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Men's Lacrosse

No. 8 Men’s Lax Takes On No. 1 Maryland In NCAA Quarterfinals

GAME INFORMATION
GAME #18: No. 8 Cornell vs. No. 1 Maryland
FACE OFF: Sunday, May 20, at 12:00 p.m.
SITE: Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium (Annapolis, Md.)
2018 Records: Cornell (13-4, 4-2 Ivy League); Maryland (13-3, 4-1 B1G)
SERIES RECORD: Maryland leads, 14-4-1
LAST MEETING: Maryland, 8-7 (5/10/2014 in College Park, Md.)
 
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* FULL GAME NOTES (PDF)
 
THE MATCHUP: No. 8 Cornell is set to battle No. 1 Maryland in the quarterfinals of the 2018 NCAA Men's Lacrosse Tournament with a berth to championship weekend on the line when the team's meet at noon on Sunday, May 20 at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Md. The Big Red is making its 21st trip to the national quarterfinals after posting a gritty 10-9 victory over the eight-seed Syracuse at the Carrier Dome. Cornell (13-4) has won 10 of its last 11 contests, and has been relying on its defense recently, holding four of its last five opponents to single-digits. The Terrapins are the number one seed in the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season. Maryland (13-3) responded to a 13-10 loss to Johns Hopkins in the B1G championship game by defeating Northeast Conference champion Robert Morris, 14-11, in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The two teams have met five times in the NCAA Men's Lacrosse Tournament, with Cornell holding a 3-2 advantage after the Terps won the last outing, 8-7, in 2014. The game will be televised live on ESPNU and online at www.ESPN3.com with Anish Shroff (play-by-play), Quint Kessenich (analyst), and Paul Carcaterra (sideline) on the call. The game can also be heard at www.WHCUradio.com or locally on WHCU 870 AM/95.9 FM with Barry Leonard and Howie Borkan in the broadcast booth.
 
WHAT TO KNOW IF YOU GO:
• The game is being played at the Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium.
• The parking lot will open at 8:30 a.m., and parking will cost $10.
• Tailgating will be allowed behind cars, but fans will not be allowed to take up parking spaces to tailgate.
• The gates will open at 10:30 a.m.
• Seating is general admission and will be on the press box side of the stadium.
• Re-entry is allowed ONLY between games.
• No umbrellas will be allowed in the stadium.
• Lacrosse sticks are permitted, however balls are not.
 
THE SERIES VS. MARYLAND: The teams first met in 1921, three seasons prior to lacrosse becoming a varsity sport for the Terrapins.
• The teams played in 1921 and 1922, but would not meet again until 1929, and Maryland went on to win four consecutive contests spanning 36 seasons (1929, 1951, 1963, 1965).
• The Big Red ended that streak by defeating the Terrapins 12-6 in the very first NCAA national championship game (1971).
• The Terps won eight straight regular season meetings from 1993-2000.
• Maryland does not count the first two meetings in the series.
 
A WIN OVER MARYLAND WOULD:
• send the Big Red into the NCAA Men's Lacrosse Tournament semifinals for the first time since 2013 and the 14th time overall.
• improve Cornell to 34-24 overall in NCAA tournament games.
• give the Big Red its second consecutive win against the number one seed in the NCAA Tournament (Virginia, 2009) and improve Cornell to 2-6 all-time against the number one seed.
• improve Cornell to 8-6 all-time when unseeded in the NCAA tournament.
• give Cornell 14 wins in a season for the first time since the 2013 team went 14-3.
• establish the best single-season win total improvement in men's lacrosse history with nine more wins in 2018 than in 2017 (5).
• make the Big Red 5-0 this season in nationally televised games.
• be the 759th win in program history.
• improve the Big Red to 7-2 vs. nationally ranked opponents this season.
• make Cornell 20-14 all-time when ranked eighth in the USILA Coaches' Poll.
• give the Big Red consecutive wins over the No. 1 ranked team in the USILA Coaches poll for just the second time in program history (Princeton in 2009; Syracuse in 2011) and the first time ever in the same season.
• improve Cornell to 7-24 all-time against the top ranked team in the USILA Coaches' Poll.
 
