1. Sam Handley, M, Penn
The senior had a stirring return after the Quakers were limited to one game in 2021, collecting 36 goals and 37 assists while helping Penn get to the NCAA quarterfinals. Few players demand attention quite like Handley, whose feeding ability makes him the center of an offense filled with capable options. His final year at Penn begins Saturday at Georgetown.
2. Connor Shellenberger, A, Virginia
A year after emerging as the star of the 2021 postseason, Shellenberger turned in a 32-goal, 44-assist campaign as the Cavaliers reached the NCAA quarterfinals. The redshirt junior is one of many known quantities on a Virginia offense that could again flirt with scoring 15 goals a game. He had three goals and three assists in an opening win over Michigan.
3. Brennan O’Neill, A, Duke
The one-time Next Big Thing has more than delivered, scoring 45 goals during the pandemic season in 2021 and then piling up 53 goals and 21 assists last spring with the benefit of any postseason games. He hit the 100-goal plateau for his career in the Blue Devils’ opener against Bellarmine and is on any short list for best player in the country heading into the spring. In Duke’s 2-1 start, he already has nine goals and seven assists.
4. CJ Kirst, A, Cornell
The junior was a popular choice as an eventual player of the year — perhaps even as early as this spring — in informal discussions with coaches this preseason. He turned in a magnificent debut with the Big Red, earning Ivy League rookie of the year honors while compiling 49 goals and 22 assists. He’ll open his second college season Saturday at Albany.
5. Pat Kavanagh, A, Notre Dame
Kavanagh had 25 goals and 39 assists last season, numbers that don’t look quite as gaudy as the rest of the guys on the list … at least until the Irish’s 12-game schedule is accounted for. He ranked sixth nationally in points per game (5.33) and second in assists per game (3.25). He was held without a goal on three shots against Marquette, but don’t fret — he dished out six assists.
Next five: Matt Brandau, A, Yale; Will Bowen, D, Georgetown; Brett Makar, D, Maryland; Jack Myers, A, Ohio State; Ross Scott, A, Rutgers