Michigan Preview: Marquette

Scrimmage season is upon us, with the Wolverines taking on two opponents (I’m not spending much time previewing D-3 Denison) at Oosterbaan Fieldhouse tomorrow. U-M smoked the Marquette Golden Eagles the week before beginning the 2013 season… and went on to achieve less than MU did over the course of the year. Scrimmage can be weird.

Marquette

Marquette Golden Eagles Lacrosse logo

Not many good Marquette lacrosse logos available on the internet :/

1 p.m. EST
Feb. 1, 2014
Oosterbaan Fieldhouse
Free Admission
@GreatLaxState, @UMichLacrosse, @MarquetteMLax

Tempo-Free Profile

Marquette is a regular-season opponent for Detroit, so get used to seeing these numbers: they’ll be back Monday(ish). The TempoFreeLax.com numbers displayed here are last season’s adjusted for strength of schedule. Marquette played a schedule last year that was just about dead center in the middle of the country when it comes to difficulty (No. 31, compared to Michigan’s No. 19).

Marquette 2013
Pace 66.07 (34)
Poss% 47.78 (52)
Off. Eff. 27.79 (46)
Def. Eff. 37.70 (58)
Pyth% 22.79 (55)

MU achieved well above expectations in the W-L column last year. They played a slightly-tougher-than-average slate, and their pythagorean win percentage (which determines the percentage of games you’d expect them to win against an average schedule) estimated barely more than three wins in their 14 tries – they got five. Part of that was losing uncompetitively against some of the best teams in the country while beating the weak sisters of the schedule – high variance in team quality there.

Either way, Marquette wasn’t all that good last year. The possession mark was poor, thanks to struggles facing off an an uninspiring ride (they actually cleared quite well for a new program).

The defense was really poor, barely climbing out of the bottom five in the country. That’s no surprise with a new program, but it was pleasantly surprising to see an offense that could actually do things in year one. That’s a product, in part, of having two years’ recruiting on campus (and some high-profile transfers) by the time you ever play a game.

The Team

Marquette already has a scrimmage under its belt, taking on High Point in a game that not only didn’t include full statistics, but in which they didn’t even keep score (usually you’ll see an “unofficial score” at least mentioned). They should be a bit more ready for actual game action than Michigan.

Fifth-year senior (and Presbyterian transfer) Tyler Melnyk, and sophomore Conor Gately, both attackmen, are the leading returning scorers, and were neck-and-neck last season atop the Golden Eagles’ leaderboard with 38 and 36 points, respectively. The 6-0, 195-pound Melnyk is more the finisher, and while Gately can either score or distribute, he leans toward assisting. No. 4 scorer Bryan Badolato, the third attackman, probably would have been right up there with them (a true finisher with 15 goals and just three assists on the year), but the Sacred Heart transfer missed nearly half the year for an undisclosed reason. Brother Rice alum Henry Nelson was one of the first attackmen off the bench, with six goals and an assist on the year.

Redshirt sophomore midfielder Kyle Whitlow was a true gunner with 18 goals and five assists. Fellow midfielder Connor Bernal had a similar distribution, but is no longer with the program. Beyond that quintet, a random assortment of players took turns stepping up here and there. Look for the Golden Eagles to rely on the four returners, while trying to develop a true second and third offensive midfielder.

Defensively, senior JJ Sagl (a Goucher College transfer) returns. He played all but about a game and a half of last year, and though his numbers were really bad (.447 save%, 12.71 GAA), some of the blame for that has to fall on the defense. Either way, Gerald Logan he ain’t.

Redshirt sophomore Liam Byrnes is the unquestioned star among the returning defenders, coming off a season in which he caused 18 turnovers and picked up a team-leading 60 GBs – Marquette doesn’t specify, but I suspect he played a lot of LSM (or at least was a faceoff wing). Classmate B.J. Grill wasn’t far behind in CTs with 13, but he only generated 18 ground balls. The third defenseman from last year is now departed in the form of Charley Gargano. Marquette will have to find someone to replace him. Sophomore Jacob Richard was the top short-stick defender last year, and look for that to continue.

The faceoff unit was a struggle for Marquette last year. Hofstra transfer Cullen Cassidy was last year’s most-deployed option, but he was pretty bad, and the fifth-year senior might see a decreased role this season. Brother Rice alum K.C. Kennedy and fellow sophomore Paul Riportella should get more run, since they were better last year.

Big Picture

This is a preseason scrimmage, and therefore it will ultimately be pretty meaningless. Michigan mopped the floors of Oosterbaan with Marquette last year (being a human mop on FieldTurf is reportedly a very unpleasant experience), and the Golden Eagles went on to have a much better season than did the Wolverines.

A lot of factors went into those disparate fates, but either way, we see that a scrimmage probably doesn’t indicate a whole lot about how the season is going to go. It’ll be nice to see some lacrosse – and the new faces on the field – but we’ll have to wait a few more days to see just how much Michigan has improved.

Predictions

It’s fruitless to make predictions about a scrimmage – will the coaches pull starters after a quarter? half? – but I’m in the predictin’ business.

  • Robbie Zonino is going to be a downgrade from Gerald Logan in the net for Michigan. That’s no insult to Zonino, but Logan really is just that good. He wasn’t as highly ranked out of high school, but he was clearly a guy that Inside Lacrosse missed on.
  • Michigan’s offense was bad for the second straight year (no surprise with a new coordinator and losing a lot of experience), but the defense improved. Another step forward – hopefully with a bit better luck on the health front – is possible, though without Logan backstopping the unit, I don’t see it happening.
  • One guy that I think will make IL look very smart, on the other hand, is freshman midfielder Mikie Schlosser. He’s been varying degrees of banged up during fall ball and early spring practice, but could be one of the better offensive midfielders on the team. If he’s as good as advertised, he could provide a third formidable midfielder, and third young one along with the well-known sophomore duo Kyle Jackson and Mike Hernandez.
  • IF Schlosser can develop as advertised, that might give fifth-year Thomas Paras the ability to move back to attack (where he excelled early in his career), or just give the first deep midfield unit of Michigan’s varsity existence. Paras missed most of last year, so adding him back to the lineup is a boost wherever he plays.

I think Michigan will take the next big step forward this year, and while that might mean only 3-4 regular-season wins, they showed last preseason that even a bad U-M squad could take it to Marquette. I think improvement from both squads will see a closer score, but the same result. Michigan ‘wins’ 13-9.

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

Posted in division 1, previews | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Michigan Preview: Marquette

The Next Level: Michigan natives playing Division-1 lacrosse in 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

  • Senior attack Tommy McKee (Holt)

Bellarmine

  • Freshman attack/midfield Graham Macko (Brother Rice)

Boston University

  • Freshman midfielder Greg Marzec (Brother Rice)

Canisius

  • Freshman midfielder Steve Wizniuk (Warren De La Salle)

Delaware

  • Junior midfielder Bennett Packer (Brother Rice)

Detroit

  • Junior attack Brandon Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Freshman attack Kyle Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Junior midfielder Mike Birney (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Junior defenseman Matt Burnett (Clarkston)
  • Redshirt senior midfielder Tyler Corcoran (South Lyon)
  • Sophomore LSM Nick Demattia (Clarkston)
  • Junior midfielder Scott Drummond (Birmingham Seaholm)
  • Redshirt freshman goalie Connor Flynn (Rockford)
  • Senior midfielder Nick Garippa (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Junior defenseman Joe Gifford (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Freshman attack Alec Gilhooly (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Freshman midfielder Ben Gjokaj (Walled Lake Central)
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Brad Harris (Saline)
  • Sophomore midfielder Andy Hebden (Brother Rice)
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder JD Hess (Birmingham Seaholm)
  • Senior midfielder Joe MacLean (Detroit Country Day)
  • Freshman defenseman Bryan Matney (Ann Arbor Pioneer)
  • Sophomore attack Nick Melucci (Northville)
  • Senior LSM Tim Robertson (Notre Same Prep)
  • Senior midfielder Drew Schupbach (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s)
  • Junior midfielder Thomas Sible (Forest Hills Central)
  • Sophomore midfielder Mike Spuller (Dexter)
  • Senior attack Tyler Staruch (Brighton)
  • Freshman attack Adam Susalla (Birmingham Seaholm)
  • Senior D/LSM Mike Wenderski (UD-Jesuit)
  • Sophomore defenseman Jordan Yono (Detroit Catholic Central)

