T is for Towson, the Colonial Athletic Association regular-season and tournament champions who bring a 12-4 record to Foxborough. The Tigers are making their third appearance in the semifinals (1991 and 2001) and their first under coach Shawn Nadelen. Towson, which is seeking its first national title, won at Penn State and against Syracuse on a neutral field to advance to the final weekend of the season.
U is for unseeded, which describes Towson. The Tigers are the seventh unseeded team in the last eight years to advance to the semifinals, joining Notre Dame (2010), Maryland (2011-12), Cornell (2013), Johns Hopkins (2015) and North Carolina (2016). Unseeded teams are 7-6 all-time in the semifinals, but 2016 North Carolina is the only unseeded squad to claim a national title.
V is for victories, something the senior classes at both Denver and Maryland have in abundance.
That goes for the NCAA tournament, too. Denver’s senior class is 8-2 in the postseason, with three semifinal appearances and a national title. Maryland’s seniors are 10-3 in the postseason and are the first class of Terps to make four final four trips since 1979.
W is for Ethan Walker, the Denver attackman who has set the school Division I record for points (70) and assists (32) as a freshman. The Ontario product by way of Culver Military Academy has five goals and five assists in the postseason.
X is for the X, and in this particular season (and with these particular teams), it bears even more monitoring than usual. Denver’s Trevor Baptiste (first in the country), Ohio State’s Jake Withers (fourth) and Towson’s Alex Woodall (11th) all have won more than 60 percent of their draws. Maryland is the outlier, but can mix and match with Austin Henningsen, Jon Garino Jr. and Will Bonaparte and has earned a slight faceoff edge in both of its NCAA tournament games.
Y is for Bryce Young, a junior defenseman who stepped into a full-time starting role this season for the first time for Maryland. In addition to a pair of vital goals (against Ohio State in the Big Ten final and against Albany in the NCAA quarterfinals), Young has been a steady presence on a defense that is allowing just 7.9 goals per game during Maryland’s current five-game winning streak.
Z is for zero, the combined number of NCAA tournament games this month involving the four semifinalists that have been decided by less than three goals. Towson (3.5), Ohio State (4.0), Maryland (6.0) and Denver (9.5) all have healthy average margins of victory through two weekends of postseason play, and all four led by at least six goals entering the final period of their quarterfinal routs.