The 2022 college lacrosse season is nearly upon us. As is our annual tradition, we’re featuring every team ranked in the Nike/USA Lacrosse Preseason Top 20.
Check back to USALaxMagazine.com each weekday this month for new previews, scouting reports and rival analysis.
NO. 12 DENVER
2021 Record: 12-5 (9-1 Big East)
Final Ranking (2021): No. 9
Coach: Bill Tierney (13th year)
When Bill Tierney first arrived at Denver in 2009, the recruiting blueprint he developed with coach-in-waiting Matt Brown revolved around the three C’s.
Colorado, California and Canada.
And while that strategy remains in place — it has yielded 10 NCAA tournament appearances, five trips championship weekend and a national title in 2015, as well as 30 of the 58 players on the current roster — Tierney acknowledged that California kids have played harder to get in recent years.
“Now it’s C, C and E,” Tierney said. “Colorado, Canada and everywhere else.”
Look no further than the first midfield line the Pioneers will trot out Feb. 5 when they open the 2022 season at Utah. There’s Jack Hannah, of course, a two-time All-American and national midfielder of the year candidate from Milford, Ohio. Then there’s Ted Sullivan, a Tucson, Arizona native who came to Denver by way of Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts. Alex Simmons, meanwhile, gives the unit its resident Canadian — a slick-sticked scorer who also plays attack when the matchup and momentum favor the Pioneers.
“We’re confident we have one of the best midfields in the country,” Tierney said. “Those three put a lot of pressure on another team to double- or triple-pole us.”
Though Hannah (37 goals on a team-high 142 shots) profiles as the alpha of the group, Simmons was the one who carried Denver during a torrid midseason stretch.
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“He won the Marquette game for us,” Tierney said of Simmons’ four-goal performance in a 10-9 win after he missed the Pioneers’ first three games. “Shooting lights out.”
The Pioneers’ top returning scorer, Simmons (31 goals, 24 assists) ranked 10th nationally in Lacrosse Reference’s estimated goals added index — a formula used to aggregate every contribution (positive or negative) that shows up in the box score play-by-play. His EGA of 2.37 was one one-hundredth of a point better than North Carolina’s Chris Gray, the USA Lacrosse Magazine Preseason Player of the Year.
Yet the enduring image of the offseason for Denver fans was that of Simmons kneeling on the turf at Peter Barton Lacrosse Stadium, his hands gripping the back of his helmet and pushing it face first into the turf after Loyola goalie Sam Shafer denied his game-tying attempt on the doorstep before time expired in a 14-13 NCAA tournament loss.
“There’s no game that comes down to that one play,” Tierney said, absorbing the blame for not taking a timeout on the Pioneers’ previous possession that resulted in an errant Lucas Cotler shot with no backup. “It’s hard for people on the outside not to look at that [finish], but we have all the confidence in the world in Alex. He’s tougher on himself than anybody else.”
Simmons bounced back in a big way over the summer, overcoming a slow start to the lead St. Catherines to the Ontario Junior Lacrosse League championship as the OJLL MVP. He also competed at the senior level in the Major Series Lacrosse Classic with the Cobourg Kodiacs.
That’s the beauty of box. There’s always another game.
And while Denver certainly has benefitted from talent discovered north of the border, it remains committed to the homegrown approach. Sixteen Colorado natives are on the roster, including a boomerang recruit in Richmond transfer Richie Connell, who grew up playing for Denver Elite. As did Rutgers transfer Zach Groff, one of five reserve goalies vying for spots behind incumbent starter Jack Thompson, also of Denver Elite lineage.
The force is strong in the first C.