CAMPUS CONNECTIONS:
• Maryland head coach John Tillman was a 1991 graduate of Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration. He played for legendary coach Richie Moran and was a member of the 1989 squad that earned a berth in the NCAA tournament.
Charlie Estill and UMD's Zach Pinney both attended Ithaca High School. 
Jonathan Donville, Scott Flynn and UMD's Bubba Fairman all attended Deerfield.
Andrew Fowler, Colton Rupp, Jack Bolen and UMD's Justin Shockey all attended Landon School.
Griff Gosnell and UMD's Steven Shollenberger both attended Bullis.
Ryan Bray and UMD's Tim Rotanz both attended Shoreham Wading River HS. 
Patrick Karey and UMD's Tyler Rockhill both attended St. Paul's School.
Dom Doria and UMD's Thomas O'Connell both attended Chaminade HS.
Christian Knight and UMD's Logan Wisnauskas both attended Boys' Latin School.
Brandon Salvatore (Taft School) and UMD's Andrew Morris (New Canaan HS) are both from New Canaan, Conn.
 
TOURNAMENT TIDBITS: Cornell's 33 NCAA tournament victories ranks sixth all-time, tied with UNC
• The Big Red's 28 appearances also ranks sixth.
• Only five teams have more national titles than the Big Red
• The 2018 season marks Cornell's 14th trip to the NCAA tournament since 2000, making it to the quarterfinal round nine times, the semifinals four times and the national championship game once in that span.
 
UNSEEDED CORNELL:
• Of its 28 NCAA tournament appearances, Cornell has been unseeded just seven times.
• In those seven tournaments, the Big Red has posted a record of 7-6.
• The Big Red was last unseeded in 2014 when it fell to sixth-seed Maryland 8-7.
 
CORNELL VS. SEEDED OPPONENTS:
• The Big Red is 22-21 all-time vs. seeded opponents in the NCAA tournament.
• Cornell won its last outing vs. a seeded opponent when it defeated Syracuse last weekend in the opening round.
 
CORNELL VS. THE NUMBER ONE SEED:
• The Big Red is 1-6 all-time vs. the number one seed in the NCAA tournament.  
• Cornell's last game vs. the number one seed was also its only victory against the number one seed, as the 2009 team upset Virginia, 15-6, in the national semifinals.
 
CORNELL VS. THE NUMBER EIGHT SEED:
• The Big Red improved to 5-0 all-time vs. the number eight seed in the NCAA tournament when it defeated Syracuse in the opening round on May 13.  
• Prior to last weekend, Cornell's last meeting with the number eight seed was a 12-2 victory over Washington & Lee in the first round of the 1978 NCAA tournament.
  
THE HEAD COACH
Peter Milliman (13-4, .765) was named the interim head coach of the Cornell men's lacrosse program on May 8, 2017.
• For the past four seasons, Milliman has served the program, first as an assistant coach and then as the program's Mario St. George Boiardi '04 Associate Head Coach of Men's Lacrosse.
• He is in his fifth season as a head coach (50-30).

INSIDE LACROSSE MEDIA ALL-AMERICANS
Jeff Teat led a trio of Cornell players named Inside Lacrosse Media All-Americans with a first-team selection.
Christian Knight was also honored with a second-team selection, while Jake McCulloch was named honorable mention.
• Knight was an honorable mention Inside Lacrosse Media All-American a year ago.
 
SINGLE SEASON IMPROVEMENT: With its record of 13-4, Cornell has posted eight more wins than it did a season ago (5), tied for the best single-season turnaround in program history.
• The Big Red had an eight-game improvement once before when the 1966 team went 12-0 following the 1965 season when the squad went 4-7.
 
MAY DAY: Cornell's win over Brown in the Ivy League Tournament on May 4 snapped a five-game losing streak in the month of May by the Big Red, giving the program its first May win since 2013.
• The Big Red is now 3-0 in May.
 
TICKLE THE ALL-IVY: The Big Red had nine players named All-Ivy, the most since the 2007 season. Cornell's three first team selections – Jeff Teat (unanimous), Jordan Dowiak, and Jake Pulver (unanimous) – are the most sine first-team honorees since the 2015 season.
 
EXCEEDING EXPECTATIONS: Cornell was chosen to finish fifth in the Ivy League preseason poll, but finished the regular season sitting in second place in the conference standings.
 
TOURNAMENT CHAMPS: Cornell won its first Ivy League Tournament title since 2011 when it upset No. 1 Yale in the championship game on May 6.
 
