It’s February, so a Duke loss doesn’t raise many eyebrows. Jacksonville’s 13-12 win over Duke was, in fact, the second straight year the Blue Devils lost to the Dolphins in February.
But Maryland losing to Loyola? Definitely didn’t see that one coming. My colleague Matt DaSilva wrote that Maryland “should not sweat its first visit to Evergreen since 2013” in our Weekend One-Liners preview.
Sweat they did. Loyola dominated the fourth quarter in a 12-7 victory over the defending champs, handing the No. 2 Terps their first loss since the 2021 NCAA championship game.
A few miles up the road, Loyola’s rival, Johns Hopkins, was busy pulling off its own upset with some fourth quarter magic. The Blue Jays scored five straight goals to open the fourth quarter, stunning No. 3 Georgetown, ultimately winning the game 13-12 for what’s easily the signature win of the Peter Milliman era.
Wrapping up the day, Air Force upset No. 12 Denver, 12-10, its first win over the Pioneers since 2009 – the year before Bill Tierney took over as Denver’s head coach.
Welcome to February.
Random Observations
It's hard to picture a better coach to keep Joey Spallina calm than Gary Gait. Gait always seems unflappable and Spallina calmly answered the social media keyboard warriors who blistered him following a 1-for-15 shooting performance in his collegiate debut last weekend. Spallina scored five goals, on just seven shots, as Syracuse beat Albany 20-8 on Friday night. He followed that up with another five-goal game (again on seven shots) and two assists in Sunday’s 15-6 win over Holy Cross.
I found it ironic that the lead-in to the first linear broadcast of the season – Michigan at Virginia on the ACC Network – was a show chronicling the history of the ACC men’s basketball tournament. Naturally, the ACC will once again not have a men’s lacrosse tournament this season.
I remember talking with then Michigan coach John Paul at the USA Lacrosse Convention one year, imagining star college football players picking up a lacrosse stick. This was during the Reggie Bush era at USC. Can you imagine?
We’re getting a taste of that this year with three FBS football players from the fall of 2022 playing lacrosse in 2023 — Navy’s Xavier Arline, Virginia’s Ricky Miezan (football at Stanford) and Maryland’s Dante Trader. You’ll get more on their stories in the next print edition of USA Lacrosse Magazine.
Miezan made his debut for Virginia on Saturday, his first regular season lacrosse game since his senior year of high school at Episcopal (Va.) in 2018. He didn’t get a lot of runs, but showed he will be a factor this year. He scored on a downhill dodge up the right alley on his first collegiate shot and showed good vision on a pass that sailed high on a back cut to Payton Cormier.
Michigan guarded him with a shortstick, something many teams are likely to try due to the abundance of talented players for Virginia’s offense, but the 6-foot-2, 235-pound midfielder might prove to be too difficult of a matchup for most shorties.
The Boston accents and small-town nostalgia in a Massachusetts State Lottery commercial shown during the UMass-Army game really made me want to drive there to buy a lottery ticket.
The prevalence of ESPN in the college lacrosse landscape really makes it hard for schools on other platforms to get exposure. It’s just too easy to bounce from one ESPN+ game to another versus opening up a new app.
How many times has Ozzy Osbourne’s Crazy Train been played at college lacrosse games over the years?
Mustang Sally is the best name in the sport. His given name is August, but the Loyola shortstick midfielder was given the nickname by his father as a child and it stuck. Sally had a key momentum goal in the Greyhounds win over Maryland.
Welcome home Russell Melendez. The Maryland native had 21 points in limited action in two years at Marquette, missing almost all of the 2022 season with an injury. He transferred to Johns Hopkins and had a game-high four goals, including the game-tying goal in the fourth quarter of the Blue Jays 13-12 upset over Georgetown.
What’s in the water in Portland? On a day when Vermont’s leading scorer from 2022, Thomas McConvey, scored six points in his Virginia debut, the Catamounts got a career-high five goals from Portland, Oregon native Jonas Hunter in a 14-12 win over No. 17 Boston University. The Portland area, where USA Lacrosse is headed for a big weekend of events later this month, had five players named to the USA Lacrosse Magazine preseason All-America team.