history (a hypothesis I’m interested in testing soon – a slow team can dictate pace in a game more than a fast team, under most circumstances), and the Wolverines worked at a possession deficit thanks to a poor performance on faceoffs.

The teams weren’t far off in efficiency, but High Point got two extra possessions, turning that into two extra scores. It doesn’t quite work like that, given that High Point’s last two scores weren’t on the final two possessions of the game (though they were close), but when the margin is razor-thin, everything counts.

Notes

The faceoffs were a total mystery. Brad Lott faced down two of the best FOGOs in the country in games shortly before the contest against High Point, performing very well against Hopkins’ Drew Kennedy and Cornell’s Doug Tesoriero. He was smoked by Jamie Piluso, to the tune of 4/15 before Will Biagi entered and performed better (mostly on account of small sample size) going 2/5. Lott has shown to be capable of elite performances, but whether it was the distraction of a spring break trip, some minor injury – he came out much earlier in the following game against Furman – or some other factor, he did not live up to the high expectations he set for himself.

The other disappointing factor was Michigan’s shooting, though there’s an easy explanation for most of the struggles there. The Wolverines were putting the majority of their shots on cage (24 of 34), but ran up against a really good goalie in Austin Geisler. He’s saving .592 on the year (pretty good), and though his .708 against Michigan was above that mark, it’s within the area where it could be mostly a statistical quirk on account of small sample size.

Offensively, Michigan was led by Ian King with three goals on 11 shots, with eight of them on the cage. It’s totally possible that with so many of U-M’s shots on cage – a third of them, to be exact – his inexperience played a role in the team’s overall poor shooting performance and inability to beat Geisler. Peter Kraus put all three of his shots on target, but only one beat Geisler. No other Wolverine had more than three total shots or two shots on goal.

High Point is one of the slowest teams in the country, and it’s clear from the way this one played out (56 possessions) that a team able to control possession can slow the pace well enough to reduce the total number of possessions. Given that the Panthers are probably a little less talented than Michigan in most positions on the field – and were indeed able to slow the game – that was the right gameplan for them to get the win.

It’s not all bad on offense. The Wolverines committed 11 turnovers on 27 possessions (.407), which isn’t a particularly strong mark. With one coming on the clear (by freshman close D Andrew Hatton), the offense itself was a little more careful with the ball, though Mike Hernandez was responsible for three of those turnovers himself. Of note, the Wolverines’ 11 turnovers were all caused by High Point – there was not a single unforced error in the game – and that’s an improvement over the past. Of course, caused or not, the turnovers still count, but being careful with the ball unless forced into mistakes is a good sign going forward.

Defensively, Michigan struggled a bit, but with the offensive and possession-based weapons they have, a .310 defensive efficiency should be good enough to get a win. As expected, Matt Thistle (three assists) and Dan Lomas (five goals) were the key offensive performers for High Point, and U-M’s close D had a tough time shutting those two down. Michigan has gone somewhat young on defense – Hatton, sophomore Chris Walker, and junior Mack Gembis are starting at close D, and sophomore Chase Brown is splitting time at LSM – so there will be growing pains, but stopping those scoring attackmen (or at least slowing them down) is the biggest struggle defensively for three years running.

Based on the stats (.591 save%), Robbie Zonino had a pretty good game, and it seems like he’s rounding into form. There will still be some head-scratching moments every once in a while, but they’ve gotten fewer and farther between over his brief U-M career, and he’s going to be a good one.

This was a game of runs, something we’ve become accustomed to this season. The Panthers ran out to a 3-1 lead in the first quarter before Michigan dominated the second and most of the third quarter, notching four straight without letting High Point get much going. HPU finished strong though, with six of the final eight goals, including the last three. There’s your difference in the game.

Elsewhere

Boxscore. Michigan recap. High Point recap. Photo gallery thanks to Clark Bell. Michigan Daily gamer.

Up Next

Michigan salvaged a win out of the road trip by defeating Furman Saturday afternoon. Recap coming this week…

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Scores and Schedule: March 9, 2014

A big D-1 day, with programs looking to break a slide. Since I didn’t get around to previewing the men’s games… both are must-wins, given the caliber of opposition. No further explanation necessary.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Men

Michigan 11, Furman 9
Detroit 9, Wagner 8

Division-1 Women

Michigan 4, Florida 20

Division-2 Women

Davenport 24, Lourdes 5
Grand Valley St. 8, St. Anselm 14
Aquinas 20, Dubuque 5
Aquinas 10, Robert Morris (Ill.) 12

Division-3 Men

Adrian 14, Augustana 13
Alma 5, Mount St. Joseph 6
Albion 13, Concordia-Wisconsin 6
Calvin 0, Elmhurst 9
Hope 8, DePauw 8
Olivet 10, Benedictine 12

