Yet Bertrand isn’t even filling exactly the same role Kraus did. Virginia still has holdover starters Ian Laviano and Matt Moore on attack, and Payton Cormier has also settled into a prominent role.
Eventually, Bertrand — a two-time Division II player of the year who had 210 goals at Merrimack and has delivered 26 goals and seven assists to the Cavaliers — wound up as a second-line midfielder and vital contributor.
“His poise, his demeanor, it’s amazing his maturity and intelligence,” Tiffany said. “I give him a ton of credit. He doesn’t play enough for us. To be honest, he should play more for us. There’s so much talent on attack, so we’re running Charlie in as a midfielder. He’s been an incredible addition.”
Still, nearly the rest of Virginia’s offensive contributors were already in the program last year (including freshman Connor Shellenberger, who redshirted last season). The same is the case at Maryland, where all six offensive starters were prominent options in 2020 and all but Daniel Maltz were important parts of the push to the quarterfinals in 2019.
With all of the restrictions associated with the pandemic, enjoying that familiarity probably was more helpful for the Terps than having to integrate an influx of new pieces.
“We didn’t really have a fall. Being able to fall back on the top five guys not including myself, having that chemistry and being able to say we’ve played with each other over multiple games,” senior attackman Logan Wisnauskas said. “We have a lot of guys with a lot of games under their belt and we’ve kind of fallen back on those guys.”
Which isn’t to say Brown and Holden, in particular, haven’t had an influence on the course of Maryland’s postseason push. Brown has 14 goals and three assists, while Holden has three goals and an assist. Both scored in Saturday’s semifinal against Duke while logging time on the second midfield.
Those are helpful contributions, but Maryland is playing on Memorial Day mainly because of players who are part of a multi-year foundation. The same is true of Virginia, and Tiffany was appreciative of the opportunity to discuss the Cavaliers’ approach to program building the day before they play for their second consecutive national title.
“Winning justifies a lot of things — probably too much,” Tiffany said. “This would be really rewarding for us as a staff and a program if the way we do our business when it comes to being very selective and purposeful with the transfer portal, that we’re not going to change the chemistry of our team because with our Cultural Thursdays and the books and the bonding we do, it’s really important for us to maintain that and not interject too much change.”