Teat and the Class of 2020 helped re-establish a winning culture at the tradition-rich program and put the Big Red back in the national conversation. They reversed a 5-13 record from their freshman year to go 13-5 in 2018 while also securing an Ivy League tournament title and a run to the NCAA quarterfinals.
After a 10-5 record in 2019 that left them one of the last teams out of the NCAA tournament, Cornell seemed poised for another postseason run this past spring after starting 5-0. The second-ranked offense in the country also featured junior John Piatelli, who ranked fourth in goals per game (4.00) in Division I and freshman Michael Long, who tallied 19 points and earned Ivy League Rookie of the Week honors twice, at attack.
“I think we’re just an extremely simple offense,” Teat said of the unit that Buczek oversaw for the last three years. “We don’t do anything outside of what we’re capable of. At the same time, we have a lot of fun and we’re a little creative.”
This year will be Buczek’s first year at the helm of the program. The former three-time All-American who graduated in 2015 was named head coach a couple days after Peter Milliman left for John Hopkins. Buczek is Teat’s third head coach in five years.
“Their passion for the game and how much they care about the program is extremely rewarding for us and easy to play for,” Teat said of Buczek and Jordan Stevens, who was promoted to the Mario St. George Boiardi ‘04 Associate Head Coach of Men’s Lacrosse.
The endowed position is not the only way the program celebrates the legacy of Boiardi — a Cornell lacrosse captain who died in March 2004 after being struck in the chest by the ball during a game at Schoellkopf Field against Binghamton. Every spring, a junior is tasked with carrying a hard hat emblazoned with the No. 21. Teat carried the hat in 2019. He passed it on to midfielder Jonathan Donville, in whose locker it still sits until the university gives the team approval to resume in-person activities.
“Carrying the hard hat and sitting next to [George] in the locker — it’s a big deal,” Teat told Inside Lacrosse in 2019. “I can’t think of enough words to put together what it means.”
To Buczek, who carried the hat in 2014, the honor shows that if you put in the work, good things happen.
While he’s only able to connect with his players via Zoom right now, he remains optimistic about the spring and said the Big Red will be ready to compete whenever the opportunity calls.
Teat’s presence should facilitate that transition.
“It’s certainly very assuring on our end,” Buczek said of Teat’s return. “We know that Jeff and the rest of the leaders on our team this year are cut from that same hardworking and humble cloth. What we talk about at Cornell is that everybody’s judged by the same standard. Whether you’re the first guy on the depth chart or the last guy, the expectation is that you’re a great teammate. He fulfills that role every single day.”