SAVES A LOT: Christian Knight ranks third among all current Division I men's lacrosse goalies for career saves (593), ranking behind only Georgetown's Nick Marrocco (655) and Manhattan's Michael Zingaro (630).
•Knight's 593 career saves are also good for fourth overall in Cornell history.
 
SHARE THE BALL: Cornell is assisting on nearly 70 percent of its goals this season (.695).
• The Big Red's assist percentage is the highest among all Division I schools.
• There are just six teams assisting on at least 65 percent of its goals, with Boston U (.678), Princeton (.678), Fairfield (.674), Albany (.669), and Harvard (.652) and joining Cornell.
• In each of its 13 wins on the season, the Big Red has assisted on at least 65 percent of its goals, with a high of .857 percent vs. Brown in the Ivy League Tournament (7 g, 6 a).
• In three of its four losses, Cornell has assisted on 55 percent or fewer of its goals, with a low of .444 percent vs. Albany (9 g, 4 a). 
 
TOP SCORING MIDFIELD: The Big Red enters the weekend with the second-highest ranked scoring midfield in the nation, as the top two lines have accounted for 161 total points.
• Only the Maryland midfield unit has more points (167).
• Altogether, only five teams – Maryland (167), Cornell (161), Vermont (154), Albany (154), and Duke (153) – have more than 150 points to its credit.
• The Big Red's first offensive midfield of Jordan Dowiak, Jake McCulloch and Connor Fletcher have the third most goals (80) of any top line, behind Albany (92) and Mayrland (85).
• Cornell's top six midfielders have accounted for 111 goals, the second most in the nation behind Albany (112).
• Cornell's 50 assists out of the midfield is good for fourth overall, behind Maryland (66), Duke (62), and Vermont (61). 
 
HIGHEST SCORING MIDFIELDERS: Jordan Dowiak ranks eight in the nation among midfielders with 36 goals.
• Sacred Heart's Max Tuttle tops the list with 46 goals.
• Of the seven midfielders with more goals than Dowiak only Maryland's Connor Kelly (44) and Loyola's Jay Drapeau (41) are still playing in the NCAA Tournament.
  
YRL UNSUNG HERO: Senior Jake Pulver has been named a finalist for the Yeardley Reynolds Love Unsung Hero Award, presented by the One Love Foundation, which recognizes one male and one female student-athlete who make significant contributions to their team and community. Named for the women's lacrosse player who lost her life from relationship violence in May 2010, the YRL Unsung Hero Award is given to student-athletes who "demonstrate dedication, integrity, humility, hard work, community service, leadership, kindness and sportsmanship – all qualities Yeardley exemplified throughout her life." Pulver is among three Division I finalists for the Award, and the winner will be announced in late May.
 
ILT TOURNEY MVP: Christian Knight was named the Ivy League Tournament MVP after leading the Big Red to its first Ivy League tournament championship since 2011.
• His 35 saves in two games set a new Ivy League tournament record. 
• Knight recorded a tournament record 19 saves in a 7-4 win over Brown in the semifinals.
• He followed that with a 16-save performance as Cornell upset No. 1 Yale in the championship game to take conference tournament crown and earn the league's NCAA automatic bid.
• He joins Rob Pannell '13 as the only other Big Red player to be named the tournament MVP.
 
WEEKLY HONORS
• The Big Red has earned two Warrior/US Lacrosse Player of the Week awards – Jeff Teat (April 9) and Christian Knight (May 7).
• Cornell has earned three Ivy League Player of the Week honors from two players – Jeff Teat (March 26, April 9) and Christian Knight (March 5).
• The Big Red have had two freshman – John Piatelli (Feb. 27) and Jonathan Donville (April 9, April 16) – take home three Ivy League Rookie of the Week awards.
Jeff Teat has been named to the USILA Team of the Week three times – Feb. 27, March 26, and April 10.
 
YOUNGEST STAFF: Cornell boasts a pair of recent grads as assistant coaches – Jordan Stevens '15 and Connor Buczek '15. No other Division I staff has two full-time assistant coaches as young as or younger than the Big Red duo.
 
SIEVE! SIEVE! SIEVE! 
• Of Cornell's 17 opponents so far this season, only four team's goalies – Penn State (.591), Princeton (.556), Brown in the ILT (.667), and Syracuse (.545) – have managed to save more than 50 percent of shots faced.
• Yale's .125 save percentage in the Ivy League Tournament is the lowest of the season for a Big Red opponent.
• For the season, Big Red opponents have managed to save just 38.7 percent of shots faced. 
• Since opponent save percentage started being recorded in 1977, Cornell's opponents have saved fewer than 45 percent of shots faced just once (2013; .435 percent).
 
