Both Aimone and Kulas had 25-goal seasons last year but arrived at them in different ways. Aimone scored in all but one game, had a stretch of five outings without a multi-goal showing and finished with a four-goal burst against Maryland in the Big Ten tournament. Kulas had 20 goals in the first half of the season but found himself the target of greater attention from defenses when the Scarlet Knights lost Brian Cameron to injury.
How steadily they — and Kurdyla — can complement Scott and Knobloch will help reveal how effective Rutgers’ offense will be.
“Having Aimone be consistent, having Dante be consistent, having the new freshman Colin Kurdyla who’s starting on the first midfield with Aimone and Knobloch, having him be consistent,” Brecht said. “We don’t need him to be the lead guy, but he needs to be a good consistent option with the other guys that are the knowns.”
Last week also represented progress in the cage, where redshirt freshman Cardin Stoller stopped 75 percent of the shots on goal (15 of 20) after back-to-back weeks below 45 percent.
There are bound to be ups and downs with most first-time starting goalies, and Rutgers is encouraged by his development over the last month.
“We don’t want to accept anything — but it’s certainly natural,” Brecht said. “C’mon, you have a freshman who started his first game against Lehigh three weeks ago. We’ve been happy with him. You always want more — you want more resources, you want more facilities, you want more recruits, you want more out of your starters. But to be fair, there’s going to be some growing pains.
“To not have a good game against Army and to go back to your hometown in Baltimore, being a guy who played at [Boys’ Latin] and had a lot of success in high school with all the friends and family and people asking for tickets, give him a lot of credit. He was focused and had a good week of practice and was mature and gave us a great game.”