Georgetown

  • Senior midfielder Grant Fisher (Brother Rice)

Hartford

  • Freshman defenseman Bennett Dipzinski (Forest Hills Northern)

Marquette

  • Redshirt sophomore midfielder K.C. Kennedy (Brother Rice)
  • Sophomore attack Henry Nelson (Brother Rice)

Michigan

  • Freshman midfielder Brian Archer (Brighton)
  • Junior defenseman Mack Gembis (Cranbrook)
  • Sophomore attack Riley Kennedy (Brother Rice)
  • Junior attack Will Meter (Brother Rice)
  • Junior midfielder Thomas Orr (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Senior midfielder Tom Sardelli (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Senior LSM Dakota Sherman (Cranbrook)
  • Sophomore defenseman Chris Walker (Brother Rice)
  • Redshirt junior defenseman Max Zwolan (Ann Arbor Pioneer)

Notre Dame

  • Freshman midfielder Sergio Perkovic (Brother Rice)

Ohio State

  • Senior midfielder Nick Diegel (Northville)

Penn

  • Freshman goalie Ahmed Iftikhar (Detroit Country Day)

Richmond

  • Freshman attack J.P. Forester (Brother Rice)

Robert Morris

  • Freshman attack Kento Nakano (Rockford)

Rutgers

  • Sophomore midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids)

Sacred Heart

  • Junior midfielder Joe Kemp (Troy Athens)

St. John’s

  • Freshman midfielder David Stafford (Mattawan)

VMI

  • Junior midfielder Andrew Erber (Dexter)

Yale

  • Freshman midfielder John Lazarsfeld (Ann Arbor Greenhills)

Schools with none: Albany, Army, Binghamton, Brown, Bryant, Bucknell, Colgate, Cornell, Dartmouth, Denver, Drexel, Duke, Fairfield, Furman, Harvard, High Point, Hobart, Hofstra, Holy Cross, Jacksonville, Johns Hopkins, Lafayette, Lehigh, Loyola, Manhattan, Marist, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mercer, Monmouth, Mount St. Mary’s, Navy, North Carolina, Penn State, Princeton, Providence, Quinnipiac, Saint Joseph’s, Siena, Stony Brook, Syracuse, Towson, UMBC, Vermont, Villanova, Virginia, Wagner, and Yale.

There are 53 players listed on 19 different teams, a decrease in overall numbers, but an increase in diversity of programs they’re headed to (55 and 13, respectively). There are nine homegrown players on Michigan’s roster, and 26 on Detroit’s roster.

Posted in division 1 | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

First Look: Michigan other opponents

I ran down Michigan and Detroit’s common opponents yesterday, and since the Wolverines’ regular season begins before the Titans’, let’s look at the remainder of the U-M schedule.

Penn State

Penn State Nittany Lions Lacrosse

Fear the Nittany Lion!

Michigan: Feb. 8 (away)

2013

12-5 (6-0 CAA), #13 Laxpower, #6 Tempo-Free Lax

Penn State was a high-achieving squad last year, including an undefeated run through the Colonial Athletic Association and culminating in a defeat to Yale in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The Nittany Lions will try to take the next step this year, though the CAA’s automatic bid is not on the table thanks to some petty athletic director bickering on account of the creation of the Big Ten Conference (starting next season).

The Past Results

As was often the case last season, Michigan ran pretty tight with Penn State for a half before running out of gas and giving up a big run en route to an 11-6 defeat. Excellent goalkeeping by Gerald Logan held PSU’s score down, but five goals on five SOGs in the third quarter opened up a comfortable Nittany Lion margin, and they cruised to the finish.

As was the case last year, this is the first regular-season game of the Wolverines’ season. We got to experience freshman phenom Kyle Jackson (2G, 1A) for the first time, and though Michigan was playing slightly shorthanded, there were glimpses of a positive future for Michigan. Everybody who scored for U-M last year returns this season, as well.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Penn State 2013
Pace 64.00 (46)
Poss% 53.81 (5)
Off. Eff. 31.08 (24)
Def. Eff. 25.07 (7)
Pyth% 75.72 (6)

Penn State’s top unit was the defense last year, led by exceptional goalkeeper Austin Kaut. He’s a preseason All-American by just about everyone in the country, so don’t expect any dropoff between the pipes. Defensemen Steven Bogert, JP Burnside, Jack Donnelly, and Tyler Travis all return, as does SSDM Michael Richards. This defense should be ridiculous. Nittany Lions won’t be giving up many goals.

On the other side of the ball, Penn State was above average, but not elite. Leading scorer Jack Forster has graduated, but attackman TJ Sanders was second on the list – and just a freshman. Shane Sturgis and perfectly-named Tommy LaCrosse are back, as well. Brother Rice alum Nick Dolik was fifth on the team in scoring, and has graduated, but as long as Penn State can adapt to not running through Forster, the offense should take another step forward.

The possession game is a big question mark. Brother Rice alum Danny Henneghan was one of the country’s best FOGOs last year, and took all but 10 draws(!) for the Nittany Lions last year. Whoever replaces him will not have a ton of recent experience, and one must assume he’ll be a downgrade from Henneghan. The Nittany Lions were a great clearing team and a good-not-great riding team last year, so their possession advantage will likely take a step back.

Johns Hopkins

Johns Hopkins Blue Jays lacrosse logo

The first bird-based mascot in the Big Ten.

Michigan: Feb. 22 (away)

2013

9-5, No. 3 LaxPower, No. 2 Tempo-Free Lacrosse

From this observer’s estimation, the end of Hopkins’s infinity-year NCAA Tournament streak last year was nothing other than a bad beat. Despite not running up a pristine record, the Blue Jays had one of the best squads in the country. This year, they’ll be out for blood, trying to prove that it was a one-year aberration, not the end of the Hopkins dynasty (even though JHU is actually joining a conference – the Big Ten – for the first time ever next season).

The Past Results

Michigan traveled to Baltimore last spring, and things did not go well. The Wolverines scored the first goal of the game, then didn’t find the back of the net again until after letting Hopkins build an 8-1 lead. After that point, U-M played a relatively good game to only be outscored 9-7, but yeah, that’s not a good look when you’re starting from seven goals back.

Eight different Blue Jays had multi-point outings, seven of whom had multiple goals (the last, midfielder John Greeley, had two assists). The efficiency margin wasn’t that bad for Michigan – the deficit was less than .018 – but Hopkins absolutely dominated possession. Unstoppable Faceoff God Mike Poppleton won 17 of 18 draws before JHU coach Dave Pietremala let some of his depth players see the field. They still managed to go 8/11.

Bright spots for Michigan were two goals apiece for Kyle Jackson and Peter Kraus, and a 12-save game out of Gerald Logan.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Johns Hopkins 2013
Pace 68.64 (20)
Poss% 55.46 (2)
Off. Eff. 30.56 (27)
Def. Eff. 24.32 (4)
Pyth% 80.03 (2)

Hopkins has been known as something of a slowdown team, so playing at above-average pace was a welcome change. The Jays felt comfortable doing that because they dominated the draws with Poppleton there, and although he’s gone, new top man Mike Kennedy was damn good as well. They should be able to not slide too much there. Hopkins had a great clear (you’d expect that from teams with good athletes and good sticks, right?) and unlike a lot of top teams, they rode pretty hard at times.

Offensively, Wells Stanwick led the way in scoring, and although he’s a preseason All-American (honorable mention) according to IL, he’s not yet the player that older brother Steele was at Virginia. Senior midfielder Rob Guida is the other dangerman, though he missed most of last season due to injury. Zach Palmer and John Ranagan depart, but the Jays return plenty of talent, and should be expected to add more through recruiting.

LSM Michael Pellegrino is Hopkins’ only second-team All-American according to Inside Lacrosse, and the only defensive player honored by the publication at all. Chris Lightner and Tucker Durkin are both gone, as is goalkeeper Pierce Bassett. While Hopkins had an extremely good defense last year, it’s fair to assume they’ll take a step back.

