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And now for the encore …
The Hawks had won a share of five NEC titles between 2014 and 2021 and didn’t have an NCAA tournament berth to show for it. So Wray and the program had reason to savor last year’s breakthrough, especially since it earned its NCAA trip with a victory at home in the league title game and then drew new fans with its spirited play in an 18-16 loss at Yale in the first round.
Saint Joseph’s brings back eight of its top nine scorers and eight starters. And while one season doesn’t pick up right where the last one ended, the Hawks have plenty of answers in place already.
“We feel like we have a good team,” Wray said. “I don’t go into every year saying, ‘You know what, I think we have a very competitive team.’ Some years, you don’t know what you have and it’s going to take shape over the course of the season. This year, I think going into the season, I think we have a good team.”
Entering the Atlantic 10
The Atlantic 10 — the Hawks’ all-sports conference home for decades — will sponsor men’s lacrosse for the first time. That means Saint Joseph’s has a new set of league foes after competing in the Northeast Conference since 2014.
Hobart — an associate A-10 member — is a familiar face, while Saint Joseph’s will now also face High Point, Massachusetts, Richmond and St. Bonaventure in conference play.
While it isn’t a perfect measurement, the RPI is indicative of the escalation awaiting the Hawks. The rest of last year’s NEC averaged an RPI of 51.7 in 2022. The five other A-10 teams’ average RPI was 30.
“I do think it’s exciting knowing you’re going to need to be at your absolute best in every single game if you want to win,” Wray said. “Not that it wasn’t necessarily the case in our previous league, but the competition level will be higher. The top three teams in the NEC on any given year, I’d put up with the top programs in the A-10. I just think from top to bottom, everybody is going to be at that level every year.”
Who’s next in the midfield?
Tucker Brown is the most established option in the midfield, and one of the Hawks’ biggest questions is how the rest of that line will look. Colin Reich (8 G, 15 A) returns after starting 11 games last year, and he showed in the fall he’s become a better dodge-to-score player.
It could be that Mac McLaughlin (19 G, 9 A), who split time between the top two midfield lines, slides seamlessly into Austin Strazzulla’s old starting spot.
“Those are big shoes to fill,” Wray said. “We’re hoping Mac can step up and absorb some of that production.”
An alternate option for the Saint Joseph’s staff is to move Levi Anderson back to midfield now that attackman Ryan Doran is healthy. Doran started the first two games last season, but suffered a torn ACL against Delaware on Feb. 15.
ENEMY LINES
WHAT RIVALS ARE SAYING ABOUT THE HAWKS
“What Taylor Wray has done with that program, being in the shadow of Penn and Penn State and Princeton and Villanova and Drexel, and oh, nice little Saint Joe’s has become someone to fear. They have great players, a couple great Canadian players. They’re good in the goal. They have one of the best faceoff guys in the country. And Taylor Wray — talk about being overlooked. This guy is overlooked as a coach throughout college lacrosse. He’s one of the best in my book.”
23.1%
Levi Anderson finished the year having generated 23.1% of the Hawks’ assists. Given his touches, the 1.7 assists he averaged per-game put him in the 78th percentile nationally. The downside for Anderson was a turnover rate that put him in just the 35th percentile nationally. If he can keep generating offense for others, while cutting out some of the turnovers, this offense could take another step forward in 2023.
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