The race to May starts today, with Furman hosting Vermont in the NCAA Division I men's lacrosse opener at 5 p.m.. Here's a closer look at the Nike/US Lacrosse Preseason Top 20.
1. Denver
2016 record: 13-3 (5-0 Big East)
Last seen: Taking back-to-back losses to close out the season, including a 10-9 setback against Towson in the first round of the NCAA tournament to quickly end the Pioneers' title defense.
Starts lost: 16%
Scoring lost: 17%
Forecast: The early postseason exit left Denver out of sight and out of mind, but this was still a team that was 13-1 in early May, can dominate possession thanks to Trevor Baptiste and should have one of the best players in the country in senior attackman Connor Cannizzaro. Overall, the Pioneers return three first-team All-Americans (Christian Burgdorf also is back), though they must cope with the unexpected absence of Zach Miller. In short, a couple late-season losses do not portend the collapse of a program that's delivered on a consistent basis since it first reached Memorial Day weekend in 2011. There are areas for improvement, particularly a defense that hid some of its vulnerabilities thanks to the team's penchant for playing make it/take it. Tighten up the defense, and Denver will contend for another national title.
Enemy lines: “Deepest, most talented team in the country, plus King Tuna and Tierney. … Incredible coaching on both sides of the ball, best FOGO in the nation. … Baptiste for Player of the Year. ... Will bounce back after a disappointing exit. Best coach ever.”
2. Maryland
2016 record: 17-3 (5-0 Big Ten)
Last seen: Nearly bringing an end to a 41-year title drought, only to allow the final three goals to North Carolina in one of the best national championship games in recent memory.
Starts lost: 39%
Scoring lost: 28%
Forecast: No, Maryland did not win the national title last year. But it was the most complete team of 2016, with the fewest vulnerabilities, and one of the benefits of that is it has fairly established answers for nearly all of the graduation hits it absorbs. The entire starting attack returns, including second team All-American Matt Rambo. After running two midfields heavily, the Terps can better handle losses in that area. Bryce Young saw plenty of time and is a good bet to slide into Matt Dunn's old starting spot. Matt Neufeldt will return from injury and reclaim his long pole spot from the graduating Greg Danseglio. Goalie Kyle Bernlohr leaves a substantial hole, but "fourth-year junior who played well in limited work" describes Dan Morris going into next year just as well as it did Bernlohr entering 2015.
Enemy lines: “Matt Rambo could very easily be a Tewaaraton finalist this year. He does get a lot of credit but probably not as much as he deserves. … Questions in cage. All-Americans everywhere else. … Word is they feel good about Morris and seemingly every year the baton has passed between great goalies, it has worked well.”
3. North Carolina
2016 record: 12-6 (3-1 ACC)
Last seen: Celebrating its first national championship since 1991 in the wake of Chris Cloutier's extra-man goal in overtime against Maryland on Memorial Day.
Starts lost: 26%
Scoring lost: 33%
Forecast: North Carolina loses only five players off its national championship team, so there's great temptation to anoint the Tar Heels as the early favorite for 2017. Yet while Joe Breschi's bunch finally obliterated the narrative of North Carolina continuously falling flat upon arriving in postseason every year, this was still a team that entered May at 8-6. The Tar Heels must find another lead attackman with Steve Pontrello (49 goals, 21 assists) graduating, but they enjoyed enough success moving around pieces last year that they'll be fine. Though North Carolina's defensive questions will pop up again.
Enemy lines: “No pressure now. Should be interesting to watch them play loose. … Seems like they have figured out some of the culture issues that may have been holding them back. … Breakthrough 2016. Pressure to repeat, see Denver '16 season.”
4. Loyola
2016 record: 14-4 (7-0 Patriot League)
Last seen: Surrendering 18 goals to North Carolina (half of them to Chris Cloutier) in the NCAA semifinals, though it should be noted the Patriot League champions' offense largely did as it pleased whenever it got the ball in that game.
Starts lost: 28%
Scoring lost: 24%
Forecast: Pat Spencer (37 goals, 52 assists) has another three years of eligibility remaining. The attackman was spectacular as a freshman, and he'll have a good chunk of his supporting cast back (though finisher Zach Herreweyers departs after a 37-goal season). The Greyhounds are the clear-cut Patriot League favorite, and a serious threat to make it to the final weekend in Foxborough.
Enemy lines: “Spencer is the best player in the country. ... Watch for freshman long-stick middie [Ryan McNulty] to make an early impact. … Spencer is not a bad place to start on offense, and [offensive] coach [Marc] Van Arsdale has some experience working with talented attackmen.”
5. Notre Dame
2016 record: 11-4 (3-1 ACC)
Last seen: Having few answers for North Carolina at either end of the field in a surprisingly lopsided NCAA quarterfinal loss.
Starts lost: 51%
Scoring lost: 36%
Forecast: It would be overly melodramatic to suggest the Irish missed the best chance they'll get to break through for their first national title. But it isn't an exaggeration to assert 2016 was a missed opportunity based on the depth of the senior class. Still, outside of a rout of Syracuse in the Carrier Dome, this is a bunch that lived a bit dangerously against most of the good (and a few of the average) teams on its schedule. History suggests the defense will be fine, and a nucleus of Ryder Garnsey, Sergio Perkovic and Mikey Wynne is a decent place to start at the other end.
Enemy lines: “Garnsey should take a big step this year and Perkovic can be the best player in the country at times. … Will need to replace Kavanagh’s play-making ability and reliability in the clutch. ... Can Perkovic produce consistently? Can Garnsey take pressure off him and get him the ball in scoring spots, or has he added more ability to create on his own?”