Division-3 Women

Albion 5, Allegheny 19
Adrian 12, Denison 23
Kalamazoo 11, Benedictine 8
Calvin 8, Capital 11
Alma 15, Robert Morris (Ill.) 10

Collegiate Club Men

UM-Dearborn 19, Taylor 5
Michigan State 11, Colorado 10

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Women

Detroit v. Robert Morris

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights v. Indiana Tech

Division-3 Women

Kalamazoo @ Aurora

Collegiate Club Men

Aquinas @ Wofford

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

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Scores and Schedule: March 8, 2014

A big D-1 day, with programs looking to break a slide. Since I didn’t get around to previewing the men’s games… both are must-wins, given the caliber of opposition. No further explanation necessary.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-3 Men

Hope 2, Denison 24

Division-3 Women

Calvin 15, Defiance 1

Collegiate Club Men

Central Michigan @ Davenport, 7 p.m.
Michigan State 7, Colorado State 8
Oakland 6, Lourdes 14

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan @ Furman, noon. Live stream.
Detroit @ Wagner, 1 p.m. Live stream.

Division-1 Women

Michigan @ Florida

Division-2 Women

Davenport v. Lourdes
Grand Valley St. @ St. Anselm
Aquinas v. Dubuque
Aquinas @ Robert Morris (Ill.)

Division-3 Men

Adrian v. Augustana
Alma v. Mount St. Joseph
Albion @ Concordia-Wisconsin
Calvin @ Elmhurst
Hope @ DePauw
Olivet @ Benedictine

Division-3 Women

Albion v. Allegheny
Adrian v. Denison
Kalamazoo @ Benedictine
Calvin @ Capital
Alma @ Robert Morris (Ill.)

Collegiate Club Men

UM-Dearborn @ Taylor
Michigan State @ Colorado

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

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Scores and Schedule: March 7, 2014

Yesterday didn’t go so hot, especially for the D-1 teams. Lots of women’s action tonight, with one D-3 men’s game.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights 15, Alderson-Broaddus 3
Grand Valley State 13, Merrimack 3

Division-3 Men

Alma 12, Wilmington 4

Division-3 Women

Alma 21, Wilmington (Ohio) 3

Collegiate Club Women

Oakland 19, Wayne State 0

Today’s Schedule

Division-3 Men

Hope @ Denison

Division-3 Women

Calvin @ Defiance

Collegiate Club Men

Central Michigan @ Davenport, 7 p.m.
Michigan State @ Colorado State
Oakland @ Lourdes

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

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Scores and Schedule: March 6, 2014

Yesterday didn’t go so hot, especially for the D-1 teams. Lots of women’s action tonight, with one D-3 men’s game.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Men

Michigan 7, High Point 9

Division-1 Women

Detroit 8, Elon 9
Michigan 7, Jacksonville 15

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights 26, Columbia (S.C.) 16

Division-3 Men

Olivet 11, Wilmington 1
Albion 6, Oberlin 5 (OT)
Adrian 7, Wooster 11

Division-3 Women

Adrian 10, Sewanee 9
Hope v. Wilmington (Ohio) – canceled

Collegiate Club Men

Michigan State 5, BYU 6
Western Michigan @ West Virginia – postponed

Today’s Schedule

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights @ Alderson-Broaddus
Grand Valley State @ Merrimack

Division-3 Men

Alma v. Wilmington

Division-3 Women

Alma v. Wilmington (Ohio)

Collegiate Club Women

Wayne State @ Oakland

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

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Michigan Preview: High Point

Michigan dipped below .500 with the nail-biter against Cornell over the weekend, but the Wolverines have a chance to get back above the mark with a two-game road trip against relatively new programs in the next few days. First up is High Point this afternoon.

High Point

High Point University Panthers Lacrosse

No Panther in the logo :-/

March 5, 2014. 7 p.m. EST
High Point, N.C.
Live stats. Live video (free).
@UMichLacrosse. @HPUMensLax. @GreatLaxState.
Michigan weekend game notes. .pdf notes.
High Point game notes.

Tempo-Free Profile

The TempoFreeLax.com numbers displayed here are finally those from this season, since there’s enough data nationally that the numbers are pretty meaningful. The figures are also adjusted for strength of schedule, so High Point’s relatively easy slate (it doesn’t get much better, coming in No. 55 overall nationally) means they haven’t been taking on a murderer’s row.

High Point 2013
Pace 57.00 (58)
Poss% 48.42 (43)
Off. Eff. 27.51 (49)
Def. Eff. 31.65 (39)
Pyth% 34.74 (45)

The most notable aspect of High Point’s game thus far this season is the slow pace of play. That makes sense for a team that doesn’t have the skill (yet) to play with most of its opposition. It’s also a product of playing against some fellow slowpokes in Delaware, St. Joseph’s, and Sacred Heart. Still, playing slow to keep things close is definitely s tool in the kit for the Panthers.

