The Next Level: Feb. 12, 2013

The lacrosse season has started in a big way, and Michigan natives have already made an impact on the field.

Air Force 8, North Carolina 16

  • Junior attack Tommy McKee (Holt) – Started and scored three Goals on five Shots and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnover.

Air Force 14, High Point 4

  • Junior attack Tommy McKee (Holt) – Started and scored four Goals on eight Shots, picked up two ground balls, and caused one turnover.

Delaware 12, High Point 10
Delaware 8, Bucknell 9

  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Bennett Packer (Brother Rice) – Has not seen game action.

Detroit 8, Ohio State 14

  • Sophomore attack Brandon Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep) – Started and scored a Goal on two Shots (both on goal). Also committed one turnover.
  • Sophomore midfielder Mike Birney (Detroit Catholic Central) – Started, scored three Goals on four Shots (all on goal), caused one turnover and picked up one ground ball. Also committed to turnovers.
  • Senior midfielder Tyler Corcoran (South Lyon) – Won 2/8 faceoffs and picked up two ground balls.
  • Senior midfielder Brandon Davenport (Grosse Pointe North) – Won 2/6 faceoffs and picked up two ground balls.
  • Freshman LSM Nick Demattia (Clarkston) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior LSM Kevin DiSalle (Orchard Lake Saint Mary’s) – Did not see game action.
  • Sophomore midfielder Scott Drummond (Birmingham Seaholm) – Started, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Senior defenseman John Dwyer (Detroit Catholic Central) – Started, caused one turnover, and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one penalty for 0:30.
  • Freshman goalie Connor Flynn (Rockford) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Nick Garippa (Notre Dame Prep) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Sophomore defenseman Joe Gifford (Notre Dame Prep) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman midfielder Brad Harris (Saline) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman midfielder Andy Hebden (Brother Rice) – Took one Shot, caused one turnover, and picked up two ground balls.
  • Senior defenseman Jamie Hebden (Brother Rice) – Started, caused one turnover, and picked up two ground balls. Also committed two penalties for 2:00.
  • Freshman midfielder JD Hess (Birmingham Seaholm) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior LSM/D Andrew Khalil (Warren De La Salle) – Picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnover.
  • Junior midfielder Joe MacLean (Detroit Country Day) – Played but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Chris Mandell (Warren De La Salle) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman attack Nick Melucci (Northville) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior midfielder Chris Nemes (Detroit Catholic Central) – Started, but only made the scoresheet by committing two turnovers and one penalty for 1:00.
  • Freshman midfielder Chris Perry (Utica Eisenhower) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Tim Robertson (Notre Same Prep) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior midfield/attack Nick Schesnuk (Warren De La Salle) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior midfielder Drew Schupbach (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s) – Caused one turnover and picked up one ground ball. Also committed three turnovers.
  • Sophomore midfielder Tom Sible (Forest Hills Central) – Took one shot on goal. Also committed two turnovers.
  • Freshman midfielder Mike Spuller (Dexter) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior attack Tyler Staruch (Brighton) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman midfielder Dylan Swanson (Ann Arbor Pioneer) – Did not see game action.
  • Senior D/LSM Mike Wenderski (UD-Jesuit) – Did not see game action.
  • Freshman defenseman Jordan Yono (Detroit Catholic Central) – Won 0/1 faceoffs.

Michigan

  • Senior midfielder Zach Dauch (Bloomfield Hills Lahser) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Sophomore defenseman Mack Gembis (Cranbrook) – Played, but did not accrue any statistics.
  • Senior defenseman Rob Healy (Notre Dame Prep) – Started and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnover and one penalty for 1:00.
  • Freshman attack Riley Kennedy (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.
  • Sophomore attack Will Meter (Brother Rice) – Started, scored one Goal on three Shots (all on goal), recorded one assist, and picked up four ground balls.
  • Sophomore midfielder Thomas Orr (Detroit Catholic Central) – Played, but only made the scoresheet by committing one penalty for 1:00.
  • Junior midfielder Tom Sardelli (Notre Dame Prep) – Started took one Shot, and picked up on ground ball. Also committed one turnover.
  • Junior LSM Dakota Sherman (Cranbrook) – Caused one turnover and picked up two ground balls.
  • Senior defenseman Austin Swaney (East Grand Rapids) – Started, caused one turnover, and picked up one ground ball.
  • Freshman defenseman Chris Walker (Brother Rice) – Did not see game action.
  • Junior defenseman Max Zwolan (Ann Arbor Pioneer) – Did not see game action.

Ohio State 14, Detroit 8

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

Penn State 11, Michigan 6

  • Senior Attack Nick Dolik (Brother Rice) – Took five shots (two on goal), recorded one assist, and picked up one ground ball. Also committed one turnover.
  • Senior midfielder Danny Henneghan (Brother Rice) – Started, won 15/20 faceoffs, picking up four ground balls, and added an assist.

Rutgers 15, Manhattan 6

  • Freshman midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids) – Did not see game action.

VMI 7, Navy 20

  • Sophomore midfielder Andrew Erber (Dexter) – Did not see game action.

