(3) Maryland vs. Vermont
Sunday, 2:30 p.m., ESPNU, College Park
Maryland’s gripe shouldn’t be with its seeding. It should be with its conference and the selection committee’s decision to make Notre Dame the No. 6 seed. The Big Ten’s scheduling shackles (no non-conference games) hindered Maryland’s ability to test itself outside of its league. The real gripe comes with potentially having to play Notre Dame in the quarterfinals — in South Bend.
Had the Irish been a No. 4 or 5 seed — like they should have been — it would have meant the top half of the bracket would funnel into South Bend. In that scenario, Maryland would end up on Long Island if the Terps make the quarterfinals.
But that’s now fait accompli. The Terps will have the opportunity to prove themselves against someone other than a Big Ten foe. Jared Bernhardt was unstoppable in the B1G tournament and pretty much all season. Few get top side with ease the way Bernhardt does. Logan Wisnauskas is more than just a wingman; he’s an All-American in his own right. The defense led by Brett Makar and Nick Grill plays with a “take your lunch money” ferocity.
Vermont’s is making its first NCAA tournament appearance. They’ve got a Bernhardt, too. He’s just not eligible anymore. Former Terps standout Jake Bernhardt is an assistant for Chris Feifs.
The Catamounts appear to have an advantage at the faceoff X. Tommy Burke ranks third in Division I (72 percent). Maryland faces off below 50 percent on the season. Watch for Vermont’s Michael McCormack — he’s the Stephen Curry of lacrosse. McCormack’s a threat to score the moment he steps inside the attack box.
The Terps have a championship roster. The bracketing stinks. Maryland will have to earn its way. The Terps are more than capable.
(2) Duke vs. High Point
Sunday, 5 p.m., ESPNU, Chapel Hill
Two years ago, High Point beat half the championship weekend field (Duke and Virginia) and watched the entire NCAA tournament from home. Lesson learned. This year, High Point put together a mini-ACC schedule. They lost to Duke, Virginia and twice to North Carolina. But the Panthers won the SoCon to punch an AQ to the NCAA tournament.
It’s a battle tested team that took both Virginia and North Carolina down to the wire. Division III transfer Kevin Rogers has become an impact scorer for Jon Torpey’s team. Asher Nolting’s size and strength make him one of the toughest covers, but he needs to limit his turnovers.
High Point has embraced a fearless “play anyone, anywhere” mentality, but …
In March, High Point got a glimpse of what a fully operational Death Star looks like. Duke Alderaan’d the Panthers 27-8. The Blue Devils led 16-3 at halftime. Brennan O’Neill scored five times. Michael Sowers rang it up four times. Twelve different Blue Devils found the back of the net.
John Danowski told us before the regular season finale against North Carolina that we still haven’t seen Duke’s “A” game in ACC play. The Blue Devils still shared the conference title.
(7) Denver vs. Loyola
Sunday, 7:30 p.m., ESPNU, Denver
Loyola withdrew from the Patriot League championship game due to a positive COVID-19 test and contact tracing. Had Loyola played in the Patriot League championship game and lost, what would have happened? My guess is Loyola would be out and Army would be in.
If the Greyhounds have their full complement of key personnel (and it sounds like they will), they have a chance Sunday night. Loyola finished the season with four straight wins — including victories against Georgetown and Army. Aiden Olmstead and Kevin Lindley have been the bulwarks offensively. They were mentored and tutored by the great Pat Spencer. Ryan “Officer” McNulty gives Loyola a big weapon in the middle of the field.
Denver’s all-time faceoff specialist TD Ierlan has actually looked mortal of late. Ierlan won just 12 of 23 faceoffs in the Big East tournament. But this is his last hurrah. He’s been a part of Championship Weekend teams at Albany and Yale. Expect to see vintage Ierlan in round one. His former Yale cohorts Jackson Morrill and Lucas Cotler add championship pedigree to “Yale Midwest.” Goalie Jack Thompson has been a difference maker for the Pios. He’s saved at least 50 percent of shots in 12 consecutive games.
US Lacrosse Magazine welcomes back ESPN play-by-play announcer Anish Shroff as a contributor for the 2021 college season. Shroff’s weekly columns on USLaxMagazine.com will include top-10 rankings and insights.
Shroff also is the co-host (alongside ESPN broadcast teammates Paul Carcaterra and Quint Kessenich) of the US Lacrosse Magazine show, “Yard Sale” (Tuesdays, 8 p.m. ET on YouTube).