Both brothers went on to play at Bryant. In four seasons, Kevin set seven NCAA records, including career faceoffs won (1,118, surpassed only this season by Trevor Baptiste), career ground balls (755), and single-season ground balls (231). He was named a USILA All-American three times.
Kenny enjoyed success as well. After redshirting as a freshman, he played in every game for Bryant over the next four seasons (67), and he amassed a 60.9 faceoff winning percentage.
“Coming in as a freshman, he was a well-established junior. It was a steep learning curve, but he made sure I never got discouraged,” Kenny said. “Kevin always took an interest in my well-being. He’d make sure I was doing what I needed to in the classroom. He’d take me out on the weekends and take care of me.”
While Kevin helped coach up Kenny, Kenny pushed Kevin.
“There’s no one you’re going to compete harder against than your brother,” Kevin said. “We’d compete in practice. It’s somebody to bounce ideas off of. When he was on the team, it helped elevate me, and it helped him become the dominant faceoff guy he is.”
“You want to make it harder in practice than in games, and that was the case for me against Kenny,” he added. “His redshirt year, he’d practice with us. Even when he was a d-middie, he’d face off with us. It’s why I became a successful faceoff guy, having someone like that to compete against.”
The Massas’ professional careers took different turns, however.
Kevin was selected by the Charlotte Hounds in the fourth round with the 26th pick in the 2015 MLL collegiate draft. He was the second faceoff specialist selected, taken two spots after Chesapeake took Maryland’s Charlie Raffa.
The problem, however, was Charlotte had also taken former Duke faceoff specialist Brendan Fowler in the second round the year prior. With Fowler entrenched as the team’s top faceoff guy, Kevin saw limited playing time. He did not play in 2015, played in five games in 2016 (taking 83 faceoffs), and appeared in nine games in 2017 (taking 94 faceoffs).
Kenny — Kevin’s self-proclaimed No. 1 fan — said it was hard to watch him go through that experience, but it was also admirable at the same time.
“He thought he deserved the position,” Kenny said. “He wanted to compete for it. When somebody is well established, watching him stay the course and not give up, watching him and seeing the success now is something tremendous and inspiring.”
Like his older brother, Kenny was picked with the fourth pick in the fourth round. Kevin said he would have enjoyed playing with his younger brother in Charlotte, just like at Bryant, but Kenny was drafted by the defending champion Ohio Machine.
Unlike his older brother, as soon as Kenny’s collegiate season was complete, not only did he dress for Ohio, he was the team’s top faceoff specialist. Debuting against the Dallas Rattlers and 2017 MLL all-star Drew Simoneau, Kenny won 13 of 28 faceoffs and picked up a game-high nine ground balls.
The only person as excited as Kenny was his brother, Kevin.
“He has earned that,” Kevin said. “I’m glad he’s getting the opportunity. It’s pretty cool. I’m excited for him.”