As always, feel free to comment with any corrections, updates, etc.

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Michigan 6, Penn State 11

It should come as no surprise that Michigan’s Team Two isn’t yet ready to compete with top-15 teams. They tried to do just that Saturday afternoon against Penn State… and actually played pretty well for a half before a lack of depth and just a few scoring options saw them seriously fall behind.

Tempo Free

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

Penn State 2013
Penn State Michigan
Faceoff Wins 15 Faceoff Wins 5
Clearing 20-22 Clearing 18-22
Possessions 41 Possessions 29
Goals 11 Goals 6
Offensive Efficiency .268 Offensive Efficiency .207

Michigan got abused on faceoffs by Brother Rice alum Danny Henneghan. Jack Eisenreich went 1/6 before John Paul inserted LSM Charlie Keady to try to force a 50/50 draw and win some ground balls. Of course, the Michigan wings (and the team in general) didn’t really follow through on that, being out-GBed 44-27.

Michigan’s ride was a non-factor – are they minimizing the use of a heavy ride (which actually paid off big last year), or was it a one-game strategy decision? Going the other way, the clear was pretty good. It was certainly an improvement over last year, when Michigan cleared 9/21 (43%!!).

Notes

It would be unfair to start anywhere other than goalkeeper Gerald Logan. I knew after seeing him in Michigan’s team summer camp and the scrimmage against Marquette last week that he’d be an upgrade over Emil Weiss (who I also believed to be a very good keeper), but Weiss showed he’ll be a star. He made 19 saves on 30 SOG, many of them point-blank robberies. He went toe-to-toe with Austin Kaut and if you asked any neutral observer which goalie was better (assuming equal defense and offense), you’d get a clueless shrug. That’s serious.

On the other hand, 30 shots on goal is not so hot for the rest of the Michigan defense. There are a number of circumstances that contributed – Penn State had a very high number of possessions, plus six minutes of EMO time – but the U-M defense still has plenty of room for improvement. Rob Healy, Thomas Orr, and Chase Brown were responsible for four of those penalty minutes, so the defense dug its own grave at times, too.

Moving along to the offense, a few familiar names made prominent appearances in the scoresheet. Will Meter, David McCormack, and Thomas Paras all had two-point days. It was a newcomer, however, who may have stolen the show. Canadian midfielder Kyle Jackson simply looked the part, and his two goals and an assist showed that he’s going to be a bigtime contributor. He’s alllllll left at this point (he had a wide open righty shot on a dodge late in the third quarter, but reset his feet to take it lefty, and the defense recovered to make the block), but Canadians often arrive in college on-handed, and that’s something he’ll improve.

Michigan’s faceoff situation should improve with the return of Brad Lott this week, and some other freshmen who were unavailable against Penn State should continue to bolster the group.

For Penn State, Shane Sturgis had four goals, but it took him 12 shots to get there. That’s an efficiency mark that I think defensive coaches can live with. TJ Sanders, on the other hand, had four of his own on just eight shots, plus an assist. That’s a good day.

Penn State is a damn good team – they return nearly every piece (including Kaut) from a top-ten defense, and have a lot of offensive weapons – so although John Paul won’t trumpet any “moral victories,” this certainly counts as one. It’s a clear sign of growth from Michigan, and an indication that they’ll probably be able to take a couple wins this year.

Quotable

Feature that will only appear in game recaps when I attend or otherwise get a chance to chat with a player or coach.

Michigan coach John Paul:

“We got out-GBed, but I thought athletically they just got after it a little bit better than we did. The clearing game. Last year, these guys killed us in their ride. Here we are in smaller confines where it’s easier to ride and we cleared very well today. We scrambled to do it a bit, but we did it.”

“You guys are starting to get a sense now that Gerry’s spectacular. He’s a very very good goalie. He’s getting better in the clearing game, that’ll become a strength of his, but we don’t want to lean on him as heavily. I thought we played pretty well 6-on-6 defensively today, I thought we did a pretty good job there. But we can’t give up that much possession, our defense gets tired and we can’t give up transition opportunities.”

“Right now, we’re working on getting to the point that we have an opportunity at the end. That’s kind of the first step. I had a lot of other coaches tell me as we built this thing that would be the progression that we’d go through. We’d have a year where we had trouble even getting close at the end, then we’d have a year where we’d get it close, and then we’d have a year where we start learning to win close ones.  That’s the progression we’re going through, right now we have to learn to keep these close.”

Senior midfielder Thomas Paras:

“Penn State’s a great team: all credit to them, thery’re tremendously coached and they’re a really talented team. We’re striving to be a program like theirs, and we just have to work on finishing our games from start to finish.”

“Just play within ourselves – myself included. At the end of the game, you saw that we made some late-minute mistakes, and we saw the score kind of creeping away from us and we were trying to get back into it. We just need to play within ourselves.”

“Any time you go out there whether it’s the fifth game or tenth game of the year, you’re still going to have just that anxiety getting into a game. We’re working on just turning that kind of anxiety into amking sure we’re staying confident, making sure we’re doing all the right things.”