Cornell

Cornell Big Red Lacrosse Logo

Bears: considered way scarier than the color red. FACT.

Michigan: March 1 (home – Oosterbaan Fieldhouse)

2013

14-4 (6-0 Ivy), #1 Laxpower, #1 Tempo-Free Lacrosse

Cornell was the best team in the country last year, and although the Big Red fell to Duke in the NCAA Tournament, they finished atop the heap by all the advanced stat dudes (myself included). The Ivy League is a tough conference, and they ran through it undefeated – but their defeat in the league tournament final foreshadowed the Duke loss.

The Past Results

This will be Michigan’s first-ever matchup with the Big Red. Probably a good thing to do it the year after they lose Rob Pannell.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Cornell 2013
Pace 74.72 (4)
Poss% 51.15 (21)
Off. Eff. 38.59 (6)
Def. Eff. 24.37 (5)
Pyth% 82.75 (1)

Cornell was elite at just about everything last year, so we’ll start with the one area that gave them occasional struggles – possession. Doug Tesoriero was good on draws, and the Big Red emphasized the ride more than most elite teams tend to. What was the problem then? A surprisingly weak clearing game, barely above the midway mark in the nation.

Cornell had firepower on firepower last year. Rob Pannell put up a huge 102-point year, Steve Mock scored 60 goals, Max Van Bourgondien was fourth on the team in scoring, and Connor English was sixth. The good news? All those dudes are gone. An absurdly prolific offense losing that amount of talent… probably won’t repeat as absurdly prolific. Junior midfielder Connor Buczek and attackman Matt Donovan (both preseason AA selections) are the leading returners, but it’s clear that the offense will have to be re-shaped.

On the defensive side of the ball, Matt Noble is gone, but Tom Freshour and Jordan Stevens return. That’s not the whole unit, but it’s a pretty good returning corps. Unfortunately, goalkeeper AJ Fiore is also out the door. He played all but about 45 minutes of the season, and saved well over half the shots he faced. He’s a big loss.

Clearly, Cornell has lost the most important pieces of every unit on the field. While that doesn’t mean they’re going to be at Michigan’s level, it sure means they aren’t likely to repeat as the TFL Mythical National Champion.

High Point

High Point University Panthers Lacrosse

No Panther in the logo :-/

Michigan: March 5 (away)

2013

3-12, #60 LaxPower, #60 Tempo-Free Lax

High Point was a first-year team last season, and actually achieved pretty well, all things considered. Three wins is a good debut season, even if Marquette managed to outdo HPU with a 5-9 year. Expect the standard step forward in year two.

The Past Results

Michigan actually managed to – gulp – lose to High Point last year, in one of its most disappointing performances on the season. A 4-4 first quarter was followed by three straight quarters of a one-goal deficit on Michigan’s end. U-M’s big problem was its tendency to turn the ball over (particularly on clears), combined with getting dominated on ground balls.

Practically the entire Michigan offense ran through freshman midfielders Mike Hernandez (four goals) and Kyle Jackson (a goal and four assists). Hernandez, however, was one of Michigan’s turnover culprits with three – D-middie Dan Kinek was up there as well. Michigan got many fewer shots off than the Panthers, despite 10 a pop from Hernandez and Jackson.

Goalie Gerald Logan made 16 saves, and it still wasn’t enough for his team to win. For all the turnover issues, the defense wasn’t up to snuff either. Dan Lomas and Matt Thistle were the main beneficiaries of that, with six points each.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

High Point 2013
Pace 68.07 (24)
Poss% 47.60 (53)
Off. Eff. 24.50 (59)
Def. Eff. 37.45 (57)
Pyth% 16.60 (60)

Lomas and Thistle were High Point’s leading scorers last year, and although it was a first-year program, they actually lost No. 3 Michael Messenger coming into 2014 (he transferred to D-2 Limestone). The rest of the squad pretty much returns intact… but as you can see at the left, it ain’t much to build upon.

It’s a similar story on defense. Goalie Austin Geisler is back, as are defensemen Garrett Swaim, Jeff Hale, and Pat Farrell. Harris Levine seems to be the primary LSM from last year, and he’s back as well. As is the case with the offense, however, there’s a long road to respectability. Returning experience should help move in that direction, of course.

The Possession game is a relative bright spot, all things considered. New squads are generally terrible clearing the ball, and High Point was actually outside of the bottom quarter of the country. That’s a good building block, on top of which they’ll be adding more good athletes through recruiting. They also rode hard (nascent teams are likely to do that), so if that is scaled back, those factors might balance out. They were just below average on faceoffs, thanks to Jamie Piluso. If he goes wire-to-wire as the starter this year (a few others got a chance last season), the Panthers should get to about .500 on draws, if not better.

Furman

Furman Paladins lacrosse

I feel like joust-as-lacrosse-stick is an underused graphic gimmick here. Step it up.

Michigan: March 8 (away)

This will be the first year of Furman’s program, so there’s not any past evidence to build a basis on them. the general picture is that new programs are sort of terrible until a couple years in, so that’s positive for Michigan’s shot. Negatives include that it’s the second game of a road swing that includes two games over four days, but in Year Three, Michigan should have enough to take care of it.

The key guy to watch for Furman will be Syracuse LSM transfer Ralph D’Agostino. He’s preseason all-conference in his first year at the new school, after being a contributor for the Orange during his true freshman season.

Maryland

Maryland Terps Terrapins Lacrosse

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

Michigan: March 18 (home)

2013

10-4 (2-1 ACC). #5 LaxPower, #3 Tempo-Free Lacrosse

Maryland is obviously one of the traditional powers in the sport, and U-M’s scheduling of them would normally be a big deal. Of course, they’re joining the Big Ten next year, so this will be a conference matchup going forward. The Terrapins were an elite team last year, but their performance in the NCAA Tournament (a first-round blitzing by Cornell) put a huge damper on what was otherwise an excellent season.

The Past Results

First (of many) matchups between Maryland and Michigan.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Maryland 2013
Pace 64.29 (44)
Poss% 53.22 (6)
Off. Eff. 34.64 (14)
Def. Eff. 25.80 (11)
Pyth% 78.81 (3)

Starting with Pace and Possession, since Maryland had a certain… reputation… as a slowdown team (a fairly accurate description) over the past couple seasons. They’re good at controlling the rock, and once they get it, they like to slow things down. Faceoff specialist Jesse Bernhardt departs, but the Terps had Andrew Holmes get some experience last year – in which he performed well. A dropoff – but not a big one – is likely, but I see Maryland running with the same style.

Since they’re a slowdown, rely-on-the-D type of team, let’s look at that defense. Poles Mike Erhardt (first-team) and Goran Murray (second-team) are IL pre-season All-Americans, and goalie Niko Amato is behind only PSU’s Kaut among keepers. Casey Ikeda, the third starter on D, doesn’t get the same level of acclaim, but he’s an experienced senior. The defense should be as good as ever in College Park.

Offensively, leading scorer Kevin Cooper is gone, as are No. 3 Owen Blye, No. 4 John Haus, and No. 5 Jake Bernhardt. That’s a lot of production (124 of Maryland’s 253 total points last year from that quartet alone), but the talent is seemingly always there at Maryland. Senior middie Mike Chanenchuk and junior attack Jay Carlson are the leading returners, and new players will have to step up around them.

St. Joseph’s

Saint Joseph's University Hawks Logo Lacrosse

Fear the Hawk

Michigan: March 22 (home)

2013

5-11 (1-5 CAA), #55 LaxPower, #58 Tempo-Free Lax

St. Joseph’s actually didn’t have that bad a record last year (not that they were the ’85 Bears or anything), so it’s a surprise that their ratings were more in the Michigan range than, say, Delaware, who was one game in the loss column better, playing in the same conference. HOWEVA, they lost three games by double digits, and one to that Michigan team, so…

The Past Results

That’s right, Michigan won a game last year, and they have the opportunity to continue a win streak (for the first time ever, since they didn’t play Mercer in 2013). The two teams played pretty even through three quarters – neither built a lead of more than two goals – before Michigan owned the fourth to bring home the second win in program history.

