Michigan 20, Mercer 7

Ian King Michigan Wolverines lacrosse Mercer Bears

Ian King winds up and fires, scoring one of his two goals.

Hey, so that ended up being a much happier occasion that the Wolverines’ last time out.

Tempo Free

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

Mercer 2014
Mercer Michigan
Faceoff Wins 18 Faceoff Wins 11
Clearing 12-17 Clearing 19-24
Possessions 40 Possessions 40
Goals 7 Goals 20
Offensive Efficiency .175 Offensive Efficiency .500

This was a blistering pace – mostly on account of all the goals – something that I think Michigan will be completely happy to settle into this year in games where it won’t result in their being wiped all over the floor. In competitive games or those where they have a talent advantage (hey, they might have those now!), look for a much more fun brand of lacrosse out of the Maize and Blue.

“We thought we had some advantages athletically, and we wanted to make this a bit more of an up-and-down game, finally,” said Michigan coach John Paul. “Against some of the teams we aren’t going to play as fast, but we are starting to get more athletic and better, and it is the way we want to play lacrosse, and our program will get there.”

Of course, the efficiency marks tell it all on the final scoreboard.

Notes

This was wire-to-wire dominance (almost – Mercer got the first goal, but after that it was all Michigan). That’s the sort of game Michigan definitely needed, building confidence going forward on both offense and defense. Even if this team’s talent/experience cocktail is still taking baby steps forward, getting an early dominant win (U-M didn’t win until the penultimate game of the 2013 season, or the sixth game of 2012 after a few chances to compete had already passed them by) can help psyche.

The story of this game in my eyes, however, was defense. In the first two years of the program, Michigan has been absolutely incapable of shutting down a team’s top scorer (or top pair). While Zack Ward and Timmy Geran put up four and five points, respectively, they weren’t simply having their way with the Wolverines’ D. The scorer that U-M was most concerned with, Chris Baxa, was held to a single goal on five shots.

That started with Robbie Zonino, who rebounded in a big way after struggling at Penn State. The downgrade in talent had something to do with it (TJ Sanders ain’t walkin’ through that door in Macon), but he was solid between the pipes, letting in only maybe one soft goal – bound to happen here and there – and stealing a couple goals away with great saves. The 6v6 defense was also great, with the close D forcing attackmen behind and the shortsticks not giving any space. Again, that’s the sort of thing that is a lot easier when you’re not facing elite talent.

“He had a better week of practice this week and was feeling pretty confident coming into this,” said Paul. “I hope he gains a lot [of confidence]. We have a better defense in front of him, especially when guys get healthy. We’re getting guys experience right now, and if he can play with confidence and make the first couple saves in a game, Robbie’s going to be fine.”

What Mercer did get was some transition on Michigan’s ride. I hadn’t even noticed, but the Wolverines ran some 10-man (though I did notice that they were riding pretty aggressively overall). The Bears’ third and fourth goals both came from an open attackman on the crease during a clear. I would imagine Michigan won’t ride as aggressively against teams that don’t give them a particular look. Two other Mercer goals came on the EMO (out of six extra-man opportunities), so the 6v6 was strong.

“We were running a ten-man a little bit, and any time you run a ten-man you’re running the risk of that,” Paul said. “It’s also the first time we’ve run that this year. We don’t practice it the way we used to back in the day. If we throw something in this week, there’s going to be a couple little holes in it.”

Offensively, 12 different Wolverines found the back of the net, with Will Biagi, JD Johnson, and Peter Khoury also adding assists without goals of their own. Mike Francia (1G, 3A), Andrew Portnoy (3G, 1A), Ian King (2G, 1A), and Kyle Jackson (2G, 1A) were your stars of the night. Michigan isn’t as reliant on one or two guys as they were last year – Mike Hernandez and Kyle Jackson, in that particular example – and with Will Meter returning to health (he dressed but did not play last night, and would have entered if needed), this should actually be a really good offense in due time. As though a .500 efficiency mark on 40 possessions didn’t make that clear.

Michigan did have some struggles on faceoffs. LSM Chase Brown started the game – but immediately left it – and took a couple more draws in the course of the contest, losing all four he took. That’s not a surprise, but he wasn’t able to muck things up and create 50/50 ground balls, either. He gave up mostly clean wins to the opposing FOGO. Will Biagi had moments of brilliance (a clean win leading to an assist on an Andrew Portnoy goal), but also some struggles. His first three faceoff losses included a clean loss and two violations, and it seemed he was capable of winning draws cleanly or at least winning the clamp, but pretty prone to violating (two penalties over the course of the game) and giving up clean wins. Developing some consistency there is key for him, something John Paul noted.