Elsewhere

Michigan official site recap. Penn State site recap. John Paul sits down with The Michigan Insider radio show. Boxscore. Photos. Game highlights. Penn State is one of Inside Lacrosse‘s weekend winners.

Up Next

Michigan has one of its few winnable games of the year coming up Saturday. That’s not to say Bellarmine is any sort of guaranteed win – there’s no such thing for Team Two – but it is an opportunity to play a team that was also in the bottom third of the country nationally. While it’s reasonable to assume Bellarmine is also improved from last year, Michigan’s improvement should be among the greatest in the country.

Bellarmine had a poor offense and an above-average defense last year, and beat Michigan in the possession game. Both teams used a heavy ride and the Knights’ ability to capitalize on the opportunities that created (along with – no surprise – success on faceoffs) mad ethe difference in the game.

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Realignment: Atlantic Sun Conference will be a thing

I had a source let me know Saturday that an Atlantic Sun Conference would be coming to a lacrosse field near you sometime soon, and lo and behold, it’s here.

Mercer (Ind.), Furman (N/A), VMI (MAAC), Jacksonville (MAAC), Richmond (N/A) and High Point (Ind.) will be your members.

There’s the big domino in your Southern lacrosse conference, and it happened in such a way that the ECAC is untouched (Bellarmine), two new programs and two recently added programs without conferences to date have homes, and in all honesty, the MAAC is strengthened, not just by shedding some “dead weight” in the form of VMI, but also contracting geographically and allowing remaining members to cut their travel budgets for conference play.

Other Changes Coming?

The same source (evidently a very good one) mentioned to me that it sounds extremely likely that Johns Hopkins will accept an invitation to form a Big Ten Conference, should that possibility be on the table down the road. That would obviously be another seismic-ish shift in the lacrosse world.

This part is where the post gets super-speculative, so none of this is gospel truth, just my thought process.

We’ve already seen Loyola dump the ECAC (lacrosse) and MAAC (all-sports) for the Patriot League (both). Two Big Ten teams and a CAA team (and a Big East team and ACC duo, though I suspect they’d be independent for a year coming up here) would be abandoning their current conferences. Along with Syracuse/Notre Dame’s departure from the Big East, you have two conferences that look like they’re going to struggle to survive.

I would bet in an instant on Fairfield leaving the ECAC for the MAAC (its all-sports home conference) in that situation, so you have lots of ECAC and Big East remnants looking for new homes (for the record, I have heard reiterated time and again that Detroit will be in the MAAC as long as they’re welcome, so don’t expect them to join a Western Conference 🙁 ).

You could easily see the true “eastern” Big East teams finding their own way (whether it’s the Big Priest or whatever it ends up being) into a new conference. The question marks for me are Bellarmine, Denver/Air Force, and Marquette. Will they be vagabonds, searching for a new conference home if the Big Ten Conference comes to fruition? It remains to be seen, but at this point it looks like a possibility.

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Scores and Schedule: Feb 11, 2013

NCAA teams based in Michigan have yet to pick up a regular-season win in a handful of tries, but Davenport carried the torch of state pride in a big way Sunday.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-3 Men

Albion 6, Carthage 9

MCLA-1

Davenport 26, Toledo 4

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

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Detroit 8, Ohio State 14

Detroit’s program is one that has improved year-over-year until a hiccup last season. The Titans had a defective offense for much of the year, and backslid during the senior season of their first recruiting class.

This year’s team aims to reverse that, and although they didn’t manage to knock of Ohio State yesterday, their performance (against a Buckeyes squad that is probably better than last year’s) indicated that they can get back on track and improve for this season.

Tempo Free

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

Ohio State 2013
Detroit Ohio State
Faceoff Wins 8 Faceoff Wins 18
Clearing 16-20 Clearing 19-23
Possessions 32 Possessions 45
Goals 8 Goals 14
Offensive Efficiency .250 Offensive Efficiency .311

This game had a nice pace to it (although we din’t know yet how the clock rules will affect national averages there, so take it for what it’s worth at this point). Although neither team had a super-efficient offensive output, it was a high-scoring contest. Ohio State dominated that possession, approaching 60% of the ball.

The ride/clear game was relatively even (and it’s always a question mark indoors), and the faceoff dot – and the Buckeyes finishing their possessions with goals – explains away the difference. A host of Titans tried their hand and didn’t see much success. Had teams accomplished even possession, the efficiency margins would have had it about a 12-10ish game.

Notes

This was a tale of two halves, really. In the first, UDM was absolutely destroyed on possession, but made up for it by being the far more efficient team. They had 16 possessions and scored 6 goals (.375 efficiency), while OSU had six goals on 25 possessions (.240 efficiency). After the break, possessions were a little more even, 16-20 in favor of Ohio State, but the Buckeyes kicked both offense (.400 efficiency) and defense (.125 Titan offensive efficiency) into gear.

Without being able to watch the game, it’s tough to say exactly what was behind that difference. Were the Buckeyes simply a better team all along, and their depth and talent took over in the second half? Did Detroit run out of offense and get tired on D (a result of that possession deficit and some penalties)? Surely, it’s a combination of all the above.

