The Case For Virginia
The Cavaliers bring back five of their six players who reached double figures in goals last season, and their midfield might have as much potential as any in the sport. Dox Aitken, Ryan Conrad and Matt Moore make up a formidable trio. “Those are three midfielders who are so dang competitive and we are really fortunate to have them,” Tiffany said. “I will admit, I don’t know if we can play them all on the same line, though I could see us using a superline at times.” If Virginia attempts to balance its midfields, Mikey Herring (12 G, 18 A) figures to benefit after enjoying a breakout junior year
The Case Against Virginia
Will the defense be good enough? In addition to the questions explored above, Tiffany acknowledges goalie is an even greater pressure point for the Cavaliers than many teams given their schematic preferences. Can they get more consistent play out of the position? Alex Rode started a dozen games as a freshman and posted a .493 save percentage, and Tiffany describes him as a “man on a mission” who has matured in many ways. Junior Griffin Thompson has started 13 games in his career as well.
Path to the Playoffs
The Cavaliers begin this season the same way they ended last year --- with a trip to Loyola, a team that will instantly test a defense that needs to be better over the course of this season. Virginia also visits Princeton (Feb. 23) and Johns Hopkins (March 23), plays host to Lehigh and Richmond and gets at least five games against ACC opponents. Strength of schedule won’t be a problem, and having broken through and defeated some conference foes last year (North Carolina and Syracuse) means there's success to build upon in league play.
Players To Watch
Dox Aitken, M, Jr.
39 G, 12 A
Aitken is already 14th on Virginia’s career scoring list for midfielders with 68 goals. If he matches last year’s total — hardly a reach — he’ll become the first Virginia midfielder to collect 100 goals and still have another season to go.
Ryan Conrad, M, Sr.
4 G, 23 GB (5 games)
The big question will be rust as Conrad returns from a knee injury that cost him the bulk of last season. At his best, he is a factor all over the field — on defense, on faceoff wings, on offense — who will be a difference-maker for the Cavaliers.
Michael Kraus, A, Jr.
44 G, 39 A
As much as Tiffany’s scheme relies heavily on two-way middies, Kraus is still the guy who makes the offense go. Expect more of the same in 2019. “It’s hard to provide enough accolades because he’s earned them all,” Tiffany said.
National Rankings
Category
|
Rank
|
Value
|
Offense |
7th |
12.61 GPG |
Defense |
52nd |
11.44 GAA |
Faceoffs |
13th |
57.7 FO% |
Ground Balls |
1st |
38.00/game |
Caused TO |
11th |
8.27/game |
Shooting |
21st |
32.1% |
Man-Up |
21st |
38.2% |
Man-Down |
34th |
67.6% |
Assists |
5th |
7.72/game |
Turnovers |
55th |
14.83/game |
Clearing |
55th |
84.9% |
Power Ratings (Scale of 1-5)
Offense
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Defense
⭐⭐
Goalkeeping
⭐⭐⭐
Faceoff
⭐⭐⭐⭐
14
Since Virginia last reached Memorial Day weekend in 2011, 14 other schools have done so — including every one of the other 10 programs to win a national championship besides Princeton.
5-Year Trend
Scoring Defense
Year
|
Rank
|
Per Game
|
2014 |
47th |
11.13 |
2015 |
49th |
11.00 |
2016 |
T-37th |
10.33 |
2017 |
65th |
13.27 |
2018 |
52nd |
11.44 |
Coach Confidential
Lars Tiffany
“Having two years of experience with the majority of the team and an influx of talent that the first-year class brings in has certainly given us a mindset that this is a big year for us to take a big step forward. There’s a different focus this year that I’ve witnessed from the men. I’m hearing things I haven’t heard before when it comes to commitment and decision-making.”
Enemy Lines
“They like chaos, but I think they’re probably learning that too much of it doesn’t work for you. You’ve got to be able to play at a different tempo at times. I think they will.”
"They’re great. Great recruiting class. Fabulous athletes. Great coach. Wow."