“We’ll have Brad back pretty soon, and that will help a lot, but Will’s getting some really valuable experience,” Paul said. “Will’s whole thing is consistency. If he can be consistent, he’ll be really good. He’s in a learning phase right now similar to what Brad went through early in the season last year. He struggled when he first came in early in the season and got better and better as the season went on. Will will go through the same thing.”

When Lott comes back, he should be the unquestioned No. 1 on faceoffs. Given the potential that Biagi has, an upgrade there should be a really big deal.

Mercer’s goalies were brutal. Most of Michigan’s scoring came on good looks, but the starter, Mike Nugent, made five saves and gave up nine goals. Backup Ryan Smith proceeded to enter early in the second quarter, and gave up 11 goals while making a single save. Ouch.

Elsewhere

Michigan recap and play-by-play. U-M postgame notes. Mercer version of the boxscore. Bear-oriented recap. Game photos.

Up Next

Yay, it’s a big week on GLS with the in-state Division-1 battle slated for Wednesday at Ultimate Soccer Arenas in Pontiac. Pending the outcome of tomorrow’s Detroit-Mercer game (which will teach us a lot about the Titans in what is a transition year for them), I’m a little more convinced Michigan should have a legit shot to win than I was yesterday.

That said, one game does not a season make, especially with all the intangible factors included in a battle between two programs that are choosing to build in very different ways just 40 miles away from each other. Much more preview content on the way for that game.

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Scores and Schedule: Feb 15, 2014

Today’s schedule, yesterday’s scores…

Yesterday’s Scores

Division-1 Men

Michigan 20, Mercer 7

Collegiate Club Women

Michigan 11, Cal Poly SLO 7
Michigan State 4, Colorado 19
Michigan State 21, Oregon State 20
Grand Valley (Club) @ Western Michigan

Today’s Schedule

Division-3 Men

Albion @ Kenyon, 1 p.m.

Collegiate Club Women

Western Michigan @ Oakland, 12:30 p.m.
Michigan v. Chico State
Michigan State v. USC

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments.

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Michigan and Detroit Preview: Mercer

Michigan tries to get up off the mat after a demoralizing loss to Penn State, while Detroit tries to unveil a (slightly) different program identity and begin 2014 with a bang. Both programs welcome Mercer to Southeast Michigan for indoor games.

Mercer

Mercer Bears Lacrosse

Fear the Bear!

@MercerLacrosse.
Mercer pre-trip notes.

Michigan
Feb. 14 2014. 7 p.m. EST
Oosterbaan Fieldhouse
Live stats
@UMichLacrosse. @GreatLaxState.
Michigan pregame notes. .pdf notes.

Detroit
Feb. 16, 2014. 2 p.m. EST
Ultimate Soccer Arenas Pontiac
Live Stats
@DetroitTitans. @GreatLaxState.
Detroit pregame notes. .pdf notes.

Tempo-Free Profile

The TempoFreeLax.com numbers displayed here are adjusted for strength of schedule, and are obviously last year’s figures, given that Mercer has played all of one game (and against a first-year team) so far. The Bears played the No. 62 schedule – second-easiest in the nation – last season.

Mercer 2013
Pace 67.18 (29)
Poss% 50.88 (24)
Off. Eff. 25.88 (53)
Def. Eff. 38.47 (60)
Pyth% 24.61 (54)

Last year was the Bears’ third at the Division-1 level, and they took a nice step forward getting to three wins (though part of that was strength of schedule, given that they beat the two worst teams in the country).

Mercer played an average pace, which you can expect out of a team with their standing in the nation: they probably want to slow things down to not get blown out, while opponents generally can score pretty quickly when they get the ball. That the Bears had a pretty good possession game helped them slow things down. That was mostly thanks to faceoff success, since their clear and ride were both bottom-13 or so nationally.

The offense was a struggle (like you’d expect from a relatively young program). They reached double-digit goals in all three wins, plus losses to Marquette, Manhattan, and High Point. They didn’t face a murderer’s row, so strength of competition definitely comes into account, and helps them get out of those national depths pre-adjustment.

