The Case For Loyola
The Greyhounds are young on offense. But with proven playmakers at midfield in senior Jay Drapeau and junior John Duffy and with remarkable junior attackman Pat Spencer running the offense, Loyola will put much pressure on Patriot League defenses. Junior midfielder Alex McGovern, a starter on attack with 44 points a year ago, could move down low again if needed. Defensively, senior Ryder Harkins leads the close unit a year after consistently handling the opponents’ top matchup problem, while third-year starter Jacob Stover is primed for his best season in goal. Barring major injuries, and if the defensive midfield is as good as advertised, Loyola should be the class of the Patriot League again.
The Case Against Loyola
Graham Savio graduated with more career faceoff victories than any Greyhound in school history. Senior Mike Orefice spent three years as a solid backup. It remains to be seen how he fares this season in the top spot – before possibly yielding to freshman Bailey Savio, Graham’s promising younger brother. The Greyhounds might sacrifice too many possessions in 2018 to sustain offensive momentum and could put too much pressure on their defense in the process. Also, Army is shaping up as a serious contender once again, while Boston University and Navy could be in the thick of things as the league schedule plays out.
Path to the Playoffs
Since joining the Patriot League in 2013, the Greyhounds have dominated the league by winning the conference title three times over the past four seasons. This team, despite losing three of its top six scorers, appears well-equipped to extend that streak. The Greyhounds last year needed to get it done as the top seed in the Patriot League championship to make the NCAAs with an automatic bid, after losing to Bucknell and Boston University in overtime during the regular season. A year after going 1-3 against nonconference rivals Virginia, Johns Hopkins, Towson and Duke, the Greyhounds need to strengthen their at-large resume by at least breaking even against that group.
Players To Watch
Pat Spencer, A, Jr.
28 G, 55 A
After his second outstanding season in a row, Spencer is the first player in Patriot League history to be named Offensive Player of the Year as a freshman and sophomore. A first-team All-American and Tewaaraton finalist in 2017, Spencer is on course to own Division I school records in career points and assists – this season.
John Duffy, M, Jr.
(13 G, 4 A)
After leading the second midfield last year, Duffy moves into the first line, where he will complement Jay Drapeau (20 goals) and McGovern nicely. Duffy makes good decisions, takes good care of the ball and creates quality shots. “Duffy is probably our most consistent [midfielder],” Toomey said. “Great kid, does everything right, says little – a coach’s dream.”
Kevin Lindley, A, Fr.
106 G, 28 A (HS)
A lefty out of Darien (Conn.) High School with tremendous off-ball sense, Lindley set single-season program records (106 goals, 134 points) last spring as the US Lacrosse Northeast Region Player of the Year. A two-time state player of the year, he led Darien to three state titles, ended his career on a 55-game winning streak and finished with career school records (219 goals, 122 assists).
National Rankings
Category
|
Rank
|
Value
|
Offense |
11th |
12.38 GPG |
Defense |
10th |
8.38 GAA |
Faceoffs |
12th |
56.4% |
Ground Balls |
3rd |
33.63/game |
Caused TO |
5th |
9.31/game |
Shooting |
29th |
30.1% |
Man-Up |
22nd |
38.5% |
Man-Down |
5th |
78.4% |
Assists |
4th |
8.38/game |
Turnovers |
9th |
11.69/game |
Clearing |
2nd |
91.8% |
Power Ratings (Scale of 1-5)
Offense
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Defense
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Goalkeeping
⭐⭐⭐
Faceoff
⭐⭐⭐
1-4
Loyola’s record in one-goal contests last year. After dropping a wild 16-15 affair in their season opener against visiting Virginia, the Greyhounds went 0-3 in overtime decisions – all on the road against Hopkins, Bucknell and Boston U. Loyola won its share of blowouts against inferior conference teams, but they need to win more close ones in 2018.
5-Year Trend
Caused Turnovers (Per Game)
Year
|
Rank
|
CT
|
2013 |
11th |
8.81 |
2014 |
15th |
8.06 |
2015 |
32nd |
6.87 |
2016 |
23rd |
7.33 |
2017 |
5th |
9.31 |
Coach Confidential
Charley Toomey
“We’re young and we need some time to grow. We’ve got a schedule that will prepare us for conference play. We’re a workmanlike group and I like to point to the [winning] culture we’ve built here. But if you take a Drapeau or a Spencer off of the field with an injury, things will get very tough for us.”
Enemy Lines
Rival Coaches
“What happened in 2017 after the final four run in 2016? Was it simply that they were just as strong a program in, but they found themselves losing too many of the close games early on? ... The midfield will look quite a bit different with Sherlock and Dennis departed, but Jay Drapeau, John Duffy and Alex McGovern are more than qualified to step into the bigger roles awaiting them. Of course, the offense really starts and stops with junior Pat Spencer, the best feeding attackman in the game who is also very dangerous dodging for himself. ... The defense appears to all be back, and if healthy can be lockdown (ex. holding Ohio State to seven goals in the NCAA tournament). ... The keys will be the two specialty areas: Graham Savio gives way to his little brother and freshman Bailey at the FO X, while the goal should be filled by Jacob Stover, who played much better as the season progressed in 2017. ... They're going to go up and down and Spencer is unbelievable as a distributor. It's just a matter of how they surround him. ... Always scary when no one is talking about them.”