Cerrone began his college career at Villanova, but opted to transfer and play his final two years at Duke. A Long Islander like Guterding, Cerrone had not met his new teammate until a coincidental encounter the summer before he arrived in Durham.
Cerrone made his way over to a complex in Garden City, N.Y., to get some shooting in. It was 8 a.m. when he met Guterding, already drenched in sweat.
“This kid’s got it,” Cerrone thought to himself.
It was there from the moment he arrived at Duke, when he inherited Wolf’s place as the dynamic lefty on attack. But he wasn’t the offensive centerpiece his first two seasons — midfielders Deemer Class and Myles Jones were — and his responsibility was to finish near the crease, work hard and not chirp much.
That’s changed over the last two seasons and especially this year in a captain’s role. And Guterding has also fine-tuned his intensity knowing his approach doesn’t work for everyone.
But it does work for a lot of the Blue Devils.
“I have noticed over time that it has rubbed off on other guys, that guys are looking to me to make that statement, whether it’s on the field or in the locker room,” Guterding said.
Duke’s postseason showings the last three years make the determined star an ideal match for this team. The Blue Devils reached Memorial Day weekend in each of coach John Danowski’s first eight seasons. Then came first-round ousters in 2015 and 2016, followed by last year’s forgettable 16-11 quarterfinal exit against Ohio State.
This month’s tournament — which began with a 17-11 rout of Villanova last weekend — is the last chance for Guterding and the rest of Duke’s seniors, and a reminder isn’t necessary. Still, he shows up for extra shooting before practice and sticks around for more after practice. He spends plenty of time scouring video with assistant Matt Danowski. He almost never stops working.
“It definitely gives guys on the team something to strive for,” Cerrone said. “It’s a role model. You could be this way. It’s easy. You just have to be determined to do it. Especially him being so close to everybody on the team, people understand there’s an off-the-field and there’s an on-the-field, but when you’re off the field there’s a still a part of you that never leaves the field, and he’s got that.”
But it doesn’t necessarily flow all from Guterding, an indication of the pride in a program with a high standard for excellence.
“I think it’s a mix of both,” defenseman Cade van Raaphorst said. “He’s one of our three captains, so everybody looks to him for leadership and looks to him to make a play. Whether we’d like to admit it or not, we do mirror a lot of that. … There’s a good mixture of him leading the way and us mirroring that, but also the same drive. What we’re doing reflects on him as well.”
For the most part, it’s worked. Since the long ride home from Penn, the Blue Devils (14-3) have lost only twice: a one-goal setback against Syracuse in late March, and a lethargic 14-11 defeat against Notre Dame in the ACC semifinals.
Historically speaking, the conference tournament loss isn’t a cause for alarm. The Blue Devils fell in the ACC semifinals in 2010, 2013 and 2014 — and then didn’t lose again. A repeat would ensure Guterding avoids a rerun of last year’s quarterfinals, when he lingered in the locker room at Hofstra and contemplated the impact of a season-ending loss.
“He’s a determined cat,” attackman Joey Manown said. “He definitely just wants to get out there and do it. He couldn’t wait for this spring and I know he wants it really badly this year.”
Added John Danowski: “I think it’s always been good. For me, it started here with Matt. He was that guy who was driven by that. Ned Crotty was driven by that. Max Quinzani was a brilliant student — he works for Goldman Sachs and had like a 3.5 — but he was driven in the weight room. He was one of the strongest guys. Jordan Wolf was that. Luke Duprey on the defensive end was that. … I do think having your best player be your most driven player is really positive.”