DEFENSIVE MIDFIELD
Dominique Alexander (Ohio St. ’13/Archers)
Mark Glicini (Yale ’16/Chaos)
Zach Goodrich (Towson ’19/Cannons)
Danny Logan (Denver ’21/Atlas)
Patrick Resch (Dartmouth ’15/Chaos)
Defensive coordinator Joe Amplo said of all the position groups, this is the most critical. Jake Bernhardt, Will Haus and Kevin Unterstein were the anchors in 2018 — short sticks who bore the brunt of opposing dodgers multiple times per possession without a shot clock. They’re like relief pitchers in baseball. You can’t have enough arms in the bullpen come playoff time. Witness the last two world championship finals. Long poles Mitch Belisle (2014) and Kyle Hartzell (2018) both were called upon to swap sticks and play d-middie.
Dominque Alexander is the veteran of this group. Amplo, now the head coach at Navy, remembers coaching him at Hofstra camps when he was an assistant coach for the Pride.
Mark Glicini got added to the U.S. player pool in 2019 upon the recommendation of 2018 co-captain Matt Danowski, John’s son, who vouched for Glicini as a great teammate.
Amplo has gotten to know Zach Goodrich as a leader given Goodrich’s role as the head coach at the Naval Academy Prep School. Danny Logan and Ryan Terefenko set the PLL on fire over the summer as rookies with the Atlas and Chrome, respectively.
In addition to Terefenko — who’s likely to be in the mix when USA Lacrosse hosts formal tryouts for the 2023 team next summer — Goodrich and Logan were finalists for the PLL’s George Boiardi Hard Hat Award given to the league’s top short-stick defensive midfielder. Logan won.
Patrick Resch is making his U.S. debut at age 30. He’s the son of Tony Resch, who was an assistant on the 2010 and 2018 coaching staffs and has also served as head coach of the U.S. box team.
Glicini, Goodrich and Resch will be back at USA Lacrosse headquarters next weekend to play in the Super Sixes event, as will Byrnes and Tierney.
DEFENSE
Jesse Bernhardt (Maryland ’13/Chrome)
Liam Byrnes (Marquette ’16/Waterdogs)
Jared Conners (Virginia ’21/Archers)
JT Giles-Harris (Duke ’21/Chrome)
Jarrod Neumann (Providence ’17/Chaos)
Michael Rexrode (Rutgers ’18/Atlas)
Jack Rowlett (North Carolina ’19/Chaos)
Cade Van Raaphorst (Duke ’19/Atlas)
Jesse Bernhardt epitomizes the on- and off-ball fundamentals Amplo insists from his close defensemen. While sprawling takeaway guys and transition scorers garner most of the highlights, the U.S. would just as much prefer those with good on-ball approach and posture, sound off-ball instincts and physicality on the interior. Bernhardt and fellow two-time U.S. team defenseman Tucker Durkin (inactive this weekend) fit the bill, but both will be 33 in 2023.
Liam Byrnes, who can play close or pole and as a third-year NLL pro is plenty comfortable with a short stick, and Jarrod Neumann are the other veterans of the position group for the Fall Classic.
Jared Conners, JT Giles-Harris, Michael Rexrode, Jack Rowlett and Cade Van Raaphorst are all age 25 and under. Amplo said Conners was the best player on any team at the last Fall Classic back in 2019, when he was still competing for Virginia, thus earning this opportunity much in the way that Connor Kelly did while competing against the U.S. for Maryland two years earlier.
Amplo asked his former Hofstra roommate and best friend Kevin Warne about Rowlett, whose nasty streak on the field and chirpy social media persona say nothing of his soft skills in the locker room. The head coach at Georgetown, Warne told Amplo that Rowlett, an assistant coach for the Hoyas, would be well worth adding to the Fall Classic roster.
“We learned the last time that personality is more important than ability,” Amplo said. “Are they what you see on Instagram?”
In conversation with Amplo, Warne called Rowlett “a sweetheart of a human being.”
“He says, ‘Joe, you’re gonna love him,’” Amplo said.