10. NOTRE DAME
2020 record: 2-3
Last seen: Dropping its third consecutive game, a 13-11 decision at Ohio State
Initial forecast: Along with Duke, the Fighting Irish are the transfer portal champions this offseason. Notre Dame picked up faceoff specialist Kyle Gallagher and defenseman Kyle Thornton from Penn, attackmen Sean Leahey (Providence) and Will Yorke (Bucknell) and midfielder David Lipka from Syracuse. That’s a lot of help to add to the above-average core a typical Notre Dame team already has in place — guys like Pat Kavanagh (10 goals, six assists) and Griffin Westlin (six goals, 10 assists) among them, though Bryan Costabile opted to turn pro rather than take a fifth year. Gallagher, who so galvanized Penn two seasons ago, instantly helps fix Notre Dame’s possession problem (.427 faceoff percentage in 2020). There was another more glaring area: Division I’s worst man-down unit (.308), something that no doubt will be an offseason priority before the Irish take the field again.
9. YALE
2020 record: 3-1
Last seen: Bouncing back from its lone loss by handling Michigan 17-11 in Costa Mesa, Calif.
Initial forecast: The Bulldogs might be the most interesting team to think about at this point. They lost a talented senior class, some of whom turned pro (attackman Matt Gaudet, defenseman Aidan Hynes and long pole Will Weitzel among them) and a few who transferred elsewhere (like Denver-bound Jackson Morrill and Lucas Cotler). But Yale still has a couple great equalizers. One is faceoff specialist TD Ierlan (.764 in 2020), who is expected to be back for his fifth year of eligibility and third in New Haven. The other is coach Andy Shay, who warrants the benefit of the doubt given how well the Bulldogs’ program is constructed. Matt Brandau (10 goals, six assists) and Thomas Bragg (eight goals, two assists) are the top offensive returnees, and Chris Fake is still around to anchor the defense. Yale might not be at quite the level it was in 2018 and 2019, but it will still be a factor this spring.