22. Rutgers
2020 record: 2-4
Last seen: Dropping a fourth game in a row, though in the process holding Princeton’s Michael Sowers to five points. In 2020, that was an accomplishment for anyone.
Initial forecast: While possession is nine-tenths of the law, possession was close to nine-tenths of the Scarlet Knights’ problems in 2020. Rutgers ranked 71st in Division I in faceoff percentage (.331), ahead of just Towson, Furman and St. Bonaventure. Everything else in the statistical profile suggests a decent team — a slightly better shooting percentage than opponents, a top-20 extra-man unit and a man-down defense that tied for fifth nationally. The scoring came, and it will this year, too, regardless of what combination of returnees (Adam Charalambides, Kieran Mullins, Ryan Gallagher and David Sprock) are mixed with Villanova transfer Connor Kirst (17 goals, seven assists in seven games). There’s still talent in Brian Brecht’s program, and Rutgers should be entertaining to watch. But the overarching question is the same as ever: Is there enough in place to survive the rigors of Big Ten play and finally lock in the program’s first NCAA berth since 2004?
21. Penn
2020 record: 2-3
Last seen: Getting five goals, including the game-winner, from senior Adam Goldner, in a 13-12 win over Saint Joseph’s.
Initial forecast: The knee-jerk reaction for any of the Ivy League powers is to expect a drop-off, and there obviously are some serious graduation losses for the Quakers. Goldner will return, according to Penn’s official 2021 roster, though stalwart defenseman Kyle Thornton is gone. He’ll be joined at Notre Dame by faceoff specialist Kyle Gallagher, who might be the biggest loss of the bunch after winning 63.3 percent of his draws in his two seasons in University City. But Penn remains capable. Sean Lulley (14 goals, 16 assists) and Dylan Gergar (19 goals) are back, as well as a presumably healthy Sam Handley. How much of Penn’s defensive issues (14 goals per game) was a function of pace, how much was opposition (it faced Duke, Maryland, Penn State and Villanova) and how much of it was personnel limitations? It’s fair to wonder. That and the matter of getting possession are why Penn starts off as a borderline top-20 team.