Brad Lott won 12 of 20 faceoffs, and in a game that came down to the fourth quarter (where he won three of four draws), that can be the difference. Unsurprisingly, Gerald Logan was a rock between the pipes, saving nearly two-thirds of shots faced.

Thomas Paras – in perhaps the only game he played fully healthy all year – scored three goals and assisted on two more. Kyle Jackson scored two himself while adding two assists. Outside of those two, it was a relatively balanced offensive output. Will Meter scored two goals, but five separate Wolverines notched a single point.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

St. Joseph’s 2013
Pace 56.75 (62)
Poss% 44.44 (61)
Off. Eff. 24.32 (60)
Def. Eff. 35.33 (52)
Pyth% 17.06 (58)

That’s a pretty dismal profile. St. Joseph’s played slow all year, but based on their individual factors – can’t possess, can’t score, can’t defend – that was probably all they could do to avoid being blown out in most of their games.

Will Abbott was the primary faceoff specialist last year, and while he wasn’t great by any stretch (.450 on the year), I’ve seen that faceoffs are not all that correlated year-to-year. Decent clear, poor ride, and faceoffs are the one area that St. Joseph’s can take a step up to possess the ball more.

The offense was nearly as bad as the possession game. The bright side is that least year’s scoring unit was led by a freshman (Pat Swanick) and sophomore (Matthew Sarcona) in the attack, and a sophomore (Michael Dougherty) and junior (Johnny Simanski) in the midfielder. All four return, so despite losing the fifth- and sixth-leading scorers, the nucleus of the O is back. That it was as bad as it was in the second year under the same offensive staff is still a question mark.

On defense, Will Farrell, Kevin Barrow, and John Moran all return, as does goalie Dustin Keen. This unit was stronger than the O last year, and if they can benefit from a simple decrease in number of opportunities, getting worn out won’t happen as quickly. I see another step forward here.

Air Force

Air Force Falcons Lacrosse

Is the bird part of the lightning or being struck by it?

Michigan: March 29 (away)

2013

7-7 (2-5 ECAC), #27 LaxPower, #29 Tempo-Free Lax

Air force has seemed to build momentum a couple times in recent history, but has been unable to get over the hump. A loss to Marquette last spring, for example, was a pretty disappointing result. They’ve been a middling ECAC squad, and with the league dissipating after this spring, who knows what the slightly-more-distant future holds?

The Past Results

Michigan – say it with me now – played even with Air Force for a while, then gave up a big run, and recovered to finish the game even. It’s stopping that run – 9-0 in this instance – that is the killer. Holt native Tommy McKee put up two goals and an assist in the Falcons’ win.

For Michigan, the usual suspects stood out. Mike Hernandez and Kyle Jackson each scored two goals, as did attackman Will Meter. Gerald Logan made 11 saves while giving up 10 goals. The Wolverines fought pretty even in possession, but during the Air Force run, the make-it, take-it nature really prevented them from slowing down the Falcons’ momentum.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Air Force 2013
Pace 67.36 (26)
Poss% 48.57 (45)
Off. Eff. 31.24 (22)
Def. Eff. 28.85 (22)
Pyth% 51.73 (29)

Air Force’s numbers were pretty consistent across the board – mid-20s – except for their deficit in possession. The odd thing is that they weren’t poor in any particular facet of the possession game, just not far above average in anything. Two faceoff specialists split time, and both return for their senior years. Bryan Price was better than Erik Smith, but it looks like there was a concentrated effort to give them about the same number of opportunities.

Smith was not a true FOGO, coming in third on the Falcons’ point list, as well. Everyone who joined him in the top six returns this spring (including McKee), so continued development of the offense is expected. Since Smith was the less successful of the faceoff specialists, it might be wise to let him focus a bit more on offense (unless the fast-break opportunities he creates are too much to pass up).

Things aren’t as rosy on defense, where goalie Austin Fox is no longer between the pipes. Matt Puleo and Alex Warden should anchor the defense, with sophomore Luke Leathers stepping up into a bigger role. Without Fox around, the goalie won’t likely be able to see as much rubber as he did and let as few goals through.

Fairfield

fairfield stags lacrosse logo

#Stagswag

Michigan: April 5 (home)

2013

8-7 (4-3 ECAC), #29 LaxPower, #34 Tempo-Free Lax

Fairfield made it into the top four in the ECAC last year, and in the last season of the league’s existence, they simply have to beat out one team (Michigan, most likely) to repeat the feat. They have bigger goals in mind though, with hopes of taking the next step into the NCAA Tournament. Maybe a tall task.

The Past Results

Michigan played Fairfield pretty close on the road last year, perhaps one of their best performances given the location and quality of opponent. A two-goal loss was a pretty good result for last year’s Michigan team, and Fairfield was on the cusp of the national top-half.

Mike Hernandez put up a goal and two assists, David Joseph had one of each, and David McCormack and David Joseph both had two-goal outings. Five of Michigan’s eight goals were assisted, one of the stronger team-play experiences of the year. Brad Lott had a great day on faceoffs, winning 12 of 18, and Gerald Logan (no surprise) saved 17 of 27 shots faced.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Fairfield 2013
Pace 61.72 (55)
Poss% 49.62 (34)
Off. Eff. 29.92 (32)
Def. Eff. 30.94 (32)
Pyth% 46.23 (34)

Fairfield played pretty slowly last year, but everything else was pretty much smack-dab in the middle of the country.

On faceoffs, Michael Roe was actually pretty good, but the overall number looks worse because of other players getting run. He’s back for his fifth year in the program. The Stags were average (duh) in clearing, and didn’t really care to ride much.

Jordan Greenfield, last year’s leading scorer, is back, and after No. 2 scorer Sam Snow, so too are Nos. 3-7 (including “my name is only a little less perfect than Tommy Lacrosse” Tristan Sperry). This is a pretty deep unit with plenty of returning experience. Depth and experience don’t guarantee a good offense, but they don’t hurt.

Goalie Jack Freshour played every second between the pipes last year, and he’s back. Greg Perraut and Toby Armour return in front of him, and though Dan Niebler is gone, there shouldn’t be too much dropoff from one piece of the defense heading out of town. Armour was the team’s enforcer last year, and with Thomas Lukavic returning healthy this year, they should be a tough unit.

Ohio State

Ohio State Buckeyes Lacrosse

A nut with a body. And a lacrosse stick.

Michigan: April 12 (away)

2013

13-4 (5-2 ECAC), #14 Laxpower, #9 Tempo-Free Lax

On the backs of a really good defense and a really good offense, Ohio State put together a great season last year. Despite most of the offensive firepower leaving, they might be even better on defense this year, and that could lead to taking the next step as a program – after winning a tournament game last spring.

The Past Results

Michigan played Ohio state surprisingly close in 2012, but got blown out last year in Michigan Stadium. As usual, the big runs doomed Michigan. The Buckeyes had four- and seven-goal stretches without a Wolverine response that doomed U-M. Aside from that, it would have been a pretty close game, but like, those count too.

Thomas Paras has a huge game against his home-state school, with four goals and an assist on seven shots. Kyle Jackson had two goals and Mike Hernandez had a goal and an assist. Gerald Logan faced 27 shots, but against the likes of Logan Schuss, he wasn’t going to repeat his typical .500-plus performance.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Ohio State 2013
Pace 64.78 (43)
Poss% 53.00 (7)
Off. Eff. 34.67 (13)
Def. Eff. 28.40 (19)
Pyth% 72.92 (9)

Fortunately, Logan Schuss ain’t walkin’ through that door this year. Neither is Dominique Alexander, one of the best true assist-men on the squad. Jesse King, Carter Brown and Turner Evans, on the other hand are back. Still, a talent like Schuss’s can’t be replaced that easily. There will be some growing pains, at the very least.

Defenseman Joe Meurer is a first-team preseason All-America selection by IL, and he’s joined by honorable mentions Dominic Imbordino and Darius Bowling (LSM), and goalie Greg Dutton. The defensive unit should be strong as ever – and they might need to be a bit stronger than last year to make up for some offensive losses.

The possession game should also see a bit of dropoff. FOGO Trey Wilkes has graduated, and he was one of the nation’s best last year. The Buckeyes were a great clearing team last year, and that should continue with most of the defense and midfield back, and they don’t concentrate much on the ride.

