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The decision last spring on whether to return for a fifth year took a bit longer.
But over the couple weeks after the season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Jared Nelson thought about all he had been through the previous four years helping rebuild the Pfeiffer program from the ground up — or as he called it, “hell and back.”
He thought about the Falcons’ 18-player roster in 2017 that still managed to finish 7-9 with a schedule against the likes of Limestone and Belmont Abbey. The transition from Division II Conference Carolinas to Division III. The 2-4 start in 2020 in Tucker’s first year at the helm.
A team captain since his sophomore season, Jared Nelson wanted to help his brother continue building what they started.
Jared and Tucker Nelson had just started the back nine at McCanless Golf Club, where rounds cost $15, last March when Tucker found out through an email from Pfeiffer athletic director Danielle Lafferty that spring athletes would receive a blanket eligibility waiver.
“Ahhh, I guess I’ll come back,” Jared told Tucker, trying to mask his enthusiasm.
Tucker Nelson then got to work fine tuning what’s turned into a juggernaut this spring. He addressed many of the team’s weaknesses through the transfer portal. There’s Victor, N.Y., native Tucker Hill, who previously played at Monroe Community College and has won 66.4 percent of his faceoffs this spring. Corey Choberka, a midfielder from SUNY Brockport who played with Jared Nelson at Vestal, registered seven goals and four assists two weekends ago. Redshirt-junior goalie Matt Stocks (Barton College) has stopped 55.9 percent of the shots he’s faced. Mike Turner (Roanoke) and Cody Stevenson (Catawba) add a physicality to the defense.
That infusion of talent has coincided with the team’s continued development, particularly at the attack. Sophomore Quinn Becraft’s 6.50 goals per game are the second most in Division III, and Jared Nelson said the lefty helps take a lot of the pressure off. Senior John Allen (51 goals,10 assists) set a USA South single-game goals record with nine last weekend. He knocked Jared Nelson out of the top spot.
“We want to be as dynamic as possible,” Tucker Nelson said of the free-flowing offense that he's constantly tinkering with and learned from his dad should be predicated upon giving players the freedom to run by their defenders.
Tucker and Jared Nelson’s interactions on the field have evolved since Tucker joined his dad's staff at Pfeiffer as an assistant in 2016. He called the dynamic “interesting,” at first. After Jared’s second collegiate game against Mars Hill, Tucker realized he couldn’t copy and paste the same motivations his dad used with him. He learned to take a more hands-on approach in the development stage rather than worrying about controlling every detail during the game. They started holding “individuals,” or fundamental skill sessions, that continue to this day and now include the whole position group.
“They’re so committed, this attack,” Tucker Nelson said. “They’re here every single day.”
Jared Nelson described the relationship being coached by his brother as “two completely different things” depending if they’re on or off the field. But no matter how many points he puts up or how far Pfeiffer gets in its quest to claim the first NCAA tournament bid in program history, some things won’t change.
“He never has a say in any of the drills,” Tucker Nelson said. “He likes to think he does sometimes, though.”