The possession game will continue to be a theme for UDM until they’re not a low-end team in that metric. Five different Titans took draws, and all of them struggled. While Jordans Yono and Houtby may have been by design to play D and not give up the break, last year’s specialists both finished poorly. Damien Hicks actually had a 3/5 day, so the redshirt freshman could be a bright spot for the Titans. OSU and UDM both had three “Team” faceoffs, which I think is a statistician’s error, though I could be wrong.

Sophomore midfielder Mike Birney was the offensive star for the Titans, putting in three goals. That’s as many as he had all last year, so either he’s ready to step up as another offensive option, or Ohio State was defending in a way that made it easy for a midfielder to put three goals on four shots.

Shayne Adams and Alex Maini, on the other hand, are known quantities, and they lived up to expectations. Two goals and an assist apiece for the duo, and Adams added a caused turnover/GB. Maini did commit three turnovers, so there’s definitely an area of improvement for the attackman. Freshman attack Ryan Callaghan contributed two assists in a non-starting appearance, so he could be one to watch as the year goes on.

On defense, this was not the Detroit defense we’ve come to expect. Only eight caused turnovers on 45 Buckeye possessions (including only one apiece from Jordan Houtby an Jamie Hebden, with the former also taking faceoffs) isn’t what we’ve seen in the past. Was it a good performance from Ohio State, or a change in philosophy from the Titans’ defense?

One thing the defense is definitely doing is giving up a lot of shots – A.J. Levell faced 31 and saved 17 – which you might not expect, given that the stats don’t seem to indicate they were taking defensive risks to create turnovers. Based on the stats, the Columbus native performed well in his hometown.

Of course, when the opposing team has Logan Schuss, maybe you just aren’t going to stop them for too long, no matter what you do. He scored seven goals (albeit on 17 shots(!)), and added three assists for a double-digit point day. Fellow attackman Carter Brown had a six-point day, and midfielder Jesse King had three goals. This is a talented Ohio State unit, but there’s still an idea of what UDM didn’t do well in game one.

Another couple games of data – albeit without a chance to watch the Titans play live – will give a better indication of what items from this game are attributable to the Titans’ and Buckeyes’ respective teams.

Elsewhere

Detroit official site recap. Ohio State official site recap. Highlights from the Ohio State site.

Up Next

Detroit travels to Annapolis, Maryland Friday to take on Navy. The Midshipmen blasted VMI 20-7 yesterday, and although beating the Keydets is nothing to write home about, it’s also something UDM failed to do in 2012.

Navy was a middling 6-6 team in the first year of the Rick Sowell coaching tenure. It’ll be interesting to see whether they’ve made the strides necessary to return to their historical standards.

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 10, 2013

The first official results of the year are in the books.

Yesterday’s Results

Division-1 Men

Michigan 6, Penn State 11
Detroit 8, Ohio State 14

Division-3 Men

Calvin 2, Carthage 29

Today’s Schedule

Division-3 Men

Albion v. Carthage, 1 p.m. (Ultimate Soccer Arenas, Pontica, Mich.)

MCLA-1

Davenport v. Toledo, 3 p.m.

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

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 9, 2013

…and the regular season has begun. Even more excitement.

Today’s Schedule

Division-1 Men

Michigan v. Penn State, 1 p.m. (Oosterbaan Fieldhouse)
Detroit @ Ohio State, 1 p.m. (Woody Hayes Athletic Complex)

Division-3 Men

Calvin v. Carthage, 1 p.m. (Ultimate Soccer Arenas, Pontiac, Mich.)

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

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Scores and Schedule: Feb. 8, 2013

MCLA action on the docket for today…

Today’s Schedule

MCLA-1

Davenport @ Central Michigan, 8 p.m. UPDATE – Clark Bell Reports this contest has been canceled due to weather.

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

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The Next Level: Michigan Natives playing Division-1 Lacrosse in 2013

Our annual look at Michigan natives who are playing college lacrosse at division-1 institutions this spring:

Air Force

  • Junior attack Tommy McKee (Holt).

Delaware

  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Bennett Packer (Brother Rice)

Detroit

  • Sophomore attack Brandon Beauregard (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Sophomore midfielder Mike Birney (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Senior midfielder Tyler Corcoran (South Lyon)
  • Senior midfielder Brandon Davenport (Grosse Pointe North)
  • Freshman LSM Nick Demattia (Clarkston)
  • Junior LSM Kevin DiSalle (Orchard Lake Saint Mary’s)
  • Sophomore midfielder Scott Drummond (Birmingham Seaholm)
  • Senior defenseman John Dwyer (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Freshman goalie Connor Flynn (Rockford)
  • Junior midfielder Nick Garippa (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Sophomore defenseman Joe Gifford (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Freshman midfielder Brad Harris (Saline)
  • Freshman midfielder Andy Hebden (Brother Rice)
  • Senior defenseman Jamie Hebden (Brother Rice)
  • Freshman midfielder JD Hess (Birmingham Seaholm)
  • Senior LSM/D Andrew Khalil (Warren De La Salle)
  • Junior midfielder Joe MacLean (Detroit Country Day)
  • Redshirt freshman midfielder Chris Mandell (Warren De La Salle)
  • Freshman attack Nick Melucci (Northville)
  • Senior midfielder Chris Nemes (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Freshman midfielder Chris Perry (Utica Eisenhower)
  • Junior midfielder Tim Robertson (Notre Same Prep)
  • Senior midfield/attack Nick Schesnuk (Warren De La Salle)
  • Junior midfielder Drew Schupbach (Orchard Lake St. Mary’s)
  • Sophomore midfielder Tom Sible (Forest Hills Central)
  • Freshman midfielder Mike Spuller (Dexter)
  • Junior attack Tyler Staruch (Brighton)
  • Freshman midfielder Dylan Swanson (Ann Arbor Pioneer)
  • Senior D/LSM Mike Wenderski (UD-Jesuit)
  • Freshman defenseman Jordan Yono (Detroit Catholic Central)