DOUBLE-DIGIT GAMES: With his 10 points vs. Brown on April 21, Jeff Teat matched the Cornell record held by Mike French '76, with five double-digit games.
• Of his five 10 point games, two have come against nationally ranked teams, and three have come against Ivy opponents.
 
100-POINT: With his four points vs. Yale in the Ivy League Tournament, junior Clarke Petterson became the 43rd player in Cornell history to register 100 career points.
 
60-60 POINT SCORERS:
Clarke Petterson (61) and Jeff Teat (97) are just the eightH pair of Cornell teammates to each register 60 points in a season.
• Cornell has not had a pair of 60-60 scorers since Rob Pannell (102) and Steve Mock (70) in 2013.
 
90-POINT PERFORMANCE: With his three points vs. Brown in the Ivy League Tournament, Jeff Teat amassed 90 points for the 2018 season, becoming just the eighth Big Red player to finish a season with 90 points.
• Cornell's last 90 point scorer was Rob Pannell with 102 points in 2013.
 
TWO 70-POINT SEASONS: Jeff Teat has amassed more than 70 points for the second consecutive season.
• He is just the fourth player in Big Red history to put together at least two 70-point seasons in a career, joining Mike French '76, Eamon McEneaney '77, and Rob Pannell '13. 

THE 30-30 CLUB: For the second consecutive season, Jeff Teat has posted 30 goals and 30 assists.
• Only three other Big Red players – Mike French '76, Eamon McEneany '77 and Rob Pannell '13 – have tallied at least 30 goals and 30 assists in a season twice in their career, with French reaching the mark three times.
• Including Teat's performance in 2017 and 2018 there have been just 13 seasons in Cornell history with a 30-30 performer.
 
THE PETTERSON-TEAT CONNECTION:
Clarke Petterson and Jeff Teat both attended The Hill Academy.
• Of Petterson's 92 points since the 2017 season, 38 have involved Teat.
• Teat has assisted on 22 of Petterson's 58 goals since 2017.
• Of Petterson's 36 assists since 2017, 16 have come on goals by Teat.
 
MOVING ON UP IN CORNELL HISTORY:
Christian Knight ranks fourth in career saves (593) … He needs 44 more to move into third place.
• Knight ranks sixth in career wins (30), tied with Dan Mackesey '77.
Jeff Teat ranks fifth in career assists (99) … He needs just six more to move into fourth place.
Jeff Teat ranks seventh in career points (169) … He needs just six more to move in to sixith place.
Paul Rasimowicz ranks ninth in career faceoffs won (250) … He needs just 45 to move into eighth place.
Jake Pulver ranks eight in career caused turnovers (36) … He needs seven more to move into seventh place.
 
SEASON MARKS
Jeff Teat ranks fourth in Cornell history for assists in a single season (60) and needs just two more to surpass Eamon McEneaney in third place (61 assists in 1976).
• Teat ranks fourth in single-season points (97) and needs just three more to tie Tim Goldstein in third places (100 in 1987).  
Paul Rasimowicz sits just outside the top 10 for season faceoffs won (140) … He needs just 13 to move into 10th place.
 
RANKED OPPONENTS
• Of the Big Red's 17 games this season, six were against teams that were ranked in the final USILA Coaches' Poll of the season.
• Cornell played Yale (fifth) and Syracuse (11th) twice, as well as Albany (fourth), and Penn State (20th).
• Three other opponents – Lehigh, Penn, and Princeton – received votes in the final poll.
• Cornell is 6-2 this season vs. ranked opponents.
• The six wins over nationally ranked opponents is the most for Cornell since 2013.
 
USILA PLAYER OF THE YEAR WATCH LIST: Jeff Teat has been named to the USILA Player of the Year Watch List
• Of the 17 players to make the cut, Teat is one of three Ivy League selections and one of just five sophomores on the list.
• The Ivy League joins the ACC, the Big East, and the Big Ten with three selections apiece, but is the only conference to have the three players come from three different institutions.  
 