The defense was really bad, however, and went against four of the worst seven offenses in the country (again, some of that lack of quality in their ranking is on account of the adjustment). There were only two games – a one-goal loss to Towson and the win over St. Joseph’s – where they didn’t allow the opposition to crack double-digits.

All told, it adds up to one of the lesser teams in the country, propped up by the ability to win faceoffs and possess the ball. That helped them slow down the game and keep scoring margins reasonable in some of the losses.

Offense

The positive to a young offense in 2013 is the return of almost all production in 2014. Midfielders Keoni Rausch (eighth on the team in scoring with three goals and four assists) and Tyler Schott (one goal), and attackmen Ian Gehlbach (two goals) and Jay DeBole (a goal and three assists) are the only departures from the offense. That’s 14 of 184 points on the year, so the important guys are back.

That includes all three starting attackmen. Chris Baxa led the way with 33 goals and 10 assists as a freshman, and Zack Ward and Cole Branch are seniors who scored 30 goals and five assists, and 15 goals and 11 assists, respectively.

Harry Baker, also a senior, was the top-scoring midfielder, though he put up just 10 goals and eight assists all year. Tim Geran wasn’t far behind with nine and six, and Eoin Collins had six himself while assisting on six more. Those three were scorers 4-6 down the roster, showing that this is an attack-oriented offense.

Ward (six goals) and Baxa (four goals and two assists) had six points apiece in the season-opener against Boston U, so the focus of the offense likely hasn’t changed. Geran had a goal and three assists, but the new name to watch is freshman James Tautkus, who had two goals and two assists. Three of his points came in the fourth quarter, so he could be more of a depth player in a competitive game.

Detroit’s defense is still a mystery at this point in the year, but for Michigan, high-output attackmen are a problem. That’s an issue from the last two seasons that seemed to persist against Penn State, and while none of these guys are on the TJ Sanders or Shane Sturgis level, they’ll definitely be dangerous.

Defense

Mike Nugent is the returning keeper after playing all but six minutes last year (backup Dillon Volk is no longer with the squad). Despite a somewhat bad overall defense, Nugent put up respectable save numbers, saving .533 of shots faced – and he faced a lot of them. He saved 10 of the 16 he faced last weekend against Boston, though the Terriers likely don’t have the firepower of either Michigan or Detroit.

Senior Michael Emerson and sophomore Matt Lucas started every game last year at close D,  though Emerson didn’t see game action against Boston U last week so his status is unclear. Tim Margiotta started four games as a freshman before getting injured and missing the rest of the year, so he’s back as a redshirt frosh. Junior Matt Campbell started in his stead during the second part of last season.

Senior Wilton McKown and sophomore JT Del Tufo should be the top options at short-stick defensive midfield, after being by far the most-used last year. Del Tufo was the only Bear with double-digit caused turnovers (not a focus of the defensive scheme, unsurprising with a pretty good goalie).

Without takeaway defenders, Mercer seems more focused on taking away good looks and that’s something Detroit, with plenty of offensive talent, should be able to crack. Michigan’s more of a question mark, but we’ll see how the young players on the roster allow for others (including fellow youngsters like sophomore middie Kyle Jackson and freshman attack Ian King) to create.

Special Teams

The faceoff game was the biggest advantage Mercer had last year. Now a junior, justin Evans won .561 of his draws, picking up many of the ground balls by himself. Backup Tyler Schott is gone, so if Evans isn’t working out, we’ll have to see a totally new player on draws. Both Michigan and Detroit have had their runs of success and struggle on faceoffs. Detroit has a number of options – for the first time in a while, they can mix things up and put another successful guy in on draws – and I think they should be able to battle Evans pretty even. If one guy isn’t working out, switching between Damien Hicks/Tyler Corcoran/Ryan Tarzia can make something work. Michigan has a couple options, but none of them other than Brad Lott have seen much success. There’s a chance the Wolverines battle Evans pretty even, but if things aren’t working out, focusing on the prevention of clean wins (and therefore fastbreak opportunities) will become the focus.

Mercer was a bad clearing team last year, hitting the .831 success rate, good for No. 52 nationally. That’s the expectation with a young squad, and given the big leap in experience this spring, it should get a bit better. Still, it’s something that both Michigan teams have a chance to exploit. Both have employed heavy riding off-and-on over time, and can pull it out of the playbook if needed. In the ride game, Mercer was No. 50 nationally. It’s unclear whether that’s a philosophical thing or their just not being very good. Detroit’s clear was really bad last year, and though Michigan’s was better, it still wasn’t great. Both teams should be able to have success.