Yale

Yale Bulldogs Elis Lacrosse logo

I think they just adapted a crew logo for this.

Michigan: April 19 (away)

2013

12-5 (4-2 Ivy), #7 Laxpower, #7 Tempo-Free Lax

Yale was sort of sneaky-good last year, starting out 3-3 before putting together a really solid backend to the season, losing only to Maryland and Syracuse both on the road (‘Cuse in the NCAA Tournament) to close the season. The Elis played close with a really good Cornell team, but weren’t good enough to upset the Big Red and win the conference.

The Past Results

This will be the first meeting between Michigan and Yale.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Yale 2013
Pace 63.19 (51)
Poss% 53.81 (5)
Off. Eff. 31.19 (23)
Def. Eff. 25.95 (12)
Pyth% 74.64 (7)

Yale’s primary strength last year was a dominating possession game (which, when combined with a pretty slow pace of play, means the Bulldogs faced very few opponent possessions). Senior faceoff specialist Dylan Levings should be able to reprise his standout performance from last year. The clear and ride games were good but nothing special, so it’s all about Levings and his .597 rate.

Attack Brandon Mangan is a third-team pre-season All-American to IL, and he put up 64 points last year. Conrad Oberbeck, the second-leading scorer, is also back, but No. 3 Corey Zdrill has graduated. Colin Flaherty and Ryan McCarthy are back along with Mangan, so most of the scoring punch is back.

It’s the defense that is decimated (though it was pretty good last year). Starting poles Michael McCormack and Peter Johnson are both gone. Michael Quinn started as a freshman, but without the senior support around him, he’ll have to adjust to a new role. In goal, Eric Natale is back.

Stay tuned in coming days, when I’ll run down the rest of the schedules for each team, and then get into full-on season previewin’ mode.

Posted in division 1, previews | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on First Look: Michigan other opponents

Michigan and Detroit Common Opponents

This list is a slightly more extensive list than it was last year, but still pretty limited. These two schools head in different directions – Michigan preparing for the Big Ten Conference while also playing out the final year of the ECAC, Detroit trying to gear up for an NCAA Tournament berth yet again – and face just three common opponents (and a head-to-head matchup).

In something of an odd coincidence, the teams also cross over scrimmage opponents (Detroit scrimmaged Ohio State in the Fall while Michigan has a regular-season game, Michigan will scrimmage MArquette Saturday and the Titans have a regular-season game later n the spring).

Mercer

Mercer Bears Lacrosse

Fear the Bear!

Michigan: Feb. 14 (home, Oosterbaan Fieldhouse)
Detroit: Feb. 16 (Ultimate Soccer Pontiac)

2013

3-8, #58 Laxpower, #54 Tempo-Free Lax

In another interesting twist, both Michigan and Detroit have indoor games in mid-February against a team whose hometown features a balmy 60-degree average that time of year. Go figure. The Bears are in their fourth year as a program, with a one-year head start on Michigan. They’ve been a bottom-ten team all three years, but last year’s finish represented a leap forward.

The Past Results

Detroit last played Mercer two seasons ago, on the road in Macon, Ga. The Titans won comfortably on the strength of a 9-0 run through the third quarter and beginning of the fourth. Without that run, it would actually have been a pretty tight game – the Titans led by just one goal at halftime – but the offensive explosion, led by Scotty Drummond, put the game away with plenty of time to spare.

Mercer is one of two victims of the Michigan Wolverines through two years of the program. U-M’s Team One headed to Jacksonville and thoroughly pasted Mercer 14-4 in 2012. At that point, it was clear that they were well ahead of the Bears, but Mercer made a pretty leap from its second team to last year’s unit. In the 2012 win, four Wolverines who are still around got on the scoreboard (A Will Meter with a goal and two assists, middie Andrew Mosko with a goal, middie Doug Bryant with three goals and an assist, A Thomas Paras with four goals and two assists).

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

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

Mercer’s lone strong point last year was its ability to possess the ball, thanks to the No. 16 faceoff unit in the country. Justin Evans returns to spearhead the Mercer faceoff unit, which should again be quite good. In the other areas of the possession game – clearing and riding – they were pretty bad, so the faceoffs were truly a lone bright spot.

Offensively, Mercer struggled to score, and that wasn’t against a murderer’s row of strong defenses (aside from Bellarmine at No. 1, Towson’s No. 20 D and Air Force’s No. 22 were the only respectable opponents, in fact). Fortunately, their top eight scorers return, and last year’s top point-getter, Chris Baxa, should make a freshman-to-sophomore leap of sorts.

The defense was even worse than the offense last year, rounding up right near the bottom of the country. Top goalie Mike Nugent is back – and should improve in his second year – but there’s a lot of room for improvement. All three starting defenders also return, but they were outside the top eight(!) in GBs on the team. The best defense for Mercer should remain keeping the ball away from the opposing offense.

Robert Morris

Robert Morris Colonials Lacrosse Roster

Robert Morris signed the Declaration of Independence. Also: looked nothing like this picture.

Detroit: Feb. 23 (away)
Michigan: April 26 (home)

2012

8-7 (3-2 NEC), #40 Laxpower, #31 Tempo-Free Lax

Despite playing in a league that was pretty weak, Robert Morris managed to rank much higher on Tempo-Free Lacrosse than on LaxPower – I suspect LaxPower undervalues teams that play at a fast pace. The Colonials managed to notch a winning record – something that Michigan and Detroit can both speak to being pretty difficult – and came to the cusp of making the NCAA tournament before falling in the NEC finals to Bryant.

The Past Results

Michigan will be facing Robert Morris for the first time. Yay Midwest (inasmuch as Pittsburgh identifies more with the Midwest than it does with the rest of Pennsylvania).

Detroit played a pretty slow game (for its standards, at least, with 69 total possessions) in Moon Township last year, but more notable was the combined futility on offense. Robert Morris nearly doubled up the Titans on fewer possessions, and Detroit’s efficiency mark was its lowest of the year. Detroit averaged less than a shot per possession, so they didn’t even shoot poorly on the day, just very infrequently.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Robert Morris 2013
Pace 70.20 (12)
Poss% 46.91 (55)
Off. Eff. 33.17 (16)
Def. Eff. 29.39 (25)
Pyth% 49.79 (31)

Robert Morris had a pretty good offense last year. They lose the Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 7 point-getters off that unit, so there will be something of a re-shaping. The bright news is that last year’s leading scorer was a freshman, and attack Eric Rankel should be able to make a step forward in his second year on campus. Of course, the Colonials seem to know how to put up points, so even with some dropoff, they shouldn’t suddenly drop down to pathetic output levels.

Bobby Mo’s defense was decent, but not quite to the elite level of the offense. It should also see a big dropoff, with starting goalie Charles Ruppert and starting D-pole Ben Lewis graduating. There is enough returning talent in the defensive unit to tread water there, but combined with a new goalie (non-Rupperts played a grand total of 21 minutes last year), there should be a hit.

Robert Morris was a very poor possession team last year, thanks in large part to being the second-worst faceoff unit in the country. With Nicholas Beaudoin struggling mightily, they were content to throw LSM Tyler Rankel out at the dot, and he was predictably bad. Unless a new player can come forward to provide a spark at the position, improvement here would be accountable to the randomness of draws.

Bellarmine

Bellarmine Knights lacrosse

Fear the stylized Knights!

Detroit: March 4 (home)
Michigan: March 15 (away)

2012

7-7 (3-4 ECAC), #28 Laxpower, #27 Tempo-Free Lax

Bellarmine was a nice example of the leap a team can take simply by focusing on what it’s good at (defense, in this case), and growing up a bit as a team. The Knights were 2-4 in close games in 2012, and although they didn’t improve their success much in that regard (3-5 in 2013), they were getting blown out less – and blowing teams out more – in the other games.