Georgetown

  • Junior midfielder Grant Fisher (Brother Rice)

Hofstra

  • Senior defenseman Michael Hamilton (Brother Rice)

Marquette

  • Redshirt freshman midfielder K.C. Kennedy (Brother Rice)
  • Freshman attack Henry Nelson (Brother Rice)

Michigan

  • Senior midfielder Zach Dauch (Bloomfield Hills Lahser)
  • Sophomore defenseman Mack Gembis (Cranbrook)
  • Senior defenseman Rob Healy (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Freshman attack Riley Kennedy (Brother Rice)
  • Sophomore attack Will Meter (Brother Rice)
  • Sophomore midfielder Thomas Orr (Detroit Catholic Central)
  • Junior midfielder Tom Sardelli (Notre Dame Prep)
  • Junior LSM Dakota Sherman (Cranbrook)
  • Senior defenseman Austin Swaney (East Grand Rapids)
  • Freshman defenseman Chris Walker (Brother Rice)
  • Junior defenseman Max Zwolan (Ann Arbor Pioneer)

Mount St. Mary’s

  • Senior midfielder Conor Carey (University of Detroit Jesuit)
  • Senior midfielder Jon Marsalese (University of Detroit Jesuit)

Ohio State

  • Junior midfielder Nick Diegel (Northville)

Penn State

  • Senior Attack Nick Dolik (Brother Rice)
  • Senior midfielder Danny Henneghan (Brother Rice)

Rutgers

  • Freshman midfielder Jacob Coretti (East Grand Rapids)

Sacred Heart

  • Sophomore midfielder  Joe Kemp (Troy Athens)

VMI

  • Sophomore midfielder Andrew Erber (Dexter)

Schools with none: Albany, Army, Bellarmine, Binghamton, Brown, Bryant, Bucknell?, Canisius, Colgate, Cornell, Dartmouth, Denver, Drexel, Duke, Fairfield, Hartford, Harvard, High Point, Hobart, Holy Cross, Jacksonville, Johns Hopkins, Lafayette, Loyola, Manhattan, Marist, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mercer, Navy, North Carolina, Notre Dame, Penn, Princeton, Providence, Quinnipiac, Robert Morris, Saint Joseph’s, Siena, St. John’s, Stony Brook, Syracuse, Towson, UMBC, Vermont, Villanova, Virginia, Wagner, and Yale.

There are 55 players listed on 13 different teams, both big declines from last year (60 and 17, respectively). That’s despite the addition of a new program in-region – although the Marquette factor is counterbalanced by the club players cycling off Michigan’s roster.

There are 11 homegrown players on Michigan’s roster, and 30 on Detroit’s roster. Despite that, the numbers overall continue to fall. The reasons behind that form a post for a different day…

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First Look: Michigan remaining opponents part 2

I took a look at the Titans’ common opponents with Michigan a few days ago. Now, it’s Michigan’s turn to run down the rest of the docket. The final six here. Round one at this post.

Colgate

Colgate Raiders Lacrosse Logo

Both flag and torch double as lacrosse sticks. Illegal equipment flag is down.

Michigan: March 17 (Flushing, N.Y.)

2012

14-4 (5-1 Patriot), #12 Laxpower, #13 Tempo-Free Lax

Colgate was a good team last year – very good, in fact. They tied for first in the Patriot League, and were the only team all season to knock off UMass (the country’s best team), doing so in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. Oh, by the way, they boast the reigning Tewaaraton winner on their roster.

The Past Results

Michigan has never played Colgate. In fact, neither has Detroit. Given how good Colgate was last year, I don’t think it would have gone well for either team, however.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Colgate 2012
Pace 72.61 (6)
Poss% 50.80 (16)
Off. Eff. 36.08 (6)
Def. Eff. 27.79 (20)
Pyth% 71.28 (13)

Colgate was a pretty fun team to watch last year. In addition to the excitement of the country’s best player, Peter Baum, they played up-tempo on both sides of the ball, and were fast because they chose to be, not because they were bad (the reason Michigan was fast).

