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Who fills the third starting attack spot?
Alex Slusher returns at one spot, and sophomore Coulter Mackesy (28 G, 15 A) started much of last year and came on late in the season. He’s a candidate for an even greater breakout this spring.
But who takes the third starting attack slot with the graduation of Chris Brown (31 G, 41 A)?
“We’ve had a handful of guys kind of filter into that third spot,” Madalon said. “A couple lefties, a couple righties. I think that is probably one of our biggest question marks going into the year. … We may play that as a revolving door until it gets solidified.”
The Princeton staff is bullish about sophomore Braedon Saris, who got into only two games last season but enjoyed a strong fall. Some other names to keep an eye on: Seniors Weston Carpenter (two assists in six games) and Jack Crockett (one goal in three games) and freshman Chad Palumbo.
Who plays goalie?
The graduation of Erik Peters (.555 save percentage, including .618 in three NCAA tournament games) leaves Princeton with minimal college experience in the cage. Senior Griffen Rakower (.636 save percentage in three games) and junior Michael Gianforcaro (.250 in three games) combined to play less than 50 minutes last season, so neither has much of a Division I track record.
Freshman Ryan Croddick is also a contender for the job, and none of the three seized control of the position in the fall.
That’s fine with Madalon, who can see the competition extending into the early portion of the season.
“I would say Rakower, Gianforcaro and Croddick is as talented a goalie room as we’ve had,” Madalon said. “These are three really impressive guys, all right-handed keepers, outstanding stickwork, great rebound control and great ball-stoppers. Still a question mark for the Tigers, but it should work itself out early on.”
Defense seeking consistency
It was tough to know what Princeton was getting at the defensive end last season, and the results reflect it. The Tigers held Georgetown to eight goals, Brown to nine goals and Rutgers to 11 goals in victories, and yielded 10 to a potent Yale team in the NCAA quarterfinals.
Princeton also gave up 19 to Harvard and 18 to Cornell in back-to-back games to close the regular season and won a 21-20 game against Penn.
A constantly changing lineup didn’t help matters, and achieving some stability at that end of the field is a priority. Last year’s postseason — giving up 9.3 goals a game in three contests — could be a solid springboard.
“That was a unit where I would say consistency wasn’t our best at certain times,” Madalon said. “As a coaching staff, you’d much rather have a consistently performing group than the highs and lows. Our challenge coming into this year is clean up the mistakes, learn from it, exactly what we did going into the postseason.”
ENEMY LINES
WHAT RIVALS ARE SAYING ABOUT THE TIGERS
“Super athletic, super experienced and very well coached. They have to replace a goalie, which I’m sure they’ll do because Madalon is a goalie guy and they have a nice stable of goalies. That team has so much coming back and is super athletic and super physical. Matt’s done a great job, and Jim Mitchell does a really good job with their offense, too.”
7.5 Wins
With the potential for 14 games (including the two Ivy League tournament games) on their brutal schedule, the debate is whether the Tigers will end up with eight-plus wins or settle for seven or fewer. Outside of their first two tune-up games, the Tigers’ schedule is very tough, with games against the reigning national champs, the reigning Big East champs and another Final Four team in Rutgers.
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