Lucas, Campbell, and Del Tufo were the team leaders in committing penalties. That’s something to watch, given that Mercer played a pretty sloppy brand of lacrosse last year, with many more penalties than opponents. Their EMO was terrible, and the man-down defense wasn’t great, either. The Bears are going to want to clean up their game at all costs, because it can beat them to commit as many penalties as they did last year. They were really clean against Boston, but that comes with all the caveats of facing a first-year team. Michigan has traditionally been very clean while Detroit has been a little more penalty-prone. With a less aggressive defense expected from this edition of the Titans, look for both teams to have something of an advantage.

Big Picture

Both Michigan and Detroit should have the opportunity to succeed against a program that’s not yet established, and wasn’t very good last year. While Michigan will be coming off an emotional low of the Penn State game and Mercer is off the high of blowing out Boston University, the talent difference between these two teams should come into play. U-M does have more talent, even if the best players aren’t experienced yet.

For Detroit, this should be an opportunity to test-run a different focus. With the best defensive players from a year ago moving on and most of the offensive standouts returning, the aggressive takeaway defense won’t be needed as much. Protecting the goalie and allowing the offense to be possession-oriented (and preferably successful on those possessions) is the new look.

Both teams are looking at Mercer as one of the closest things to a sure win this season, and either of them losing to the Bears would be quite bad indeed.

Predictions

Starting with Michigan:

  • The Wolverines seem to play better in Oosterbaan Fieldhouse, so the location is an advantage in that regard. Expect them to be as crisp as you’ll see them all season. The offensive execution is sharp, while other teams have trouble adjusting to the lighting, etc.
  • Mercer has an edge on faceoffs regardless of whether Brad Lott plays, but it’s not a significant margin (and even closer if Lott is in). The fast break is in play once or twice though, thanks to a clean win from Evans.
  • Michigan will see a player or two notch his first career point. That’s likely to be an assist from a faceoff man (or a goal or assist from redshirt freshman attack Brendan Gaughan), since the most likely options – Mikie Schlosser and Ian King – notched against Penn State.
  • Mercer will have some openings on the inside from attackmen in what has become a very frustrating Michigan tradition. Either they’ll have to clean that up, Robbie Zonino will have to play a better game than he did against Penn State, or the scheme might have to get adjusted without Gerald Logan between the pipes.

I feel a fast-paced game coming on (not least of which because that probably benefits Michigan). The Wolverines run out to a 3-0 lead, and while Mercer has a couple medium-sized runs during the game, U-M is able to take it comfortably, 16-10.

As for Detroit:

  • The identity change works out in this one. Detroit is able to get attackmen open on dodges, open shooting lanes for Mike Birney and other midfielders, and put together a very impressive offensive performance.
  • The defense, on the other hand, will take some lumps early in the year. Over the past couple years, we’ve seen the Titans go away from the pressure defense, then snap back into it (successfully so) once a more passive scheme didn’t work out. Given the roster makeup of this squad, they should be able to stick with it longer, but they’ll have to adjust.
  • This should be a game featuring a lot of EMOs – something that really benefits the Titans. Look for at least one bomb on the extra-man from Birney, and some solid scoring with the advantage.

Detroit’s program is far more stable, identity change or not. UDM is also used to playing in the friendly confines of Ultimate Soccer, and they can ride that comfort to an early lead before Mercer adjusts. Titans build a lead then ride it out, working through new offensive sets more than just trying to score all game. Detroit takes it by a 16-5 score.

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

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 14, 2014

Today’s schedule, yesterday’s scores…

Yesterday’s Scores

Collegiate Club Women

Michigan 11, BYU 8

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan v. Mercer, 7 p.m. Oosterbaan Fieldhouse

Collegiate Club Women

Michigan v. Cal Poly SLO
Michigan State v. Colorado
Michigan State v. Oregon State
Grand Valley (Club) @ Western Michigan

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments.

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Lax Links: Feb. 13, 2014

Time to round up the latest. As always, links, press releases, college commitments, etc. can find the inbox on Twitter or via e-mail.