Offensively, Peter Baum had an amazing season last year, racking up 97 total points. That came on a jaw-dropping 67 goals (he’s one of only six players that put up that many points, much less goals). Second-leading scorer and fellow attackman Ryan Walsh was just a freshman last year, and he’ll be back. The attrition starts at No. 3, however, with midfielder Jeff Ledwick moving on. No. 4 Brendan McCann (the third attackman) is a junior this year, and the fifth-leader was midfielder Matt Baker, who also returns and is now a senior. So much of a very potent offense returns that it’s tough to predict anything other than pain for Colgate opponents. If Baum misses significant time due to injury, you could see a slide, but otherwise I’m not expecting it.

The defense is similarly stacked with returners. Although the team’s non-faceoff leader in ground balls, senior captain Kevin Gordon, is gone (he’s listed as a defenseman, but played LSM based on having zero starts last season), starters James Queeney, Kevin Boyle, and Bobby Lawrence are all back. Between them, they missed one start all season, and had a decent defensive efficiency despite playing a couple good offenses over the course of the year. Goalie Jared Madison is gone, but as long as there’s a competent body between the pipes, it’s not a huge concern.

In the possession game, Robert Grabher was above .500 on faceoffs, and also returns (insert standard “doesn’t necessarily carry year-to-year” thoughts here). The Raiders were a good ride/clear team as well, and with their returning talent, I would expect that to continue. This should be one hell of a team.

Loyola

Loyola Greyhounds Lacrosse

Fear the Greyhound!

Michigan: March 23 (Michigan Stadium)

2012

18-1 (7-0 ECAC), #2 LaxPower, #2 Tempo-Free Lax

So, uh, yeah. This is your defending national champion. No tall mountain to climb there. Although The Hounds lose some talent, they were the (second-) best in the country for a reason, and they have plenty of excellent players returning as well.

The Past Results

Shockingly, Michigan held their own against Loyola in Oosterbaan Fieldhouse last spring, only falling by a 15-8 count. Loyola was fairly dominant in time of possession (Michigan conceded faceoffs by playing defenseman JD Johnson at the dot – though Johnson still won a decent share by turning them into 50/50 balls), but didn’t blow out a team that many other opponents did.

Thomas Paras and Willie Steenland had two goals and an assist apiece for Michigan, and Alex Vasileff added two tallies of his own. Austin Swaney and J.D. Johnson led the team in GBs, and former goalie Emil Weiss went the distance in net.

Loyola’s Mike Sawyer had a decent offensive outing, notching five goals and two assists. Davis Butts and Eric Lusby, the team’s other offensive stars last year, had two and two each.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Loyola 2012
Pace 65.84 (32)
Poss% 52.68 (8)
Off. Eff. 35.50 (9)
Def. Eff. 23.69 (5)
Pyth% 83.01 (2)

Hey, this team was pretty good at lacrosse. The only thing they were “bad” at was entertaining the most ADHD-stricken among their fans, playing at a leisurely pace despite plenty of talent on both sides of the ball. They dominated on offense, defense, and in the possession game, and that’s a pretty good recipe for ending up a national champion.

Eric Lusby is the biggest loss for this team. He led the team with 71 points, mostly through goal-scoring. Mike Sawyer will have to pick up some of that slack, as will fellow attackman Justin Ward. Midfielder Davis Butts is back, and he led the midfield in scoring last season. Sean O’Sullivan wasn’t too far behind him, but both of those players were back a bit: this is an attack-driven offense. With a new coordinator in town, that might change (David Metzbower replaces Dan Chemotti), and Butts kept pace with many of the attackmen in Loyola’s scrimmage against Team USA, so with the talent in place, the Hounds would be wise to use it.

On the defensive side of the field, D-middie Josh Hawkins gets a lot of the press because he’s exceptionally athletic and has sweet dreads. However, longpoles Reid Acton and Joe Fletcher are probably the more important pieces outside of transition opportunities (and expect Loyola to run a bit more with the new clock rules, if the USA scrimmage is any indication). Defenseman Dylan Grimm is the only loss from the close D, and goalie Jack Runkel also returns.

Faceoff specialist J.P. Dalton – who took damn near every draw for Loyola last season – is gone and will have to be replaced. It’s safe to assume a slight step back in that department, especially with almost no experience returning.

Air Force

Air Force Falcons Lacrosse

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

Michigan: March 30 (Michigan Stadium)

2012

6-7 (1-5 ECAC), #35 Laxpower, #29 Tempo-Free Lax

Air Force didn’t have a great season, with their only ECAC win coming against Bellarmine (the shellacking of Michigan was a non-conference game in the Wolverines’ probationary year). They had some pieces in place, but the gauntlet of the ECAC schedule – Denver, Loyola, and Ohio State can go up against almost any conference’s top three, aside from maybe the ACC – did them in.

The Past Results

I alluded to it a moment ago, but the Wolverines truly got demolished by Air Force last year (not like I flew out to Denver to attend the game or anything…). U-M was on the wrong side of a 15-6 decision.

The Wolverines were actually the better possession team, but couldn’t put the ball in the back of the net themselves, while Air Force ran out to an absurd .536 offensive efficiency.

The Wolverines had only six goals and only two assists, so it wasn’t a banner day offensively. A really sloppy performance in terms of penalties was also huge. Air Force notched four EMO goals, including two of their first three – after Michigan had taken a 3-0 lead.