The Panthers also have relatively few of those possessions, with a percentage well under 50% so far this season. They have out-possessed only one team so far this year, the most recent opponent Jacksonville.

On the settle ends of the field, High Point doesn’t have a whole lot going on. They’re slightly better – just under average – on the defensive side of the ball (albeit having played against some anemic offenses). Their offense is struggling thus far in 2014, however.

All that together, combined with the fact that they’ve played a pretty easy schedule, surprisingly hasn’t knocked them that far down the national ranks in terms of overall pythagorean win expectation. They’re well out of the country’s bottom quarter of teams, and have built pretty quickly, all things considered.

Offense

The Panthers are led offensively by sophomore attackman Dan Lomas, who has 10 goals and one assist on the year. U-M fans likely remember him from such events as “scores six goals on Michigan last season.” He’s a true finisher with a statline like that, and is capable of dodging from low to find space. After him, fellow sophomore attack Matt Thistle (who actually has more points on three goals and 10 assists) is the guy to watch. As the production implies, he’s a true distributor.

The next four leading scorers on the High Point roster are all midfielders. Lomas is a finisher and Thistle is an assist-man, but the midfielders are all a little more balanced (albeit with an emphasis on scoring, rather than dishing out).

Redshirt senior Bucky Smith – a Navy transfer – has seven goals and two assists on the year, even though he’s not listed as a starter in all but one game (the most recent one against Jacksonville, so expect him to be a big part of the gameplan). He put up most of his seven goals in wins over St. Joseph’s and Sacred Heart. He supplanted sophomore Christian Bieth in the starting lineup, but Bieth (3G, 3A) will still get some significant run.

The other two starting midfielders are redshirt sophomores Brad James and Mitchell Dupere with five and four goals, respectively, and an assist each. Third starting attackman Michael LeClair is a freshman with three goals and two assists on the season. Redshirt sophomore attack Adam Seal started once in place of Lomas.

This isn’t an assist-heavy offense, with only 23 on 40 goals so far this season, nearly half of them coming from Thistle. If you can shut down his feeding and Lomas’s finishing, the High Point offense is totally handcuffed. That’s easier said than done though, especially for a Michigan offense that has struggled to defend elite attackmen for three years running.

Defense

Redshirt junior goalie Austin Giesler, a Virginia transfer, has played all but a minute of the season between the pipes. He’s pretty good, saving .575 of shots faced thus far this season, though allowing nine goals a game with High Point’s slow pace of play isn’t the most impressive, it’s still good given the youth of the program. He frustrated Michigan with 13 saves (allowing 10 goals) last year.

Junior Pat Farrell is the only defenseman to start every game so far, and his eight caused turnovers lead the team – though he has a mind-numbingly low three ground balls to show for it. Redshirt senior Jacksonville transfer Garrett Swaim and redshirt sophomore Nick Bittner have started four games each, and they both have six caused turnovers (with a more-reasonable seven and 14 ground balls, respectively). Sophomore Zack price has picked up starts in the two that aren’t yet accounted for, and has forced five turnovers.

Redshirt sophomore Harris Levine and freshman Tanner Landstra have rotated in for depth (I suspect Levine is the primary LSM, but the Panthers don’t differentiate on the roster, and no poles outside of the starting close D have much production yet this year). Sophomore Joseph Taulane has been the top d-middie, and is one of the team’s top non-faceoff ground ball vacuums. Redshirt sophomore Brendan Montrello has been another option there, but has only three CTs and three GBs on the season.

This isn’t a turnover-heavy defense, instead focusing on reducing the number and quality of shots faced by Giesler. With Michigan’s individual offensive talent (shockingly, some of the best High Point has seen this year – talk about a program turning the corner), there should be opportunities to get good looks on Giesler. The trick will be beating a fairly strong keeper.

Last year, Michigan relied heavily on shooting from then-freshmen Kyle Jackson and Mike Hernandez, with both launching 10 shots. U-M is a more accurate shooting team this year, and there’s a much wider range of offensive talent. Hernandez (who also added three turnovers in last year’s game) hasn’t been the huge factor for Michigan he was last year, and reducing that pressure should give Michigan a more diverse attack that’s capable of finding more openings against the Panthers.

Special Teams

High Point is a poor faceoff team, which should mean very good things for Brad Lott and Michigan. The most-deployed option is sophomore Jamie Piluso, who comes in at .473 on the year. However, he only has a few more attempts than junior Chris Davila (.488), so it’s a team effort there. With the way Lott has played against Drew Kennedy of Hopkins and Doug Tesoriero of Cornell, the questions might be more about snagging the 50/50 GBs than Lott not winning any clamps. He went .500 against him last year, but this is a much better version of Brad Lott.