TEWAARATON NOMINEE: Jeff Teat has been named one of 25 nominees for the 2018 Tewaaraton Award.
• Teat and Jake McCulloch were both named to the Tewaaraton Watch List.
• Cornell has not had player make the official list of nominees since Connor Buczek '15 and Matt Donovan '15 made the list during the 2015 season, ending a streak of 11 consecutive seasons with at least one player making the final 25.
• The Big Red men's lacrosse program has produced two Tewaaraton Trophy winners – Max Seibald in 2008 and Rob Pannell in 2013. 
 
PULVER'S GOT SENIOR CLASS
Jake Pulver has been named one of 10 finalists for the 2018 Senior CLASS Award in collegiate lacrosse.
• To be eligible for the award, a student-athlete must be classified as an NCAA Division I senior and have notable achievements in four areas of excellence: community, classroom, character and competition.
• Cornell has had three Senior CLASS award winners – Matt McMonagle '07, Max Seibald '09, and Connor Buczek '15.
 
BACK IN THE RANKINGS AGAIN
• The Big Red entered the week of April 16 ranked eighth in the USILA Coaches Poll, its first top 10 ranking since April 27, 2015.
• Cornell's inclusion in the March 26 USILA Coaches Poll (No. 14) ended a 29-week streak in which the Big Red was out of the poll, the longest stretch in school history.
• The Big Red was last ranked at No. 15 on Feb. 15, 2016.
• The Cornell program has had just two other significant ranking droughts in program history – 26 weeks from mid-March 1996 until the first week of the 1999 season and 21 weeks from late March 1993 until April 29, 1995.
 
TEAT'S CAREER DAY: Cornell sophomore Jeff Teat had a career day vs. Harvard on April 7, having a hand in 12 of the Big Red's 15 goals.
• Teat's 12 points on the day matched a career high and ranks third all-time in Cornell history for points in a single-game.
• His eight assists set a personal-best and ranks fourth in Big Red history for assists in a single-game.
• The eight assists were the most by a Cornell player since Andrew Collins handed out eight helpers vs. Yale in 2003. 
 
OFFENSIVE OUTBURST:
• Earlier this season, Cornell scored 20 goals in three consecutive games (Penn – 20; Air Force – 23; Dartmouth – 22) for the first time in program history.
• The Big Red's 65 goals in that span came on 87 shots on goal (.747 percent).
• Cornell assisted on 48 of the 65 goals (.738).
• Of the 65 goals, 38 came from the midfield, with 27 from the attack.
• With 65 goals on 113 possessions, the Big Red averaged just over one goal on every other possession during the streak (.575 percent). 

WIN NUMBER 750
• Cornell picked up the 750th win in program history when it defeated Air Force, 23-5 on March 27.
• The Big Red is one of just seven NCAA Division I men's lacrosse programs to boast at least 750 wins.
 
FASTEST TO 100:
• With 100 points in 18 career games, Jeff Teat scored 100 career points faster than any other four-year player in Cornell or Ivy League history.
• In NCAA history, the 18 games matches Tim Nelson (NC State/SU), who also did it in 18 games from 1982-83.
• Rob Pannell tallied his 100th career point in his 25th career game with the Big Red during his sophomore season in 2010.
• Michael French '76 (16 games) and Eamon McEneaney '77 (19 games) registered their 100th career point in fewer games than Pannell, but due to NCAA rules that prohibited freshmen from playing varsity sports, both accomplished the feat in their junior season.
• Teat is the 42nd player in Cornell history to amass 100 career points.
 
ROSTER SUPERLATIVES: Cornell's 49-man roster is the largest since the program carried a jayvee team in the mid-1980s, surpassing the 47-man roster of the 2008 season. 
 
THROWBACK NUMBERS
• The 2018 roster features five unique numbers on it - #51, #61, #77, #78, and #93.
Jeff Teat is the first player to wear #51 since Jerome Dolins wore it in 1966.
Selden Leonard is the first player to wear #78 since Marshall Grode in 1959
Parker Henderer (#61), Tom Reilly (#77) and Kiernan Coles (#93) are the first. Big Red men's lacrosse player to ever wear their numbers. 
 
ELITE COMPANY
• Over the past 10 seasons (2008-2017) only 10 schools have registered 100 victories – Duke (147), Syracuse (134), Denver (122), Maryland (128), Notre Dame (118), UVA (112), North Carolina (110), Loyola (108), Cornell (105), and Hopkins (100).
• During that span, only nine teams have won at least 65 percent of its games – Syracuse (.788), Duke (.754), Notre Dame (.742), Maryland (.736), Denver (.728), Loyola (.692), UVA (.683), Cornell (.673), and UNC (.671).
 
