US Lacrosse Magazine released the Nike/US Lacrosse Division I Men’s Preseason Top 20 on Jan. 2. Team-by-team previews will be unveiled on uslaxmagazine.com through the end of the month and will also appear as part of the magazine’s NCAA preview edition in February.
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No. 20 Marquette
2018 Record: 6-8 (3-2 Big East)
Coach: Joe Amplo (7th year)
All-Time Record: 46-45
NCAA Appearances: 2
Final Fours: 0
Championships: 0
Joe Amplo reached deep into his bag of motivational tricks.
Literally.
When the Marquette men’s lacrosse team reported to campus in late August, the Golden Eagles’ seventh-year head coach had with him the same luggage he took to and from Israel over the summer as an assistant coach for the gold medal-winning U.S. national team — the USA shield reminding him of the power of a unified vision and the expectation that you’ll still be playing on the last day.
Amplo packed the bag with everything he’ll need for a six-day stay in Philadelphia at the end of May. It sits now near the desk in his office, displayed prominently for his players to see.
“Everything happens twice,” Amplo said, paraphrasing leadership expert Robin Sharma. “Once in your mind and once in reality.”
This isn’t just bravado, a trait Amplo possesses in spades. It’s not a ruse, either. He really believes this team has the makeup to advance all the way to championship weekend.
Not since the 2016 season — when Marquette landed the sixth seed and a home game in the NCAA tournament in just its fourth year of existence — has Amplo felt this sure about the Golden Eagles’ potential.
Which is funny, because statistically, Marquette is coming off of its worst season since 2014. The Golden Eagles finished 6-8, fading late with two losses in six days to Big East nemesis Denver. They shot an abysmal 23.3 percent for the season, ranking 69th out of 71 teams in Division I.
And yet, Amplo noted, if you reversed the result of Marquette’s overtime losses to Bellarmine and Notre Dame, the Golden Eagles would have had a top-six RPI. (Though you could counter with Marquette’s five one-goal wins — the same margin that has decided 22 of 46 victories in program history.) Moreover, Tanner Thomson, a crafty Canadian and NLL prospect, redshirted last season due to a lower-body injury.
With Thomson’s return, the emergence of John Wagner (five game-winning goals) and the addition of Delaware transfer Andrew Romagnoli (34 goals, 19 assists in 2017), offensive coordinator Stephen Brundage has more weapons at his disposal in 2019.
Romagnoli already knows the lay of the land. He redshirted as a freshman at Marquette in 2015 before transferring to Delaware, where his older brother played. He was one of four players who were kicked off the team last March due to an unspecified violation of team policies.
When Romagnoli reached out to Amplo about coming back to Milwaukee, the coach arranged a dinner that included Romagnoli’s father, Jack, and Amplo’s wife, Jen. Amplo peppered Romagnoli with questions about his behavior and commitment. Then he offered him a spot on the team.
“I’m not afraid to take a chance on a kid if I believe in him,” Amplo said, citing the example of Jordan Greenfield, the former Fairfield star who fell out of favor there, took a year off of lacrosse and then helped transform the Marquette program as a graduate transfer in 2015. “Yeah, it’s risky. But I just believe in our culture that we can absorb one or two kids who have the right heart.”
“We’re a Jesuit institution,” Amplo added. “We believe in forgiveness.”
Another transfer, goalie John Hulsman, figures to step into the starting role vacated by Cole Blazer, who graduated and was recently picked up by the Chesapeake Bayhawks in the MLL supplemental draft. Hulsman was a first-team All-Southern Conference goalie as a freshman at Bellarmine.
Factor in a stout and fundamentally sound defense — led by legacy guys like Noah Richard and Nick Grill, whose older brothers Jake and B.J. played for the 2016 team — and you begin to understand the comparisons to that group.
Amplo doubled down on his prediction by distributing 200 save-the-date postcards on campus for NCAA championship weekend. He had new volunteer assistant Tim Rotanz, who played on Maryland teams that became a Memorial Day mainstay, put together a presentation on the final four experience. Marquette’s fall-ball schedule mimicked the five-week run that would comprise the Big East and NCAA tournaments, culminating in a final split-squad exhibition with referees and school administrators on hand, vendors and food trucks on site and music blaring at Valley Fields.
“Why not? I believe in this group,” Amplo said. “The worst thing that could happen is we’ll be disappointed. The best thing that could happen is maybe we’ll raise the bar.”
“Winning two Big East championships [in 2016 and 2017], that was terrific. But there’s so much more out there,” he added. “We’ve got to change the vernacular of who we are, how we act and speak. Let me take a chance.”