As a result, May will be entirely about lacrosse for the program, and Galloway is counting on a veteran roster that includes nine graduate students, a senior and nine redshirt juniors to steer things as the Dolphins attempt to earn the first NCAA tournament berth in program history.
“The captains and the seniors are going to lead the rest of the way,” Galloway said. “We’ve kind of given the keys to those guys, because I believe we can’t monitor them enough right now and it has to be the guys in the locker room that know how quickly this can end if we don’t take care of our business.”
Indeed, that’s the top priority for Jacksonville. As impressive as the Dolphins have been, they currently sit at No. 24 in the RPI and No. 38 in the NCAA’s strength of schedule metric. Those are the sort of numbers that typically aren’t rewarded with at-large berths on Selection Sunday.
With two more victories, though, the metrics won’t matter and the Dolphins will earn a platform even bigger than the ones it took advantage of against Duke and Denver in the first month of the season.
“We control what we control, and it’s how we play next Thursday,” Galloway said. “And then if we have the opportunity to continue the season, we’re going to continue to make a statement that Jacksonville lacrosse was not a flash in the pan in February.”
NUMBERS OF NOTE
2
Division I programs that have had multiple players enjoy eight-goal games within the last six seasons. Tye Kurtz’s eight-goal showing against Drexel on Saturday, coupled with Mike Robinson’s nine-goal outing against Saint Joseph’s last season, put Delaware on the list. Georgetown has also had two different eight-goal scorers since 2017 — Daniel Bucaro (in 2019 against Yale) and Jake Carraway (in 2021 against Villanova).
3
Announced attendance figures of at least 5,000 fans on Saturday: Navy-Army (9,618), Maryland-Johns Hopkins (7,065) and Penn State-Rutgers (5,223). It matched the total number of crowds of at least 5,000 for the entire season prior to then. It also marks the first time three different sites drew at least 5,000 fans to Division I games since April 12, 2014, when Michigan-Ohio State (17,641), Navy-Army (10,774), Maryland-Johns Hopkins (9,553) and North Carolina-Syracuse (6,684) did so according to NCAA attendance data.
16
Goals allowed by Bucknell in Friday’s 19-16 defeat of Lafayette, the most the Bison have yielded in a victory since an 18-17 overtime defeat of Gettysburg in 1983. Coupled a 16-14 triumph over Mercer in its season opener, Bucknell has won both time it has allowed 14 or more goals this season.
21
Goals allowed by Syracuse in its 21-15 loss to Virginia, tied for the most it has ever allowed in the Carrier Dome. The Orange had allowed 21 there in two other occasions — a 22-21 victory over Virginia in 1997 and a 21-9 loss to North Carolina last season.