There’s a case to be made North Carolina has demonstrated a higher peak than anyone else in Division I. It mauled Denver 24-13 in its season opener, a game it led 21-6 after three quarters. It picked up one of the season’s most valuable road victories, a 16-13 triumph at Virginia on March 11 when it led 11-4 at halftime. Saturday’s pounding of Syracuse was maybe the most thorough showing of the year.
If anything was absent, it was consistency. Maybe the back-to-back losses added some urgency, though it’s understandable a team rolling along at 9-0 would feel a bit comfortable.
Then again, it’s hard to feel too much at ease when Breschi has scrapped the traditional plan of using a scout team against starters throughout practice and instead gone ones against ones. The assignments vary — no one is forced to defend attackman and Tewaaraton candidate Chris Gray every day — and Breschi believes there’s a payoff for both units.
“I want that so it makes our defense better,” Breschi said. “By seeing that, you have to make time for that offense against our defense every day because it makes our defense play faster and makes our defense understand, ‘This is what you’re going against when you play Notre Dame, Virginia, Syracuse, Duke, etc.’ The speed of play is just at another level.”
There is encouragement on offense, too. As good as Gray’s been — with 37 goals and 31 assists, he’s the only 30-30 player in Division I — there are three other Tar Heels with 30 points (Nicky Solomon, William Perry and Tanner Cook) and nine players on the roster with at least 10 goals.
And Carolina goes even deeper than that. Grad transfer Connor McCarthy scored three goals at Syracuse, and freshman Cole Herbert scored his first two goals Saturday. The likes of Lance Tillman and Henry Schertzinger are earning expanded roles.
“I think they’re starting to understand, ‘If I play my best, and Chris plays his best and Jacob Kelly plays his best, and that first midfield of fifth-year seniors plays their best — it is tough to defend,’” Breschi said. “That’s what we need at the defensive end, too. I think it’s a work in progress, and as the temperature gets warmer, we’re starting to realize the potential that’s in the room.”