The late summer doldrums call for a lookahead to six months from now, when the 2025 college lacrosse season will begin.
Most transfers have found their landing spots and most coaching vacancies have been filled. And while it’s too early to know exactly every team's makeup — heck, most schools haven’t even posted rosters yet — it’s never too early to project who will be the top contenders.
Up next: Nos. 5-1.
Previously: Nos. 25-21 | Nos. 20-16 | Nos. 15-11 | Nos. 10-6
5. VIRGINIA
2024 record: 12-6 (1-3 ACC)
Last seen: Left thoroughly out of sorts in a 12-6 loss to Maryland in the program’s second consecutive NCAA semifinal ouster. It was also the Cavaliers’ lowest offensive output in coach Lars Tiffany’s eight seasons in Charlottesville.
Projected starts lost: 80 of 180 (44.4 percent)
Projected scoring departing: 218 of 403 points (54.1 percent)
Initial forecast: It’s going to be different. Program legend Connor Shellenberger exits the college scene after earning NCAA tournament most outstanding player honors in 2021 and a nod as a Tewaaraton finalist the next three years. Payton Cormier, the NCAA’s career goals leader who found the net a school-record 65 times in 2024, also departs. And Virginia will need a new defensive anchor with Cole Kastner out of lacrosse eligibility (though he’ll pursue a season of basketball at Stanford).
The next big Cavaliers star is probably McCabe Millon, who had 41 goals and 25 assists as a freshman but will find himself atop scouting reports next spring. Plenty of useful pieces remain in place, including midfielder Griffin Schutz (23 G, 12 A), long pole Ben Wayer (98 GBs, 26 CTs) and short stick Noah Chizmar.
But two things are abundantly clear: Virginia needs to improve a defense that struggled against the elite offenses on its schedule, and it has a goalie competition to sort out after Kyle Morris got the nod in the final four over the benched Matthew Nunes.
Bryant’s Johnny Hackett (23 G, 24 A) transfers in. So does revival-via-change-of-scenery candidate Charles Balsamo, who had 20 goals and 11 assists as a freshman at Duke but slipped to seven goals and nine assists last spring.
Tiffany offered a matter-of-fact assessment of his program’s standards after the loss to Maryland — “We don't measure ourselves by hanging final four banners, we measure ourselves with titles” — but given some of the top-end roster transition, reaching the final weekend might qualify as a more satisfying accomplishment than usual for the Cavaliers in 2025.