The Past Results

Michigan’s loss in Louisville last year partially doomed not just the 2013 season, but will have a major negative effect on 2014. Goalie Gerald Logan injured his shoulder in that contest, and though he put together a strong year after that game, it could have been better if he was healthy. Now, he’ll miss all of 2014 after having surgery to repair that shoulder. U-M hopped out to a lead on the Knights, but a make-it, take-it situation led to runs of six straight goals in the first and second periods, and five straight in the third and fourth (four of them in just over a minute on the clock). Bellarmine was a good-not-great possession team last year, so giving up those runs was a poor showing for Michigan.

The Titans also fell victim to a big run out of the Knights. After a 1-1 draw through the first quarter, BU scored seven of the next eight to build a big lead early in the third, and cruised to a win. Detroit struggled clearing in the third quarter, a big part of the run, and BU attackmen Cameron Gardner and Lance Robinson each netted a hat trick.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Bellarmine 2012
Pace 70.93 (8)
Poss% 50.25 (28)
Off. Eff. 24.74 (56)
Def. Eff. 23.26 (1)
Pyth% 55.54 (27)

Bellarmine’s offense was awful. Though the Knights hit double-digits six times, one came in a loss, and most of their big scoring outputs were against the moribund defenses on the schedule. Gardner (top scorer) is back, but Robinson (No. 3) is gone, as is last year’s second-leading scorer, Michael Ward. So too are Nos. 4, 5, and 7, and the eighth-leading scorer was an LSM last year. This offense will be back to square one to an extent. Started from the bottom now we… will probably still be at the bottom.

The defense, on the other hand, was outstanding. Air Force, Denver, Virginia, and Penn were the only teams to hit double-digits against Bellarmine. Unfortunately, a big part of that success is out the door with extremely talented goalie Dillon Ward, and some key defensive pieces are gone as well. Repeating as an elite unit is tough for what is essentially a mid-major team, and with these losses I see a big dropoff.

Bellarmine was below average on faceoffs. Although they lose the most-deployed specialist in Michael Herring, the players behind him actually fared much better, so moving back toward average is a solid bet.

Head-to-Head

Feb. 10 (Ultimate Soccer Pontiac)

2013

Michigan: 1-13 (0-7 ECAC), #54 Laxpower, #61 Tempo-Free Lax
Detroit: 5-10 (3-3 MAAC), #50 Laxpower, #48 Tempo-Free Lax

Before I actually preview both of these teams next week, a Cliff’s Notes version: Michigan made some progress judging by the eyeball test, but didn’t change much based on the stats and results. Detroit took a big step forward by making the NCAA Tournament and nearly upsetting Notre Dame, but really only improved marginally over 2012 on the basis of the whole body of evidence.

The Past Result

Since last year’s game got canceled (it was like learning there would be no Christmas this year for this guy), a recap of the 2012 meeting, as presented in last year’s preview:

UDM scored in runs of two (twice), three, and four goals in the course of the game – a theme for Michigan’s defense throughout the year, actually – and led 12-7 almost midway through the fourth. Thomas Paras drew things within four goals, but a Tim Lehto unassisted tally closed the door on any comeback attempts, and a Thomas Paras goal with under a minute left served to do little more than make the score look a bit nicer.

If the teams’ schedules had been reversed – if Michigan had taken on two highly ranked and highly skilled opponents while UDM was getting their first action of the year – it might have been a little closer, but the Titans’ experience (one player on Michigan’s roster last season had ever played Division I ball, while obviously every non-freshman on the UDM squad had a year of varsity under their belt) was too much for Michigan to overcome.

Stay tuned in coming days, when I’ll run down the rest of the schedules for each team, and then get into full-on season previewin’ mode.

Posted in division 1, previews | Tagged , , , , , | Comments Off on Michigan and Detroit Common Opponents

MHSAA Seeds and Regions for 2014

The high school governing body in the state has released the full list of pre-season seeds for this spring. See the full document here, but here’s the important part:

Division-1

  1. Brother Rice
  2. Forest Hills Northern
  3. Clarkston
  4. UD Jesuit
  5. South Lyon
  6. Detroit Catholic Central
  7. Holt
  8. Brighton

Division-2

  1. Forest Hills Central
  2. Cranbrook
  3. Detroit Country Day
  4. East Grand Rapids
  5. Notre Dame Prep
  6. Warren De La Salle
  7. Haslett-Williamston
  8. Okemos

It’ll be interesting to see if Forest Hills Northern – now a solo team, instead of combined with Forest Hills Eastern – can live up to that No. 2 seed in Division-1.

Unlike previous seasons, as far as I can find in the release, there was no announcement of the state finals location. Last year’s choice of East Grand Rapids was controversial, but the event went off without a hitch (albeit with some grousing from the East side of the state).

Posted in high school | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Lax Links: Jan. 16, 2014

It has been a hot minute since I’ve put together a links post (more than a month. Oops), so let’s get right into it:

Division-1

Lax.com previews the MAAC (h/t: College Crosse):

Alex Maini and Mike Birney are discussed as players to watch, and the Titans are projected to finish second to Siena in the league. IL predicts the Titans will tie with Siena atop the league. Maini, Birney, and SSDM Nick Garippa are all-conference pre-season.

Lacrosse All-Stars previews the Titans’ 2014 team.

New Detroit gloves for 2014.

This is pretty old by this point, but Lacrosse Film Room (which is awesome, give it a follow on Twitter or your RSS reader of choice) looks at the 10-man ride that helped Notre Dame get back in the game against Detroit and stave off the upset in the first round of the NCAA tournament last spring.

Michigan athletic director David Brandon was named the first IMLCA Extra Man for his efforts in bringing varsity lacrosse to Ann Arbor.

Inside Lacrosse picked Michigan fifth in the ECAC for the 2014 Faceoff Yearbook. No individuals are preseason all-conference.

Lax.com picks Michigan last as well, but names midfielder David Joseph as a player to watch:

U-M goalie Gerald Logan expressed some Twitter disappointment that he didn’t make the pre-season All-America list according to Inside Lacrosse, but now that he’s been ruled out for the season, he’ll have to wait another year to crack into the lineup. (On a side note, it’s absolutely wild that he didn’t at least garner honorable mention. Complete oversight/snub based on what he did last year).

Michigan headman John Paul talks about how freshman Robbie Zonino will step in for Logan, and other spring developments for the Wolverines.

Midfielder Mikie Schlosser missed Michigan’s fall scrimmage with injury, but he is expected to make a big impact for the Maize and Blue this fall. His play of the day from Jan. 7 shows just a little bit of what he can bring.

Lacrosse Film Room looks at Michigan’s 3-3 ride against Colgate. Peter Baum got his against the Wolverines, though. So did teammate Ryan Walsh.

Get yer Michigan season tickets.

Michigan freshman faceoff specialist Brian Archer will be bloggin’ this spring.

U-M defenseman Dakota Sherman will play for Team Israel at the 2014 World Championships.

The Michigan women volunteered at the Food Gatherers food bank in early December. They are in the process of building a Championship Culture.

The formation of a Big Ten Lacrosse Conference is one of Inside Lacrosse’s biggest stories of 2013.

Big Ten Network Whining

The April 12 Michigan/Ohio State game in Columbus will air live on Big Ten Network. That’s cool. My complaint? Only 1-2 other games expected to get BTN coverage.

I understand the monetary realities of doing live sports coverage, particularly for what is still something of a niche sport. However the Big Ten Network is dying for programming in the spring (or at least, should be, because they put on a lot of really bad television).

Lacrosse is a made-for-TV game, and the league that owns the Network is starting a brand new conference in the sport next spring. Show more. Without getting into baseball/lacrosse bickering, there is plenty of other content that (while free to the network) is just fillinf space and attracting zero eyeballs.

Michigan has five home games in Michigan Stadium this spring (plus two in Oosterbaan, a non-TV-friendly venue). Ohio State has six games outside, including the Michigan contest and also one against fellow Big Ten team Penn State. The Nittany Lions have seven outdoor games of their own. That’s without even getting into the women’s side of things. That the BTN can only bring itself to cover 2-3 of  18 contests is just sad.

If that continues going forward (fortunately, I don’t suspect it will, though Hopkins’ home games will remain on ESPNU), it’s a major lost opportunity for the network – and evidence that it’s not about giving consumers a good product but rather about making buckets of money for athletic departments.

/end BTN whining

Recruiting

The Detroit women announced their 2014 signing class, as did the men.

