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Every Monday at 6:30 a.m. this fall, Dave Pietramala and his Johns Hopkins men’s lacrosse team can be found at Du Burns Arena on the East side of Baltimore. It’s an experiment that Pietramala wanted to undertake as part of an effort to shake up the way that fall practices have gone in the past.

This year, the Blue Jays kicked off the fall season with two hours of practice a week — one hour of individual installment of the offensive and defensive concepts and another at Du Burns Arena for box lacrosse. The box game has been picking up steam in the U.S., with players like Tom Schreiber and Kieran McArdle succeeding in the NLL (and former Hopkins great Paul Rabil joining the U.S. national box team). However, Pietramala said he’s not worried about developing the next generation of American box stars.

“Our intent is selfish,” Pietramala said. “… [The box game] is enjoyable. We’re finding that they are working hard. They are certainly being challenged physically and conditioning wise. It doesn’t feel like practice, yet we are developing certain skills that are really important to what we do offensively and defensively.”

Through the box game, Johns Hopkins players are learning more about picking and defending the pick, as well as handling the ball in close spaces. Upperclassmen like Joel Tinney and Shack Stanwick pick up underclassmen and head across town each Monday for an unconventional fall practice.

“It’s not just giving in to drilling and coaching, where we’re standing around and learning,” said Tinney, who grew up playing box lacrosse in Ontario. “You learn from doing. That’s one thing that our coaches have really adjusted to this year. … This is one of the more competitive first two weeks of fall ball that we’ve had since I’ve been here.”

It’s a change of pace for a Johns Hopkins program, led by Pietramala, that’s looking to vault itself back into the national title conversation. Following consecutive 8-7 seasons — and a blowout loss to Duke at home in the first round of the NCAA tournament — Pietramala is hoping a new approach to the fall season will help generate momentum toward the 2018 season.

For a Blue Jays program that has won nine national championships and appeared in nine more title games, the past two seasons won’t cut it. 

“People are starting to leave us out of that conversation in terms of the top teams in the country, just based off the last two years,” Tinney said. “For us, it’s not enough to get a home game in the first round. We’re trying to get back to championship weekend, where this program has made its staple for so many years and where we feel it belongs.”

Two integral parts of building the foundation for 2018 are the leaders of the team and its incoming freshman class. Just this week, it was announced that Tinney, senior attackman Shack Stanwick and senior midfielder Brinton Valis were named team captains.

Shack Stanwick, who led Johns Hopkins with 47 points last season, was named a team captain alongside Joel Tinney and Brinton Valis.

Stanwick, who led the team with 47 points on 26 goals and 21 assists in 2017, becomes the second member of his family to get the title — his brother, Wells, was named captain for the 2015 season. 

“It’s an honor,” Stanwick said. “It’s really special to be at such a historic lacrosse university and to be considered that. A lot of responsibility comes with it, with the team and the coaches. … I grew up watching Hopkins play and my brother was lucky enough to be a captain here as well. Those two things make it a little more special.”

The three captains will help in assimilating this 2017 freshman class into a veteran-laden roster for the spring season. Led by middie Connor DeSimone (Smithtown East), the Blue Jays incoming class ranked No. 8 by Inside Lacrosse.

Pietramala didn't care much for that ranking, but he's not shying away from using it as fuel going forward.

“The young guys are aware of what the opinion of their class is out there,” he said. “Nonetheless, we don’t recruit for numbers. I’ve shared that with them more as motivation than anything else.”

Also adding to the depth of the Blue Jays roster is the return of defenseman Patrick Foley, who missed the 2017 season because of academic requirements. Foley will help fill a void left by All-American defenseman Nick Fields, who led the team with 19 caused turnovers last season.

The defense may come with more questions than the offense, which is led by Stanwick, Tinney and Kyle Marr. The Hopkins offense, though, will have to make up for the loss of John Crawley, who recently signed on as an assistant at Notre Dame, and Wilson Dismuke.

