Moving along into the middle segment of the way-too-early top 25 are a pair of traditional powers that dealt with sobering 2021 seasons, as well as three programs entering 2022 with credible hopes of their deepest postseason runs in recent memory, if not ever.
15. JOHNS HOPKINS
2021 record: 4-9 (2-8 Big Ten)
Last seen: Leading Maryland for much of the first three quarters before wearing down late in a Big Ten title game loss.
Initial forecast: Even accounting for all the things working against the Blue Jays last season — no fall ball in a year they welcomed a new coaching staff — it was an immensely bleak spring up until late April. Hopkins was 2-7 entering its regular-season finale against undefeated Maryland and … outplayed the Terrapins for 58 minutes. Then the Blue Jays picked off Penn State and Rutgers in the league tournament and gave Maryland another tough run. The Hopkins team from the first nine games didn’t belong in a top 25 conversation. Over its last four games — even at 2-2 — it looked like it would have been a headache if it had slipped into the NCAA tournament. Connor DeSimone (25 goals, 20 assists) is back for a bonus year, and the Blue Jays will benefit as much as anyone who played in 2021 with a cohesive and coherent offseason. Here’s guessing we see something similar to the Hopkins of late last season, though a non-conference schedule that offers few places to hide (Delaware, Georgetown, Jacksonville, Loyola, Navy, North Carolina, Princeton, Syracuse, Towson and Virginia) means things could still be bumpy.
14. DELAWARE
2021 record: 10-3 (7-1 CAA)
Last seen: Discovering that life as the top seed in the CAA tournament is rarely a ball of sunshine, falling to fourth-seeded Hofstra in the conference semifinals.
Initial forecast: The Blue Hens posted 10-win seasons in 2019 and 2021, and the next step in the progression under fifth-year coach Ben DeLuca could be an NCAA tournament berth. Delaware looked like it might have that breakthrough last spring, and the bulk of the contributors who made the Blue Hens so dangerous while anywhere near full strength are back. The big departure is Charlie Kitchen (28 goals, 27 assists), the only full-time starter who doesn’t return to Newark in 2022. It’s a sign of how potent Delaware can lose Kitchen and still have 74.8 percent of its points from a year ago on this season’s roster. Mike Robinson (43 goals, eight assists), already a rarity as an attackman who plays on the faceoff wings, should again be plenty productive, and returnees Tye Kurtz (26 goals, 22 assists), Cam Acchione (22 goals, three assists), Mark Bieda (17 goals, 10 assists) and Matt Acchione (12 goals, seven assists) should remain valuable contributors. With Owen Grant, fresh off a CAA defensive player of the year honor, back to anchor the close unit, the Blue Hens are capable of ending an 11-year postseason drought.