Denver’s 14-12 victory at Ohio State felt different than recent tight losses to Jacksonville, North Carolina and Yale, because winning always feels different than losing.
But did it look different anywhere other than the scoreboard? Not especially.
And maybe that’s the key to understanding the 4-4 Pioneers, who close out non-conference play Saturday at home against Towson before delving into a five-game Big East slate confined entirely to April.
“What I have learned is that we’re a resilient group,” Denver coach Bill Tierney said. “We’re still pretty erratic. We still make the same mistakes we made in the first week, but I think our trajectory is heading in the right direction.”
After four-plus decades of college coaching, Tierney would know. But it’s nonetheless fascinating that aside from a blowout of Canisius and a thumping at Duke, Denver has consistently found itself in games with three-goal margins or less in the fourth quarter.
Throughout Tierney’s tenure in the Mile High City, the Pioneers have won their share of those games. But heading into last week, Denver found itself at 3-4 after a 16-13 loss to Yale — the first time it was under .500 more than three games into a season since going 7-8 in 2009, the last season before Tierney’s arrival.
The Pioneers’ reaction in the aftermath of that setback was arguably more heartening to Tierney than the actual victory in Columbus a week later.
“When we lost to Yale last week, a lot of teams that are used to not being 3-4 start pointing fingers, blaming each other, all of that other stuff,” Tierney said. “We implored upon the guys to stick together, and we really didn’t have to do that. They were sticking together.”
There were on-field developments that were encouraging as well. Richmond transfer Richie Connell delivered as a zone-buster in place of Johnny Marrocco, depositing four goals on six shots. Goalie Jack Thompson made 11 stops to raise his save percentage to .476 — still off last year’s .561 mark, but still an improvement on where things stood at the end of February.
And in the big picture, Denver landed a quality road victory with the potential to prove useful in May, something that remains well off for a team still figuring itself out.
“I don’t think of the Ohio State victory as, ‘OK, we’re finally here,’” Tierney said. “But I also never thought [after] North Carolina, Jacksonville and Yale, ‘Oh, we’ll never be back.’ You see the rankers and the prognosticators and all that kind of stuff, and I’ve been on both sides of that for years, not taking into account who you’re playing. So for the first time in a long time, we’re outside the Top 20. We never talked about that, just like we never talked about it when we were No. 1, 2, 3 or 4.”
Most years, of course, Denver already appears well on its way to an NCAA tournament berth. That’s still to be determined for this group of Pioneers, who remain predictable in some ways and unpredictable in others roughly midway through the season.
“We’ve always said the tough early season non-conference schedules have always been what we do,” Tierney said. “Most years after eight games, we’ve been at worst 5-3, 6-2, 7-1. This year we weren’t. This year we’re 4-4, and we were 3-4. It’s new, and it’s something [where] we have to see what we’re made of, and we’re going to find that out on Saturday.”