Division-1

The UDM athletic apartment is going ham on preseason preview videos. Most interesting to me (though it’s the oldest) was the practice report, so that’s the one that gets the embed:

Defense preview. Offense preview.

If you’re looking for tickets to Detroit’s games at Ultimate Soccer Arenas (against Mercer Sunday and Michigan next Wednesday), you can buy them through the UDM website.

The Titans received their MAAC Championship rings at a recent UDM basketball game. Outlook for this spring in the Metro Atlantic. Detroit was officially picked to finish second, with attack Alex Maini and midfielder Mike Birney named preseason all-conference.

College Crosse runs through the ECAC. Michigan will try to make some noise in the final year of the conference’s existence. You can see the official ECAC media guide here, and John Paul’s appearance at conference media day on Youtube.

After Gerald Logan was ruled out for the season, Michigan was in need of a new goalie for depth, and student body walkon Bobby Riso will be the man.

Michigan had a team head-shaving… uh… party? for the vs. Cancer foundation. Jason Rubenstein of the Michigan Daily covers the event. U-M freshman faceoff specialist discusses it in his Under The Arch blog.

LaxBuzz previews Michigan. Lacrosse All-Stars does the same.

The Michigan women are having an open practice in Oosterbaan Fieldhouse Saturday.

Division-3

Albion’s Kevin O’Grady and Kyle Formanczyk were the offensive and defensive players of the week in the MIAA last week.

MCLA

UM-Dearborn’s team is as serious as it gets when it comes to MCLA programs, what with press releases announcing new assistants and all. Patrick Riley will coach the goalies and defense in Dearborn this spring.

Lacrosse All-Stars grades the schedules for the entirety of the CCLA-1 and the CCLA-2. Michigan State and Davenport earn A+ marks for the top division, and Siena Heights gets the top honor in Division-2.

High School

The Saginaw Heritage lacrosse community was hit with tragedy in January when senior A.J. Stewart lost his battle with thyroid cancer. Obviously, lacrosse is the last thing on anyone’s radar when a high school kid dies, but that’s one more community Stewart touched.

Brother Rice takes the No. 6 spot in Student Sports Lacrosse’s preseason Midwest/West rankings.

Camps/Clinics

Robert Morris University is based in Moon Township, Pennsylvania. Makes it tough to attend a girls’ lacrosse clinic there, right? Well, it’s your lucky day! (Or rather, March 8 is your lucky day). RMU head coach Katy Philllips, along with her assistants and players, will host a clinic at Country Day that afternoon, on the eve of the Colonials’ game at Detroit. It’s 60 bucks to attend, which includes the cost of a t-shirt. The high school girls hit the field at 1 p.m., younger girls at 4 p.m. Hit up Robert Morris’s website for more details.

The Brine National Lacrosse Classic tryouts took place last weekend at U-M, and TopLaxRecruits has your player reaction and final roster. The main event takes place this summer in Maryland. They also covered the girls’ tryout at Country Day.

The Wolverine War team camp in Ann Arbor will take place July 19-20 this summer.

True Lacrosse is holding a summer camp at Orchard Lake St. Mary’s June 23-26. There are options for commuters and overnight campers.

The Davenport women are hosting a clinic in just over a week. Separate events for offensive and defensive player Feb. 23 in Grand Rapids.

Recruiting

The Hometown Life article covering Signing Day in Bloomfield Hills includes to lacrosse players: Marie D’Angelo (Grand Valley State) and Emma Mucci (Detroit). “Hometown Life” remains an extremely bizarre name for a newspaper.

Inside Lacrosse runs down the commitment of 2014 D Will Kane to Detroit.

He is a three year letterman for Dallas Jesuit and was a starter my 2012-2013 season (junior year). This summer with Iron Horse Lacrosse Club he attended Baltimore Summer Kickoff, King of the Hill, and was an all star at Laxachusetts and at T99.

I presume he signed the first Wednesday of February, but I have seen no evidence of such.

Orchard Lake St. Mary’s 2014 midfielder Brent Lubin committed to the new Division-1 program at NJIT.

Washington (D.C.) Gonzaga 2017 midfielder Bran Townsend committed to Michigan.

Clarkston 2014 defenseman Scott Allen committed to Michigan State. So too did L’Anse Creuse North defenseman Tevor Green. Spartans are loading up on D with Eric McLean of Rochester Adams also joining the class.

