Things were new at Syracuse last season because it was Gary Gait’s first season as head coach after moving over from a long stint coaching the Orange’s women’s program.
And this fall? Gait’s still around, but only a handful of steady contributors remain from last spring.
Syracuse saw 77.4 percent of its points depart (216 of 279). Players who accounted for 74.3 percent of its starts (104 of 140) are no longer with the program.
And considering the Orange went 4-10 last year, the extreme makeover probably isn’t the worst thing.
“We’ve had a considerable amount of turnover,” Gait said. “I think, obviously, what we learned last year is that with the players that we had, we weren’t able to do some things, and unfortunately we came up on the short end, whether due to some injuries or lack of certain players in certain positions.”
It isn’t a roster with a bunch of knowns, at least not because of their time in a Syracuse uniform. The Orange bring back three players who started at least half the season last year — defenseman Nick Caccamo and midfielders Griffin Cook and Tyler Cordes.
All four of Syracuse’s 20-point contributors departed, thanks to a mix of graduation and transfers. Faceoff man Jakob Phaup graduated. Starting goalie Bobby Gavin came and went in a semester.
All of which makes Syracuse ripe for a reinvention.
“I think we’re going to play differently,” Gait said. “You’re going to see the ball move much quicker on the offensive end of the field. On the defensive end, we feel a lot more comfortable about the guys we have in the positions and the communication skills.”
It also means fall ball is a vital opportunity to make progress.
“We have a new group of players that provide us the ability to do different things,” Gait said. “From the defensive end to the offensive end, we’re certainly going to be young, and they’re going to have to develop. It’s a different skillset than we had last year.”
LAST SEASON
In a nutshell, the Orange could hardly stop anyone in Gait’s debut season, and it explained a great deal of the program’s nosedive. Syracuse ranked 66th nationally in scoring defense (14.71 goals per game) and last out of 72 Division I teams in man-down defense, getting a stop just 42.6 percent of the time.
That put exquisite pressure on an offense that got the ball a good amount (.578 faceoff percentage, ninth nationally) but wasn’t particularly efficient when it did (28.3 percent shooting, 41st) even with the since-graduated-and-now-at-Georgetown Tucker Dordevic (47 goals, 12 assists) and Brendan Curry (34 goals, 19 assists) creating problems.
Syracuse yielded an average of 17.5 goals during a year-ending six-game skid that sealed the program’s first 10-loss season.