The NCAA men’s lacrosse committee’s most difficult decision might have been made for it Sunday morning.
Loyola’s withdrawal from the Patriot League tournament due to a positive COVID-19 test in the team’s Tier 1 testing pool means the Greyhounds won’t have a chance to claim an automatic berth. It also throws into question whether Loyola would be available for an NCAA tournament first-round game next week.
After Saturday’s play, the committee’s at-large math appeared clear. Four ACC teams are near-certain to be seeded in the top five. Denver and Syracuse, while not perfect, are good bets to claim berths.
That leaves two spots for three teams: Army, Rutgers and the Patriot League runner-up. With Lehigh taking the automatic berth in a no-contest, Loyola is the third team in this mix.
Quantifiable accomplishments clearly favor the two Patriot League schools. Army won at Syracuse in February and Loyola in April. Loyola stunned Georgetown to close the regular season, took the rubber game of three from Navy on Tuesday and then salvaged a season split with Army on Friday.
And then there’s Rutgers, with zero victories over teams with winning records and a loss to 4-9 Johns Hopkins. Of the teams in the mix for the final spot, Loyola’s setback at 6-8 Towson in late March is the only misstep in the same area code as the Scarlet Knights’ Big Ten semifinal loss.
In a sense, it would be an appropriate comeuppance for the Big Ten to find itself as one-bid territory. The league’s decision not to participate in any non-conference games when nearly every other conference permitted them played an oversized role in creating the committee’s near-impossible task of comparing teams.
Even if each Big Ten team played only a couple non-conference games, the value of contests with manageable travel like Johns Hopkins-Loyola, Maryland-Virginia (a series that was supposed to resume last year), Ohio State-Notre Dame, Penn State-Villanova and Rutgers-Army mixed into the data would be immense.
At the same time, it takes a cold, cold heart to have no sympathy for Rutgers. The Scarlet Knights had near-misses in 2016, 2017 and (to a lesser degree) 2018, and Brian Brecht’s program is due for its first NCAA trip since 2004 — and overdue for a Selection Sunday break.
But not like this.
Loyola had finally figured things out after a couple frustrating months, winning four in a row to charge into at-large contention. It was going to have a chance to render the issue moot Sunday afternoon in the final game of the regular season, the only contest standing between the committee and its final verdict in this most unusual of years.
Instead, it’s an only-in-2021 conclusion. Loyola is sidelined, definitely for today and possibly for longer. The uncertain availability would make it easier to plug Army and Rutgers into the final two spots and call it a day.
Easier, in this case, isn’t better. It’s just a reminder the pandemic that’s done so much to upend everything in the last 14 months is still collecting collateral damage.
Automatic Qualifiers (8)
|
W-L
|
RPI
|
T5
|
T10
|
T20
|
Notable Losses (25+)
|
Maryland |
12-0 |
6 |
0-0 |
0-0 |
2-0 |
--- |
Georgetown |
12-2 |
7 |
0-0 |
2-1 |
2-2 |
--- |
Drexel |
10-2 |
11 |
0-0 |
0-0 |
1-1 |
at UMass (32) |
Bryant |
9-3 |
13 |
0-0 |
0-0 |
1-0 |
Hobart (30), at Stony Brook (33) |
Vermont |
9-4 |
15 |
0-1 |
0-1 |
0-2 |
at Binghamton (39) |
High Point |
8-5 |
16 |
0-4 |
0-4 |
0-4 |
at Richmond (31) |
Lehigh |
10-1 |
19 |
0-0 |
1-0 |
3-0 |
--- |
Monmouth |
8-2 |
24 |
0-0 |
0-0 |
0-0 |
at Manhattan (27), Canisius (35) |
It’s going to be difficult to hand Maryland the top overall seed given the impossible-to-avoid questions about the Big Ten’s strength. It’s also going to be difficult to drop the undefeated Terrapins much further than the No. 2 seed. … Georgetown can comfortably take in Selection Sunday after defeating Denver for its third consecutive Big East tournament title. The Hoyas should land the No. 6 or No. 7 seed. …
Drexel isn’t going to be seeded, but the Dragons are a team no one should want to deal with in the first round. Winners of nine in a row, Drexel is a threat to at least match its quarterfinal trip from its only other tournament appearance in 2014. … Bryant is cooking heading into the NCAA tournament, scoring 70 goals in its last four games. That includes a 16-10 drubbing of Saint Joseph’s in the Northeast title game. …
Congrats to Vermont, the only first-time participant in this year’s NCAA tournament field. The Catamounts shrugged off Albany in the America East title game, and their distance from any of the anticipated sites makes them a prime candidate to get shipped to Denver to play the Pioneers or Notre Dame. … It just makes too much sense to pair High Point with either Duke or North Carolina for a first-round game. The Southern Conference champs faced both teams earlier this season. …
Lehigh picked up the Patriot League’s automatic berth as part of the fallout from Loyola’s withdrawal from the conference tournament. At 10-1, the Mountain Hawks stand a decent chance to be the No. 7 or No. 8 seed. … After having its first eight games decided by a combined 12 goals, Monmouth won its final two games in the Metro Atlantic tournament by a total of 12 goals. The Hawks are making their second NCAA trip.