Due to the unfortunate rule of allowing a maximum of four poles on the field at a time, Michigan State will also have to recruit other positions. Fortunately, Rochester Adams midfielder Brendan Mamon has pledged to the Spartans.

Forest Hills Central midfielder Kevin Barissi committed to Trine University.

Class of 2016 defenseman Curtis Alexander of Deerfield (Mass.) Academy committed to Michigan this week.

Job Openings

Grand Blanc and Waterford are still seeking coaches.

Utica Ford is looking for a JV coach.

The Next Level

West Bloomfield graduate Caleb McCurtis is now plying his trade at Ohio Valley University in West Virginia. Not bad for a kid who didn’t give lacrosse a second thought when he first entered high school.

Tommy McKee, a Holt alumnus, and the rest of the Air Force attack earn distinction from Inside Lacrosse.

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 13, 2014

Today’s schedule, yesterday’s scores…

Today’s Schedule

Collegiate Club Women

Michigan v. BYU

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments.

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The Next Level: Feb. 11, 2014

Our annual look at Michigan natives who are playing college lacrosse at division-1 institutions this spring. The season has snuck up on me, so getting this post up before games begin this weekend…

Air Force 8, Denver 14

  • Senior attack Tommy McKee (Holt) – Started and scored three Goals on six Shots. Also committed two turnovers and one penalty for 1:00.

Boston University 6, Mercer 17

  • Freshman midfielder Greg Marzec (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.

Marquette 6, Lehigh 13

  • Redshirt sophomore midfielder K.C. Kennedy (Brother Rice) – Lost all three of his faceoff attempts.
  • Sophomore attack Henry Nelson (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.

Michigan 7, Penn State 22

  • 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) – Recorded three Assists.
  • Junior attack Will Meter (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Thomas Orr (Detroit Catholic Central) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Senior midfielder Tom Sardelli (Notre Dame Prep) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior LSM Dakota Sherman (Cranbrook) – Caused one turnover and 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.

Ohio State 9, Johns Hopkins 10 (3OT)

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

Richmond 12, Virginia 13

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

Rutgers 13, Manhattan 5

  • Sophomore midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids) – PLayed, but only made the scoresheet by committing one turnover.

VMI 5, Navy 18

  • Junior midfielder Andrew Erber (Dexter) – Took two Shots.

As always, corrections, additions, and scorelines from other divisions are welcome in the comments.

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Michigan 7, Penn State 22

I wasn’t expecting a Michigan win in this one, but the degree to which they were blown out came as a surprise. Scoring against Austin Kaut and Co. was a known tall task. Penn State’s ability to score seemingly at will on the other end of the field was the surprise.

Tempo Free

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

Penn State 2014
Michigan Penn State
Faceoff Wins 12 Faceoff Wins 20
Clearing 12-13 Clearing 15-17
Possessions 27 Possessions 38
Goals 7 Goals 22
Offensive Efficiency .259 Offensive Efficiency .579

By last year’s standards, this was an average-paced game between the teams (with 65 possessions, it splits the difference between the Nittany Lions’ 64 and Wolverines’ 66). Penn State dominated that possession, though they didn’t really need to do so given the disparity in the offensive outputs.

Notes

(Quick note – there are discrepancies between the official box scores on the Michigan and PSU websites, so for now I’m trusting the Penn State version as gospel, since it doesn’t credit TJ Sanders with an assist on one of his own goals…).

We’ll start where the problems really got started for Michigan – possession. Though the Wolverines cleared very well, they had far fewer opportunities to do so (their possessions ended with a Penn State clearing attempt; Penn State’s possessions ended with a goal and a faceoff), and the battle on faceoffs went decidedly in the Nittany Lions’ direction. Brad Lott did not play, though I was expecting him to, and that (hopefully) accounts for some of the issues there. Will Biagi had a decent 4/9 performance on faceoffs, but Kevin Wylie and LSM Chase Brown combined for a .348 mark, allowing for PSU’s advantage in possession. Penn State also had three goals directly off faceoff wins, and though that wasn’t the key to their offensive success, it certainly didn’t hurt.

The biggest key to Michigan’s defensive struggle seemed to be goalkeeping. U-M’s goalie duo combined for 22 goals against and just six saves. Depending on which box you trust, both Zonino and D’Alessio gave up 11 (Michigan version) or Zonino gave up 14 and D’Alessio gave up eight (Penn State version). Either way, the freshman made five saves while D’Alessio saved just one shot. Maybe Penn State is that talented, but given that only six of their 22 goals were assisted(!), I tend to think some of it is on the keepers – with another hefty portion of the blame going to individual defense against dodgers. Now that Zonino has a game under his belt with the pressure of a D-1 game, hopefully he’ll be able to make some quick adjustments and improve.