2014 Romeo goalie Drew Pointe signed with Siena Heights.

2014 Rockford midfielder Ben Sims committed to Michigan State.

2014 Salem defender Paul Sommerville signed with Aquinas.

2014 Novi midfielder Keith Pravato committed to Canisius.

2014 Lakeland goalie Austin Herbert signed with Walsh University.

TopLaxRecruits talks with 2014 Clarkston attack Eric Ward, who signed with Lake Erie.

TopLaxRecruits profiles UDM signee Austin Polson-McCannon, an LSM from Prior Lake (Minn.).

2014 Milwaukee (Wisc.) Marquette University School attack Joey Kesseler committed to Michigan State.

The official Michigan site profiles women’s signees Becca Merchant, Devon Maltz, Lily Kovach, and Molly Fishter.

2015 Cranbrook midfielder – and Notre Dame commit – Michael Langdon gets a shoutout in a breakdown of ACC recruiting on Inside Lacrosse.

2015 Cranbrook attack Johnny Wagner committed to Marquette. Highlights here. StudentSports Lacrosse article.

TopLaxRecruits talks with 2015 Detroit Country Day midfielder Devon Callaghan, who committed to Detroit.

2015 Chagrin Falls (Ohio) midfielder Ali Magyaros committed to the Detroit women.

2016 Washington (D.C.) Gonzaga midfielder Avery Myers committed to Michigan. Inside Lacrosse brings the details:

The 6-foot-2, 175-pound middie plays for Blackwolf and was a member of the Purple Eagles’ varsity in the spring. This summer, he attended Jake Reed’s Nike Blue Chip, Under Armour Shootout and NHSLS. He strongly considered Maryland, Ohio State and Cornell, among others.

StudentSports lacrosse also covers Myers’s commitment.

2016 Westminster (Conn.) attack Noah Fosse committed to Michigan. Inside Lacrosse once again brings some info.

LaxLessons.com talks with 2017 Washington (D.C.) Gonzaga midfielder Brian Townsend, a Michigan commit (and high school freshman):

What were your main factors in your decision?
The quality of the school, the facilities, the program is on the rise, and the chance to spread the game of lacrosse to the Midwest.

What other schools were you considering and what schools did you visit?
I considered Johns Hopkins, Maryland and Penn State. I visited Maryland, Johns Hopkins and Penn State.

Bonus #growthegame tag.

Two Michigan commits get some love from Inside Lacrosse in its Adrenaline Showcase recap:

Liam Bourke (Redwood ’14 / Michigan), Peter Mascheroni (Redwood ’14 / PG ’15), Doug Strazza (De La Salle ’14) and James Harrison (Palo Alta ’14) completed the unit and played very well, collapsing on the ball carrier and wreaking havoc.

Linemate Christian Ford (Bishop’s School ’16 / Michigan) is an outstanding athlete who plays beyond his years.

Bourke competed for ADVNC and Ford for RC Elite.

High School

Ann Arbor Pioneer will be rocking matte black helmets this spring.

Clarkston is seeking assistant coaches. Hit up the LaxPower database for more opportunities (there are several).

MCLA

Michigan State has named its captains for this season: Matt Allemang (Farmington HS), Michael Klaus, Charlie Dever, Ian Meador (Northville HS), and Mitch Hall (Farmington HS).

Home and away uniforms for the Spartans.

Grand Valley’s 2014 schedule is live on the internet, as is Aquinas‘s

Club and Youth

The Heat Lacrosse Invitational will take place June 19-20 at Rockford High School.

Brine Michigan Team tryouts are Feb. 8 in Ann Arbor.

269 lacrosse 2014 promo video.

Wolverine Warriors summer travel team tryout are just 10 days away. Visit the WW website for more info.

Registration is open for the Cranbrook Lax Jam.

Etc.

Brother Rice grad – and most recently Detroit offensive coordinator – Karl Zimmerman has been named the head coach at D-3 Trine University.

As always, you can send new tips, commitments, articles, etc. to the Twitter @GreatLaxState or e-mail it to me.

Posted in division 1, high school, mcla, youth | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Lax Links: Jan. 16, 2014

U-M goalie Gerald Logan to miss the year

Robbie Zonino Conestoga Pioneers Michigan Wolverines Lacrosse

Zonino will have a chance to contribute earlier than expected. Photo appears courtesy of PhillyLacrosse.com.

Sounds like a release from the Michigan program is coming soon, but it sounds like Michigan goalie Gerald Logan’s recent should surgery will cause him to miss the entirety of the 2014 spring season.

Sophomore Mike D’Alessio and freshman Robbie Zonino are the only other goalies currently listed on Michigan roster (though I wouldn’t be surprised if some walkon depth was added at this point), and it seems that Zonino – the No. 67 freshman in the country, according to Inside Lacrosse – will be the guy.

Zonino played at Philadelphia-area power Conestoga, was team captain as a senior, and was the No. 1 goalie (though he split time) for the Mythical National Championship-winning ‘Stoga squad his junior year.

UPDATE: Official release from Michigan:

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Sophomore goalie Gerald Logan (Sachem, N.Y./Shoreham-Wading River) of the University of Michigan men’s lacrosse team will miss the 2014 season with a shoulder labrum tear that required surgery, the squad announced today (Friday, Jan. 10).

Last season, Logan was selected to the All-ECAC Rookie Team and was named the team’s MVP. Logan was No. 2 in the NCAA with 211 saves and ended his freshman campaign averaging 15-plus saves per contest. He recorded double-digit stops in 13 of 14 contests and stopped at least 15 shots in nine games. Logan compiled a 56.3 save percentage, faced 565 shots, and led the team with 36 ground balls.

His program-record 25 saves against Army on March 2 tied the NCAA season high for saves in a single game.

U-M has a pair of goalkeepers expected to fill the void in 2014. Highly touted true freshman Robbie Zonino (Berwyn, Pa./Conestoga), who was ranked as the No. 8 freshman goalie in the country by Inside Lacrosse, is the projected starter heading into the 2014 season. Also on the roster is sophomore goalkeeper Mike D’Alessio (Eastchester, N.Y./The Hackley School), who did not see game action last season.

“We’re obviously going to miss Gerald on the field this season, but our first priority is always the long-term health and welfare of our student-athletes. We expect him back to 100 percent by next fall,” said head coach John Paul. “We have full confidence in Robbie as our starter. He had a great fall where he gained valuable experience against Notre Dame, and he has been preparing himself for this role for a few months now.”
The Wolverines will open the 2014 season with an exhibition contest against Marquette in Oosterbaan Field House on Saturday (Feb. 1) at 1 p.m.

So there’s that.

Posted in division 1 | Tagged , , | 6 Comments

Great Lax Bay Classic

Lacrosse is known mostly as a spring sport, but with non-scholastic teams and tournaments gaining in popularity, the game is truly a year-round endeavor. A new summer tournament will be coming to the Great Lax State in 2014 with the inaugural Great Lax Bay Classic.

The tournament, held in Saginaw June 27-29, will feature divisions at multiple levels of competition in both genders.

“We’re going to try to put together a more inclusive event that can bring the whole family up,” said event organizer Mark Greaney. “We’ve got divisions for just about everybody in both genders. So many parents have one son and one daughter, and we want to be able to do both at once. Most aren’t combined tournaments.”

In accordance with the family-friendly mission is the accessibility – Saginaw is reasonable travel from nearly everywhere in the state and region – and cost of the entire event.

“We made it much more affordable,” Greaney said. “Most tournaments are $1300-1500. You even see them $1500 per day, and we’re going with $995 a team with multiple-team discounts. $50 off per extra team. Not everybody’s playing the high-stakes club teams, so we’re trying to get community and travel teams alike up there.”

Although this is the event’s inaugural year, it projects to run smoothly. Greaney – president of the Michigan Youth Lacrosse Association – is planning on an all-star game for the varsity divisions, and a recruiting coordinator who will highlight the top performers at the event. Even those college coaches who don’t make the trip will know who impressed.

“We’ll also have a recruiting coordinator that will put up a writeup of the players who impress, and those who perform well,” he said. “We’ll send that out to a network of coaches in addition to the ones that are at the event.”

