Milliman addressed his new team during a Zoom call Monday morning. The Blue Jays are coming off an abbreviated 2-4 campaign after salvaging a 13-12 overtime win against Mount St. Mary’s in what wound up being their season finale March 10.
“The guys seemed like they were excited to see what’s next, hear what’s next,” said Milliman, who in addition to filling out a coaching staff hopes to find ways to connect with the Blue Jays players who are completing the spring semester remotely. “Amid everything that’s going on, it’s a priority that I develop some personal relationships as soon as possible.”
Two Johns Hopkins starters who had entered the NCAA transfer portal after Pietramala’s ouster — senior attackman Cole Williams and fifth-year senior midfielder Alex Concannon — could still return to the team. Williams, a two-time All-Big Ten performer and a USILA All-American in 2018, led the Blue Jays with 17 points (11 goals, six assists) in six games this season. Jack Rapine, a three-year starter on defense, left the team in January and also is listed in the portal.
Asked if Johns Hopkins might be the beneficiary of the Ivy League exodus of senior stars with additional NCAA eligibility, Milliman admitted he had not paid much attention to the transfer portal this offseason. The Ivy League does not allow graduate students to compete in athletics and Harvard, Princeton and Yale have said they would not give additional eligibility to those who withdraw and reenroll to preserve their undergraduate standing.
“It’s a possibility,” Milliman said. “There’s a lot of young men who I’ve competed and coached against and gotten a chance to see firsthand what type of competitors they are. Because of the way the rules work in that league, it might provide some opportunity.”
One such candidate could be Jackson Morrill, the No. 2 all-time scorer and a two-time All-American attackman at Yale. He has deep roots at Johns Hopkins. His father, Mike Morrill, was a two-time All-American and NCAA champion for the Blue Jays in the late 1980s and later played for Team USA. His grandfather, William Morrill Jr., was Johns Hopkins’ all-time leading scorer, a three-time All-American and also a two-time national champion when he graduated in 1959. His great-grandfather, the late William Kelso Morrill, is a 1927 graduate of the school who led the Blue Jays to two national titles in 16 seasons as head coach. All three are in the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
Of course, pedigree isn’t everything. According to sources familiar with search, the other finalists for the position included Towson’s Shawn Nadelen and Hobart’s Greg Raymond — both Johns Hopkins alumni — as well as Jacksonville’s John Galloway and Richmond’s Dan Chemotti.
Baker identified non-negotiable criteria that drove the university’s decision to hire Milliman.
“Among those were high character, a coach who is committed to providing an outstanding and holistic student-athlete experience for our players and a coach who is well-positioned to achieve a level of competitive success befitting the tradition and legacy that is Johns Hopkins lacrosse,” she said. “Peter emerged from an incredibly talented pool of candidates as someone who not only had all of those non-negotiables, but also clearly articulated a vision for the future of our program that resonated with and inspired all of us. His record of success at Cornell is remarkable, his innovative and strategic approach to the game is compelling, and his experience supporting and developing the kind of student-athletes we’re fortunate to have here at Hopkins — all of those things further differentiated him.”