Penn State’s scoring production was dominated by the Nittany Lions’ two best-known threats, senior attack Shane Sturgis and sophomore linemate T.J. Sanders. That one attackman (Tyler Melnyk) accounted for most of the scoring in the Marquette scrimmage is one thing, but with a true scouting report installed and Penn State’s offense not exactly a mystery, this is troubling. Michigan’s longpoles are banged up quite a bit, but one-on-one dodging seemed to destroy them on a couple occasions (and the goalkeeping, again, will take a step back with Gerald Logan out injured). The third starter at attack, Kyle Baier, added three goals for good measure. (There’s something to be said for Sanders scoring two of his goals, Sturgis scoring one, and Baier two after Penn State had a ten-goal second-half lead. Tambroni didn’t exactly call off the dogs on offense, even when Michigan switched to a walkon goalie).

When they got possession, Michigan’s offensive players actually did a pretty good job holding onto the rock. Eight turnovers in 27 possessions doesn’t look great, but the Wolverines did manage to launch 35 shots (albeit with only 17 on goal), so they had the ball enough to actually do the things needed to score gong forward against defenses that are slightly less awesome.

…and the awesomeness of the Penn State defense really is that notable, as mentioned above. Even though only three of Michigan’s seven goals came against Austin Kaut (backup Conor Darcy allowed four and saved four in just over 20 minutes of action), U-M won’t face Kaut again this year. Nor will they face as talented a unit of defensemen.

Onto the good side of things for Michigan, where there were some encouraging offensive performances. Freshman Ian King was the only multi-goal scorer with two (albeit with nine shots and only five on goal), but sophomore attack Riley Kennedy notched three assists. He assist both of King’s goals and on David McCormack’s score, as well. Thomas Paras, Mike Hernandez, David Joseph, and freshman Mikie Schlosser accounted for the rest of Michigan’s goals, all unassisted. With the way some units are banged up (Michigan isn’t running a true lefty at attack right now), there’s room for improvement, especially when facing reasonable defenses.

Michigan had a ton of EMO opportunities (seven), and though they cashed in on three of them, they’ll have to do better in the future to capitalize on what opponents are giving them. A great goalie is one killer man-down advantage, so give them a slight pass against Kaut. But, uh, they had a 6-on-3 opportunity in the second quarter and couldn’t score. That’s really not good.

Elsewhere

The Penn State version of the boxscore, and the Michigan version. U-M game recap. Penn State game recap. Penn State photo gallery. Snuff film shows a soft goal or two and some scary defense:

Up Next

Things get a little bit easier this week, going from the No. 6 team in last year’s final TFL ratings to the No. 54 team in the ledger in Mercer. U-M will return home to face the Bears at home in Oosterbaan Fieldhouse. That venue has been Michigan’s best in the short history of the program (better than Michigan Stadium, even), and this is a rare opportunity for a win.

Mercer beat first-year program Boston U by a 17-6 score over the weekend, so the Bears certainly won’t be a pushover (also evidenced by the fact that they won three games last year, albeit against the worst two teams in the country and a St. Joseph’s squad that also lost to Michigan).

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 9, 2014

Today’s schedule, yesterday’s scores…

Yesterday’s Scores

Division-1 Men

Michigan 7, Penn State 22

MCLA

Siena Heights 13, Central Michigan 12

Collegiate Club Women

Central Michigan v. Western Michigan

Today’s Schedule

Nothin’ 🙁

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments.

Posted in division 1, mcla, wcla | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Scores and Schedule: Feb. 8, 2013

Today’s schedule, yesterday’s scores…

Yesterday’s Scores

Division-1 Women

Detroit 3, Ohio State 18

Division-3 Men

Calvin 1, Carthage 23
Albion 15, Carthage 12

MCLA

Michigan State 13, Grand Valley State 9
Central Michigan 18, Saginaw Valley 5

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan @ Penn State, 1 p.m.

MCLA

Siena Heights @ Central Michigan, 6:30 p.m.

Corrections, omissions, etc. always appreciated in the comments.

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