The event is just another way the game is growing in the state.

“For lacrosse to grow in Michigan, it needs a stronger youth base than what was there,” Greaney said. “It can’t rely on different individuals. Through the MYLA and this event, we’re trying to help with that.”

You can find out more on the event at GreatLaxBay.com.

Posted in high school, youth | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Lax Links: Dec. 5, 2013

News items, links to articles, tips, college commitments: send them to the inbox via e-mail or Twitter.

Gear Posts

Michigan-Dearbornof recent varsity promotion – will don the famous winged helmet that is known for being the helmet du jour of its sister school in Ann Arbor:

University of Michigan-Dearborn lacrosse helmet history

Dearborn helmet history

The Next Next Level

This is not something that Michigan-based programs are used to: recently-graduated Detroit Titan Jordan Houtby signed a pro contract with the NLL’s Minnesota Swarm.

Division-1

Detroit’s Lift-a-Thon raised $1,000 for the Vs. Cancer foundation. Photos from the event.

Detroit’s Mike Birney will teach you how to shoot 114 mph. I’m sure it’s super-easy.

Former Detroit Catholic Central and Notre Dame FOGO Jake Marmul is now an assistant coach for the UDM women’s team, and he goes in front of the camera to discuss his role with the lady Titans.

Publicity is on full blast for Ohio State’s Showdown in the Shoe game, and the opponent this year will be none other than Michigan. In the past two seasons, the Wolverines had welcomed the Buckeyes to their own version of the same event, the Battle at the Big House.

College Crosse breaks down the 2014 Michigan schedule. The different categories, as defined by Hoya Suxa, are opportunities to get wins, opportunities to get one’s own face kicked in, and the chance to win a couple conference games and get into the final ECAC tournament.

Crazy one-handed finish for Michigan’s Kyle Jackson in a scrimmage earlier this fall:

Inside Lacrosse catches up with the Michigan women. The inaugural season this spring should be, at the very least, an interesting one.

Recruiting

Detroit Country Day 2015 midfielder Devon Callaghan has committed to Detroit. Thanks to his dad, Jim, for reporting the commitment.

2014 Clarkston attack Connor Ward committed to Lake Erie College.

1763 Lacrosse Club’s Charlie Hayes signed with UDM.

Student Sports reports that Cincinnati Moeller 2014 goalie Alex Cook committed to Detroit.

PhillyLacrosse.com covers the commitment of 2016 Spring-Ford faceoff specialist Matt Dellacroce to Michigan.

From the moment I stepped on campus I loved the atmosphere and the feeling that I got from the school. I really enjoyed the ‘Big school feel’ with the large athletics and incredible school spirit.

That big school atmosphere is something that Michigan intended to sell to recruits early in the process – only a few other schools play both Division-1 lacrosse and competitive college football – so clearly, the intended result is there. More on Dellacroce at the link.

Michigan’s 2014 and 2015 recruiting classes are ranked No. 10 and No. 7, respectively, according to StudentSports.

Michigan picked up a 2017 commit in the form of Washington (D.C.) Gonzaga midfielder Brian Townsend. This kid hasn’t picked up a stick as a high school lacrosse player yet I’m just sayin’. Still, the competition included Hopkins and Maryland, so that’s a big win in a classic Big Ten recruiting battle (or something).

Newton Square (Pa.) Episcopal Academy 2015 twins Jane and Lily Crager have committed to the women’s team at Michigan.

Hartland 2014 attackman Dalton Reiche has committed to Grand Valley State.

L’Anse Creuse North 2014 Johnathon Janes committed to Western Michigan.

Ann Arbor Pioneer 2014 midfielder Erik Barosso committed to Wooster College.

Coaching

Michigan coaching clinic TONIGHT at 6 p.m. That’s in, like, two-plus hours. Oosterbaan Fieldhouse in Ann Arbor.

Michigan State will be allowing high school coaches the opportunity to see what the Spartans’ program is all about with a couple open practices in January.

Expansion/Realignment

The University of Texas has been mentioned consistently as a potential entrant into the world of Division-1 lacrosse. The sport is on the school’s athletic department radar, a positive sign.

This is not directly related to the Great Lax State or even expansion directly, but Notre Dame and Denver will play in Orange County, Calif. this spring. That’s bringing the game to the West Coast (at a high level), and giving those programs exposure in a growing hotbed. Michigan has been recruiting very well on the West Coast as well. Of course, a ticket to the game is ludicrously expensive for a niche sport.

Etc.

The registration deadline for the D-Town Lacrosse Classic is Dec. 15.

The Michigan Chapter of U.S. Lacrosse has its annual scholarship program going on now:

The Michigan Chapter of U.S. Lacrosse is pleased to announce the opening of its 2014 college scholarship program.  The scholarship amount is $1,000 to each winner.  USLM expects to award approximately six scholarships this year, depending on strength of applications.

The scholarship is available to high school seniors playing on their high school’s lacrosse team in the spring, 2014 season.   A minimum GPA of 3.0 at end of the fall, 2014 high school semester is required.  (3.0 on 4.0 scale; equivalent on other scales.)  The scholarship is available to persons attending a Michigan College or University in the fall of 2014, and is paid upon proof of enrollment.  Other requirements apply.

Applications and all supporting materials must be postmarked by May 16, 2014.  Winners will be announced and notified on or about June 1, 2014.  Presentations will be made at the USLM Hall of Fame Game for high school graduating seniors, in June.

Visit the link for full information.

313 Lacrosse summer team tryouts take place tomorrow in Shelby Township. Visit 313lax.com for more details.

Forest Hills Central junior goalie Justin Bacon has been selected to play on the USA U-19 team. Huge honor for an in-state kid.

High school lacrosse in the city of Detroit? High School lacrosse in the city of Detroit. Words cannot describe how excited I am for this.

Posted in division 1, gear posts, high school, mcla, youth | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

UM-Dearborn goes varsity

There’s a new collegiate varsity program in the state. Michigan-Dearborn will continue to operate as an MCLA and NAIA program, but has received varsity status from its university. Press release time:

Kevin LaHaieThey made their first conference playoff appearance in 2013. And now University of Michigan-Dearborn’s lacrosse program has even bigger plans for 2014.

This spring, UM-Dearborn will add lacrosse as a varsity sport. Jason Watts (’03 B.S.E.M.E.), who has served as head coach for the club lacrosse team since 2009, will continue as varsity head coach.

“We gained a lot of respect in the conference after making the playoffs last year,” Watts said. “It’s important for us to build off that success to grow the program, and we’re happy to see the university support us.”

The move from club sport to varsity is part of the ongoing expansion of UM-Dearborn’s athletics programs, designed to support enrollment growth and enhance student engagement on campus. The university added varsity men’s and women’s cross country in 2011 and men’s soccer in 2012.

“Students who are active members of the UM-Dearborn community often feel more connected to the university and do better in their coursework,” said Ann Lampkin-Williams, senior adviser to the chancellor for inclusion and special projects and interim athletic director. “We’re continuing to look for creative ways to foster an inclusive campus community that is supportive, welcoming and engaging for our commuter and residential students”.

On the field, Watts hopes to see the team compete for conference championships—the Wolverines will continue to compete in the Central Collegiate Lacrosse Association (CCLA) and the Wolverine-Hoosier Athletic Conference (WHAC)—and return to the playoffs.

Watts is a former UM-Dearborn lacrosse player who joined the team during its inaugural club season in 2001-2002. He began as an assistant coach at UM-Dearborn in 2005 and last year earned WHAC Coach of the Year and Champions of Character Coach honors. He continues to play lacrosse as a member of the Motor City Lacrosse Club.

He will be joined by assistant coach Mike Wagner (’05 B.B.A.), a former four-year captain for UM-Dearborn’s lacrosse team who earned All-CCLA honors. Wagner joined the Wolverine coaching staff in 2006 and is president of the Motor City Lacrosse Club.

Students interested in joining the team are invited to open tryouts Monday, Dec. 9, from 9-11 p.m. in the Fieldhouse.

Growth growth growth. I especially like to see new programs in areas outside of the state’s traditional hotbeds (Oakland County and the east side of Grand Rapids).

Posted in mcla | Tagged | 2 Comments