The Blue Jays will enter scrimmages looking to see how far they’ve come so far this fall. Up first is a matchup with Team Israel — where Pietramala said they’ll employ a 90-second shot clock — and then scrimmages with Albany and Army in a HEADStrong event at Boys’ Latin on Oct. 15.

Hopkins Lacrosse Advisory Board

Johns Hopkins announced Monday the formation of the Johns Hopkins Lacrosse Advisory Board, which will bring together 24 of the program's supporters and alumni to help create a network for current players to use. The Board will "create a mentorship platform, plan internship and professional networking events across the United States, improve communication and engagement with our alumni community and promote and explore new philanthropic initiatives" according to a press release.

The Board includes names like Rabil, Kyle Harrison, David Cordish and Mary Ann Dickson.

From Volunteer to Teammate

Zach Ernst, a Johns Hopkins men's lacrosse volunteer, got an awesome surprise at a team meeting last Friday. Pietramala announced he'd become an official member of the Blue Jays program.

About Johns Hopkins

  • Coach: Dave Pietramala

  • Last Seen: Being blown out by Duke at Homewood Field in an NCAA tournament first-round game. The Blue Jays just got into the tournament after finishing the regular season at 8-6 and 3-2 in the Big Ten.

  • Key Returners: Shack Stanwick (26 G, 21 A), Kyle Marr (25 G, 20 A), Joel Tinney (19 G, 9 A), Hunter Moreland (54.3 FO percentage), Jack Rapine (29 GB, 17 CT)

  • Team Stats: 11.60 goals per game, 11.74 goals allowed per game, 46.5 faceoff percentage, 101 caused turnovers

  • Last Nike/US Lacrosse Ranking: No. 10

  • Conference Snapshot: With the Maryland curse gone and many of its stars out the door as well, the Big Ten is wide open. Ohio State will be back and strong, as will a rejuvenated Rutgers team, making this conference as strong as ever. After losing Nick Fields on the defense, the Blue Jays bring in three Power 100 defensemen (Jared Reinson, Lucas Capobianco-Hogan and Brandon Shure). The prize of the 2017 freshman class was middie Connor DeSimone, who ranked No. 5 in the nation.

Offseason Hot Topics

The NCAA men’s lacrosse rules committee is allowing teams to experiment with a shot clock this fall. The committee is also discussing several other aspects of the game, including whether to allow attackmen to leave their feet to score around the crease and whether to change the size of the substitution box. Pietramala provides his feedback on these three hot topics in the men's game, as well as the new recruiting realities since the landmark legislation passed, which prohibits college lacrosse coaches from communicating with prospective student-athletes until Sept. 1 of their junior year of high school.

  • 60-Second Shot Clock: “I prefer we don’t have one, but if we do, I prefer a 90-second shot clock and not a 60-second shot clock. We don’t have the best players in the world in the college game; those guys are in the pros. We need to understand while we can learn some things from them, we don’t necessarily have to be them. Ninety seconds would be fair — 30 to clear it and 60 to shoot.”

  • The Dive: “I would be in favor of bringing the dive back. I don’t think it’s a safety issue. When the dive was in the game, I didn’t see many goalies getting hurt. But it was really tough to officiate whether a guys was pushed or dove under his own power. … It brings a level of excitement to the game. I would put another cylinder within the crease and say, ‘OK, you land in the crease, that’s one thing. You land inside the cylinder, it’s no goal.’”

  • Smaller Substitution Box: “You saw more transition lost because of the larger substitution box. You saw more collisions because of it. Even as a defensive guy, in terms of clearing, the larger box makes it a lot easier. I’d rather see a smaller box. I didn’t think there was anything wrong with the box before.”

  • New Recruiting Realities: “When kids make a commitment two years later, things that were interesting to them then might not be two years later. We are getting a young man, who when we get on the phone with him, there’s more depth to the conversations. There’s a greater sense for what their interests and desires are. … I think it is a very good rule and I hope that we stay right where we are. And we were a big participant in early recruiting.”

Social Snapshot

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