THE TOP TWO DIVISION I TEAMS in shooting percentage last season were Virginia and Penn State, a pair of NCAA semifinalists.
Sitting at No. 3? Lehigh (.341625), which edged out national champion Notre Dame (.341598). It was the third time in four years the Mountain Hawks finished in the top 13 nationally in the category, and it was their seventh top-20 finish in 12 seasons.
Tiffany has largely watched Cassese’s teams from afar (his Brown teams swept a home-and-home from Lehigh in 2008-09, Cassese’s first two seasons, and Virginia beat the Mountain Hawks early in the 2019 and 2020 seasons). But especially in the shot-clock era, he has a decent sense of Lehigh’s path to success.
“They realized they couldn’t win all six matchups on the field,” Tiffany said. “They could win a couple matchups. Using pick play, they create mismatches to increase the number of matchups they could win. I know that’s common these days, but they took it to a different level. They were very, very particular with the first part of the shot clock so they weren’t taking bad shots, so they were taking as best a calculated shot as they could to score goals.”
Cassese will have a greater margin for error at Virginia. Shellenberger’s presence ensures that, and Virginia also brings back attackman Payton Cormier (52 goals, 12 assists) and midfielder Griffin Schutz (24 goals, 16 assists). The Cavaliers also landed a commitment from Jack Boyden, the Division III player of the year this spring after scoring 69 goals with 88 assists for Tufts.
Of course, Virginia doesn’t need an offensive overhaul after Kirwan’s precise work over the years. What will be intriguing, especially early next season, is how Cassese merges his own principles with what helped the Cavaliers win titles in 2019 and 2021 and make a deep run this spring.
“I certainly have certain schemes and certain things I’m passionate about in the way I coach offense, but at the same time, I want to make sure these guys are comfortable,” Cassese said. “They’ve operated at a very high clip. They’ve been one of the top offenses for years. My goal is going to be to blend some of the things I believe in with the things they have done well.”
One thing will clearly be different: After running his own program since his mid-20s, Cassese will be in a different role. And that isn’t always easy for a longtime head coach.
But it comes with an upshot that wasn’t always available to him while he was in charge at Lehigh: The chance for frequent deep dives with players on the field and in the film room. That’s no doubt part of what he and Tiffany daydreamed about on occasion over the years, and it’s definitely why Cassese was already hard at work at Virginia when Tiffany returned from earning a bronze medal with the Haudenosaunee in San Diego last week.
“I can’t wait to do that," Cassese said. “That’s something I’m really passionate about. To get back into the nitty-gritty and X’s and O’s as a coordinator is actually something I’m actually energized by.”