Save for losses to Yale and Princeton, Cornell rallied off 10 more victories and clinched the Ivy League tournament title, downing the eventual national champions in doing so. Teat dropped 99 points and narrowly missed out on being a Tewaaraton finalist.
Cornell, a team ranked at the bottom of the Top 25, or on the outside looking in, had put together its strongest season since 2015. But Milliman, uncertain of his future, wasn’t ready to congratulate his team on a job well done.
“In a practice before our first-round game, we were going through a warm-up fast break drill and we were kind of not taking it seriously and throwing the ball around, not as dialed in as we should have been,” McCulloch said. “He stopped practice and brought us in and humbled us a little bit. He told us just because we won a couple big games in a row, it doesn’t mean we can take off at practice. He stressed the importance of every minute counts when you’re at practice. No matter how high or low you get, you have to make sure you get the same work ethic all the time.”
Cornell made a run to the NCAA quarterfinals, downing Syracuse at the Carrier Dome for the second time in 2018 and eventually falling to Maryland in Annapolis. What was a season of lower expectations became one from which to build.
Milliman, who spent 2018 trying to focus on the task at hand, delivered a successful season to the Big Red fans in Ithaca.
“We’re excited about where we are, but more so where we can be,” Milliman said. “Our guys got a taste of how close we were. The entirety of last season, we talked about just playing good lacrosse and seeing how things worked out in the end. But we never knew how good we were. I don’t think we knew until we got to the stretch at the end, how good we could be. You get a taste of it.”
The successful season was enough to warrant bringing back Milliman — the man who helped build the program we see today — for the foreseeable future. It seemed like one season changed the trajectory of the program, but players and coaches will say it was years in the making.
Either way, 2018 was a pivotal point in Cornell men’s lacrosse history.
“We definitely feel we are heading in the right direction,” McCulloch said. “We saw the impact that all of us coming together. The success we could gain in one year by sticking together and trusting in Coach Milliman’s leadership and preparation.”
Milliman has been hard at work over the past year trying to instill a culture of selflessness, determination and camaraderie. It’s the same principles that Buczek, Pannell, Belisle, Seibald, French, Moran and others have lived by for decades.
In one season, he’s helped bring the Big Red out of a lull. With a strong core of returners and a 13-player recruiting class, they’ll be in a short list of national title contenders for 2019.
To many, Milliman reinforced the foundation on which Cornell lacrosse was built.
“Our guys understand that there’s an incredible tradition to uphold here,” Buczek said. “It’s a burden sometimes, but it’s a burden that’s worth carrying. Once you make it to the other side, it was worth it, no doubt about it.”
And as expected, Milliman has no plans to rest on his laurels now that Cornell is back in the limelight. There’s still plenty of room to continue growing.
“Regardless of how I got where I’m at, this year was a big one for our program,” he said. “We got back to the NCAA quarterfinals and won the Ivy League championship. We were a Top 10 team. That’s something that our guys don’t want to rest on. These guys want to get back to the final four and win another national championship for the first time in a long time. For the first time in a while, we feel like it’s on its way to Ithaca. We just have to figure out how to get over that hill.”