Dylan Westerhold did not have a spectacular day in net, but it’s hard to blame the goalie when he faced so many shots (he let in 15 on 24 faced). With Emil Weiss between the pipes, the story could have been very different.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Air Force 2012
Pace 71.69 (8)
Poss% 48.50 (46)
Off. Eff. 29.97 (30)
Def. Eff. 27.46 (17)
Pyth% 52.13 (29)

I was surprised to see Air Force ranked as highly as they are according to Tempo-Free Lax, and I think part of the issue may simply be that Michigan game. It was one of Michigan’s worst games of the year, and easily Air Force’s best. Hacking it out of the numbers would take the Falcons well below their current rankings… but it still counts at the end of the day.

Three attackmen – all of whom return – led The Academy in scoring last year. Keith Dreyer was more a feeder than a goal-scorer, while both Mike Crampton and Holt native Tommy McKee were primarily finishers. Beyond that trio, there’s a dropoff to midfielders Erik Smith and Kyle Cassady (another attack-centric offense). The sixth- and seventh-leading scorers were more attackman in Ryland De Pol and Pat Harrison. Sophomore midfielder Tom Burgess rounds out last year’s double-digit point scorers. Every single one is back.

The defense isn’t quite so lucky. Starter Dayton Gilbreath has graduated along with SSDM Jon DeBonis, but D starters Matt Puleo and Davis Gunter are back, along with goalie Austin Fox. Another longpole, Kyle O’Brien, was a freshman last year and picked up plenty of ground balls – I think he was the LSM, but the AFA roster doesn’t differentiate.

Faceoff specialist Bryan Price, who won .512 of his draws last year, is also back. From a pure talent retention standpoint, this Air Force team should be greatly improved.

Delaware

University of Delaware Blue Hens lacrosse

The Blue Hen works exclusively chest and arms in the gym.

Michigan: April 6 (Newark, Del.)

2012

6-9 (1-5 Colonial), #33 Laxpower, #30 Tempo-Free Lax

Delaware started last season pretty well, opening with two wins and then losses to a Loyola and Johns Hopkins team that ended up being pretty damn good. The wheels kind of fell off from there, with the only wins coming against expansion teams Michigan and Mercer, a pretty bad Saint Joseph’s team… and 8-7 Villanova. Weird year for the Blue Hens.

The Past Results

Delaware came in the latter part of Michigan’s schedule when the Wolverines started getting their stuff together. During that stretch, they managed to stay very competitive against some decent-to-mediocre teams, one of which Delaware was. The Blue Hens only won 11-7.

Michigan was right in the same neighborhood of Delaware from an efficiency standpoint, but a big deficit in possessions – the Wolverines won only 1/3 of faceoffs, and cleared less than 75% while allowing Delaware a near-perfect day – led to the clear loss.

Emil Weiss was the star with 17 saves, but also a goat with five turnovers in the clearing game. He faced 28 shots and practically stood on his head, so that sin can be mostly forgiven (Michigan wasn’t really in position to win anyway), but it’s certainly a “what could have been” situation.

Trevor Yealy and David McCormack were Michigan’s offensive stars, with three and two goals, respectively. Willie Steenland added two assists.

Detroit also played Delaware last year, getting crushed 19-6.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Delaware 2012
Pace 67.47 (21)
Poss% 51.88 (12)
Off. Eff. 28.90 (37)
Def. Eff. 30.48 (32)
Pyth% 51.69 (30)

The numbers may be proving me wrong a bit here, but I think Delaware was pretty bad last year. The play of FOGO Dan Cooney kept things in reach, and although the Blue Hens were the more efficient team in each of their six wins, they were within the margin where another possession or two in either direction could have made a big difference. Huge wins over Detroit and Mercer also skew the numbers.

Unfortunately for Delaware, Cooney is gone, and that slim margin for error might be eliminated. His primary backup, Tyler Barbarich will likely take over at the dot, but expecting him to perform like Cooney (especially when he was under .430 himself last year) may be unfair.

Things don’t start so hot for the offense, either. Attackman Grant Kaleikau has graduated after accounting for as many points as the next three leading scorers combined. Those three players – midfielders Danny Keane and Nick Diachenko and attackman Mark Yetter – benefitted from a lot of Kaleikau assists, and his threat is gone. Keane and Diachenko return, but will have to hope for another creator/distributor if they want to stay productive. Senior midfielder Dom Sebastiani is the only returning player who has more assists than goal last year among regular rotation players.

A pair of freshmen split time in net last year, with redshirt Chris Herbert getting about 2/3 of the minutes and Brett Anton getting the remaining significant time. Anton actually put up significantly better numbers, but without knowing the situations each played in, it’s unfair to compare them (what I’m saying here is there’s probably a reason Herbert played more). As for defensive field players, senior Connor Fitzgerald will be a two-time captain this fall, but the guys who played alongside him are either gone (Jarred Bowe and Tim Langmaid) or only split time last year (James Connelly).