CLOSE CALLS
• Since the beginning of the 2003 season, Cornell is 38-22 in games that have been decided by a single goal, a mark that was raised when the Big Red defeated No. 11 Syracuse, 10-9, in the NCAA first round on May 13, 2018.
• Of the 22 losses, 17 have come against ranked opponents, including 11 against squads ranked in the top-10, five of which were ranked either No. 1 or No. 2 in the nation.
 
BIG RED INTERNATIONAL
• Three former Big Red players – Rob Pannell (USA), Max Seibald (Israel), and Mat Martinez (Puerto Rico) – have already been selected to participate in the 2018 Federation of International Lacrosse (FIL) Men's Lacrosse World Championship, scheduled for this July in Netanya, Israel.
• Two other alumni – Brennan Donville and Jason Noble – and current player Jeff Teat are still on the training roster for Team Canada.
• Cornell senior Kason Tarbell is on the training team for the Iroquois Nationals.
 
MILLIMAN TABBED TO ASSIST TEAM USA: Interim Head Coach Peter Milliman has been named an assistant coach for the 2019 U.S. men's national indoor team. The team will be led by Regy Thorpe (Syracuse University), who will guide the team in pursuit of a gold medal at the 2019 Federation of International Lacrosse (FIL) World Indoor Lacrosse Championship (WILC), Sept. 19-28, 2019, in Langley, British Columbia, Canada.
 
PRESEASON ALL-AMERICAN:  Sophomore attackman Jeff Teat was named a preseason second-team All-American by Inside Lacrosse Magazine.
 
OH CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN:  The Big Red has four captains this season – seniors Jordan Dowiak, Christian Knight, Jake Pulver, and junior Clarke Petterson.
 
HARD HAT: Clarke Petterson was selected to carry the Hard Hat for the 2018 season. The tradition of the Hard Hat began in the fall of 1999. Midway through the fall season, a player is selected to carry the Hard Hat for the year. The recipient is someone that the coaches feel demonstrates a blue-collar approach to the game of lacrosse; he is driven and selfless, not the most talented player on the field, but consistently the hardest worker. He puts the team first, and embodies how the coaches want Cornell players to act and respond on or off the field.
 


 
 
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Players Mentioned

Jack Bolen

#16 Jack Bolen

SSDM
6' 0"
Senior
Ryan Bray

#20 Ryan Bray

M
5' 11"
Junior
Kiernan Coles

#93 Kiernan Coles

D
6' 1"
Junior
Jordan Dowiak

#23 Jordan Dowiak

M
6' 0"
Senior
Charlie Estill

#11 Charlie Estill

A
6' 5"
Senior
Connor Fletcher

#27 Connor Fletcher

M
6' 3"
Sophomore
Scott Flynn

#44 Scott Flynn

LSM
6' 2"
Senior
Griff Gosnell

#37 Griff Gosnell

D
6' 0"
Sophomore
Patrick Karey

#15 Patrick Karey

LSM
6' 2"
Sophomore
Jake McCulloch

#9 Jake McCulloch

M
6' 0"
Junior
Clarke Petterson

#45 Clarke Petterson

A
5' 10"
Junior
Jake Pulver

#34 Jake Pulver

D
6' 0"
Senior

Players Mentioned

Jack Bolen

#16 Jack Bolen

6' 0"
Senior
SSDM
Ryan Bray

#20 Ryan Bray

5' 11"
Junior
M
Kiernan Coles

#93 Kiernan Coles

6' 1"
Junior
D
Jordan Dowiak

#23 Jordan Dowiak

6' 0"
Senior
M
Charlie Estill

#11 Charlie Estill

6' 5"
Senior
A
Connor Fletcher

#27 Connor Fletcher

6' 3"
Sophomore
M
Scott Flynn

#44 Scott Flynn

6' 2"
Senior
LSM
Griff Gosnell

#37 Griff Gosnell

6' 0"
Sophomore
D
Patrick Karey

#15 Patrick Karey

6' 2"
Sophomore
LSM
Jake McCulloch

#9 Jake McCulloch

6' 0"
Junior
M
Clarke Petterson

#45 Clarke Petterson

5' 10"
Junior
A
Jake Pulver

#34 Jake Pulver

6' 0"
Senior
D