First was the Fuqua School of Business, ranked 12th in the country according to US News & World Report. After doing more research, Sowers found their master’s degree program was a great academic fit and thought it had everything he was looking for.
Second was his conversations with those within the Duke lacrosse program. Sowers felt a kinship with several of the players after he got a sense of their competitiveness and their drive. Head coach John Danowski and his assistants, Matt Danowski and Ron Caputo, never pressured Sowers or made him feel like he was on the clock. What stood out most about those interactions, though, was that they rarely talked about lacrosse. They seemed more interested in his family and his experiences at Princeton off the field.
The third, and perhaps most important, element was that he would not have to embark on the journey alone. On Sherrerd Field at the Class of 1952 Stadium, Sowers and Phillip Robertson possessed an almost telepathic connection honed through hard work. That will continue at Koskinen Stadium.
“After playing with him a good amount my sophomore year and last year, I have a good sense where he likes to go, but I still have to be able to move really quick because he is so shifty,” said Robertson, who led the NCAA in shooting percentage in 2018. “You definitely have to be ready at all times.”
Roommates for the past two years, the fellow captains and linemates’ Spelman Hall apartment was the nexus for Princeton team meals and gatherings, like the Super Bowl watch party they hosted in February. That bond was evident when the Tigers started the 2020 season 5-0. While Sowers averaged 9.4 points per game, they also looked like one of the most complete teams in the country.
“I consider him like a brother at this point with how long we’ve known each other and played together,” Sowers said of Robertson.
In Durham, they’ll live with Joe Robertson, Phillip’s younger brother, with whom Sowers played in high school as teammates for, wait for it, Dukes Lacrosse Club. Before missing this spring with a torn ACL, Joe Robertson led the Blue Devils in goals in 2019, including the overtime winner against Notre Dame that sealed their spot in the final four. Sowers has also exchanged texts with freshman Dyson Williams, who led Duke in goals during its abbreviated 2020 campaign and Brennan O’Neill, the top-ranked recruit in the Class of 2020 according to Inside Lacrosse, who’s been called the “Zion Williamson of lacrosse.”
That’s just part of the attack. Is it possible to have too many options?
“With the talent we have, the sky is certainly the limit, but for us it’s about what we’re going to do from September to January that will define us,” Sowers said, while also noting that he feels almost like a freshman again. “It’s going to be awesome to get down there and establish chemistry with those guys and learn from them.”