BALTIMORE — Perhaps the greatest test Loyola faced Saturday was one that had nothing to do with which opponent showed up at the Ridley Athletic Complex. Instead, the Greyhounds had the task of dealing with sudden prosperity.
The Loyola defense managed it just fine, smothering short-handed Johns Hopkins for much of a 13-8 rout that never felt especially close after the first 20 minutes.
“I thought it was a near-perfect first half defensively,” Loyola coach Charley Toomey said. “I thought the guys were just dialed in on their matchups and just played good, solid defense. Now our challenge for our team is to have defense that travels.”
The Greyhounds (2-0) held Maryland to seven goals in their opener a week ago. Saturday brought more of the same; Loyola limited the Blue Jays (2-2) to five goals until the final two minutes.
Chalk some of it up to the absence of Hopkins attackmen Jacob Angelus and Russell Melendez for reasons coach Peter Milliman declined to disclose. Angelus had two goals and eight assists in the Blue Jays’ first three games, while Melendez had five goals.
“It’s an adjustment anytime you’re taking significant pieces out of the puzzle, but it’s not an excuse by any means,” said Milliman, whose team trailed 6-2 at halftime. “There’s opportunities for everybody. We work with the same group all week long. I don’t think any of it has to do with the fact we didn’t have two guys we had the other day. It was not the best effort, and it was not a tough showing and we have to get better there.”
Regardless of who was available and who wasn’t, two things were obvious. Loyola handled Hopkins’ lineup shuffle — which saw starting midfielders Dylan Bauer and Brendan Grimes move to attack and Cameron Chauvette and Matt Collison get starting midfield nods — with ease.
In turn, it was an arduous task for the Blue Jays to generate remotely decent scoring opportunities. And that came after the Blue Jays managed just one goal in the second half of an 11-7 loss to North Carolina on Tuesday.
“We’ve been trying to make home run plays that just aren’t there,” attackman Garrett Degnon said. “We found success in the beginning of the year in just trying to move it forward, not throwing skips, not jamming it inside too much. Just re-emphasizing going back to simple lacrosse, just creating an advantage and making simple plays after that.”