High Point has been a decent clearing team at over 87% on the year. That’s pretty encouraging for a relatively young program, but with some of their most skilled players in the goal (Giesler) and close D, they’re polished enough to withstand all but the heaviest rides. Michigan might have one of the heaviest rides they’ve seen all year (they cleared perfectly against Sacred Heart’s awful ride and have failed here and there against some not-too-heavy groups).

Coming the other way, High Point has hardly opted to ride the opposition at all, forcing only eight fails on 85 opposing attempts. Michigan isn’t the cleanest team at advancing into the offensive box, but they’re approaching 90% efficiency in that regard this season, and unless High Point suddenly breaks out some new tactics (or they commit some unforced turnovers), should be able to do well in this one.

High Point has been fairly penalty-prone this year, and with Michigan’s newfound ability to really achieve at a high level on EMO (it helps to have talent and experience, yeah?) there should be some opportunities there. The Panthers are holding opponents to .280 effectiveness there, but Cornell’s man-down was even better and Michigan hit .500. When they get their own chances, the Panthers are converting at a .235 rate, and Michigan’s defense against much better teams has allowed about 40% conversion. U-M should be able to avoid giving up man-down goals simply on account of playing a clean game.

Big Picture

Losing to the Panthers last year was a huge letdown for the Wolverines, especially since it was a semi-odd game in the rain with a turnover-prone Michigan offense that couldn’t get much going outside of the two freshman midfielders. The Wolverines looked at that point to lose their last winnable game of the season (though they’d later upset St. Joseph’s at home).

This year, both teams appear to be much better, but it’s probably fair to say – given the near-upset of Cornell and a pair of wins already – that Michigan has made more improvements, particularly on the offensive side of the ball. U-M needs this game to have a chance to get above .500 ever again this season, given the way the schedule plays out, and that’s probably motivation enough.

Taking big steps for Team Three means winning a game like this.

Predictions

Michigan’s spring break trip probably hasn’t started like expected (it’s been raining/sleeting/whatever in North Carolina the first couple days this week), but living up to expectations on the field is the name of the game.

  • Michigan should be able to dominate possession. As mentioned above, the faceoff battle was pretty even last year, but Sophomore Brad Lott is head-and-shoulders better than Freshman Brad Lott, and he’s rounded into form as one of the nation’s best. Meanwhile, Piluso hasn’t even been the best on his team. The Wolverines’ clear/ride combo should be an advantage, as well.
  • Michigan’s dominance of possession will prevent High Point from slowing things down like they prefer to do, since the Wolverines like a bit more speed in the game.
  • Whereas last year’s offense was totally dependent on two freshman midfielders, this year’s group has talent at attack and midfield, and has more answers when one thing is shut down. Look for Hernandez to be more of a distributor, and Kyle Jackson to compete with freshman attack Ian King for the team lead in scores.
  • Was Robbie Zonino’s strong performance in the Cornell game a sign of things to come or a flash-in-the-pan in terms of long-term success? Unfortunately, I lean slightly more toward the latter, though both factors are obviously at play here. If he can save more than .500 of shots faced, that should be enough for the Wolverines to earn a comfortable win.
  • Lomas and Thistle will get theirs. Not only are they simply really good, but the U-M defense has traditionally struggled against a top-two at attack who can really give opponents fits. While talent is getting there defensively, the depth for Michigan isn’t up to snuff yet.
  • The Wolverines will give up a now-customary three-plus goal run, but it won’t be enough to bury them, like it might be against a more experienced team.

Michigan’s an early-season success story nationally, and winning a game like this is something that they should be able to do, on the road or not. They come out focused on their spring break trip, and show more glimpses of a strong future in a 15-9 Wolverines win.

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

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Scores and Schedule: March 5, 2014

Rough day yesterday, with two losses for in-state teams and one game canceled. Here’s to a stronger Wednesday.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Men

Detroit 8, Bellarmine 12

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights 17, Emmanuel (Ga.) 18 (OT)

Division-3 Women

Olivet @ Hiram – canceled

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan @ High Point, 7 p.m.

Division-1 Women

Detroit @ Elon
Michigan @ Jacksonville

Division-2 Women

Siena Heights @ Columbia (S.C.)

Division-3 Men

Olivet v. Wilmington (Ohio)
Albion @ Oberlin
Adrian @ Wooster

Division-3 Women

Adrian @ Sewanee
Hope v. Wilmington (Ohio) – canceled

Collegiate Club Men

Michigan State v. BYU, 1 p.m. MST @ Colorado
Western Michigan @ West Virginia

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

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