Think of it as frenetic in bursts. Loyola still wants to run because it has defensive midfielders like Mustang Sally who are effective in transition. But it also has to be smart with the clock, knowing it needs to get its defense a rest.
Most of all, it needs to cash in when opportunities present themselves. That happened against Lehigh when Adam Poitras scored once when a loose ball dribbled through to him five yards from the crease and another time in transition. Luke Murphy’s man-up goal — the Greyhounds’ last of the night — was deposited off a rebound.
“I think it’s a time and place,” said Poitras, who has a team-high 24 goals. “You have to recognize that if we’ve played three or four straight possessions of defense, we’re probably not looking to slip a pass across the crease for a dunk. We obviously want to run fast. We think we have good sticks in the rope unit, and they handle the ball really well. We have a lot of faith in them, and we think if we can easier ones, it will help the team out a lot.”
Much like last year, when Loyola picked off Johns Hopkins and Maryland in February before sputtering, the Greyhounds opened with a sparkling victory (at home against Georgetown). They’ve now won back-to-back games for the first time all season, and get Bucknell (3-7, 2-3) and Holy Cross (2-7, 0-5) the next two weeks before closing against Navy (6-4, 3-1) and Army (8-1, 3-1).
“It’s time to stack them,” Toomey said. “That’s going to be my mantra for this team, to just keep doing what we have to do to keep stacking wins in the league.”