Saint Joseph’s

Saint Joseph's University Hawks Logo Lacrosse

Fear the Hawk

Michigan: April 20 (Michigan Stadium)

2012

6-9 (1-5 Colonial), #50 Laxpower, #48 Tempo-Free Lax

Saint Joseph’s smacked Michigan around in fall ball last year… then proceeded to be kinda bad during the course of the season. Their wins included Mercer, Wagner, VMI, and Quinnipiac, owners of nine wins between them (the Hawks also beat Marist and Towson, much better teams). This is a squad that has a lot of improving to do, but in the second year of a new coaching staff, may be able to do just that.

The Past Results

As mentioned previously, Michigan got killed by the Hawks in fall ball last year. It was Michigan’s first Division-1 action of any kind, so maybe a little expected, but to follow that up with the season Saint Joseph’s had… well I guess that explains how Michigan was a 1-13 squad last year.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Saint Joseph’s 2012
Pace 62.13 (48)
Poss% 48.07 (50)
Off. Eff. 23.26 (57)
Def. Eff. 28.78 (24)
Pyth% 28.92 (48)

So, Saint Joseph’s was pretty bad last year. They played slowly, couldn’t control the ball, couldn’t score. The one thing they could do was prevent opponents from scoring (probably made for a lot of really boring games), but that wasn’t enough to nab them more than a few wins, even against a pretty weak schedule.

If you couldn’t score the ball at all last year, it might not be such a bad thing to lose some of your leading scorers. At least that’s what Saint Joseph’s will be hoping. Although the top two scorers (junior attack Ryan McGee and senior attack Kyle Williams) return, three of the other top seven guys are gone. McGee was a one-man show last year, scoring or assisting on more than half the Hawks’ goals. He might need to carry an even bigger load this year if the offense is going to improve at all.

The defense, on the other hand, was pretty good. Kevin Barrow, John Moran, and Will Farrell (different spelling, but, !!) return – though Moran and Farrell each only played art of the year – but the rest of the unit is hit hard by graduation. For being the lone bright spot last year, the defense may not hold up to its standards. Matt Germain, Colin Roemer, and goalie Griffin Ferrigan (who saved .572 of shots faced) are all out the door. Dustin Keen will likely step in between the pipes.

Denver

Denver Pioneers Lacrosse

90s-tastic background

Michigan: April 27 (Denver, Colo.)

2012

9-7 (3-4 ECAC), #5 LaxPower, #8 Tempo-Free Lax

Denver has been a hot program in recent years, reaching the NCAA Tournament each of the last three year, and making it to the semifinals in 2011. The Pioneers’ resurgence has been built on the coaching of longtime Princeton headman Bill Tierney. Although DU’s record last year wasn’t stellar, the losses were to tough teams: Ohio State, Loyola (thrice), and Notre Dame were among the seven losses.

The Past Results

Michigan traveled out to Denver to take on the Pioneers last year – they’ll do the same in 2013 – and came out with a 17-5 beatdown. That was no surprise given the talent and experience difference between the two programs.

The Wolverines couldn’t win a faceoff, cleared poorly, and couldn’t take advantage of the limited possessions they had (while allowing Denver to take advantage of their own time after time). Dylan Westerhold was the man between the pipes, and his inexperience showed.

Doug Bryant scored two goals for Michigan, while Thomas Paras, Alex Vasileff, and Jeff Chu each scored one. Michigan mustered only seven shots on goal, so scoring on five of them (none assisted) was actually pretty impressive. Maybe the goalie was just surprised when they got one off.

The Forward-Thinking Look Back

Denver 2012
Pace 62.00 (49)
Poss% 52.82 (7)
Off. Eff. 38.77 (2)
Def. Eff. 30.40 (31)
Pyth% 75.12 (8)

It should come as no surprise that Denver was a reallllly slow team last year – it’s a Tierney tradition. Despite the slow pace of play, they fielded a very good possession percentage and offense – it might have behooved them to speed things along a little.

About that offense: its most important piece, Canadian attackman and all-around badass Mark Matthews is gone. So is No. 2 scorer Alex Demopoulos, a fellow attackman. Midfielder Jeremy Noble was only one point behind Demopoulos (46) last year, so he should step into a bigger role. Still, losing your top two scorers isn’t the preferred way to enter a season. Attack Eric Law is also back, as is midfielder Wes Berg. The pieces are in place to have another great offense, but reaching No. 2 nationally with the talent the Pioneers are replacing will be tough. Expect midfielder/FOGO Chase Carraro to possibly play a bigger role in the scoring unit, especially when he can create fast breaks.

Defensively, Denver was very young, and should improve with experience. Goalies Jamie Faus and Ryan LaPlante both return, with Faus coming off injury – but potentially losing his job to All-Freshman team member LaPlante. On D, Carson Cannon, Matt Kramer, Drew Babb, and Kyle Hercher all return. Expect immediate improvement from the defense.

I touched on Chase Carraro in the offense section, but it’s important to note that he’s also one of the country’s best faceoff specialists. He won .604 of his draws last season, a big part of the Pioneers’ huge possession advantage (they were mediocre on the clear, and not a heavy-riding team, to say the least).

That’s all, folks. Pre-season opponent previews are complete.

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