The strategy sounds straightforward enough. You’ve no doubt heard NFL GMs and insiders alike spout it over the last decade. Draft the best available player. That’s easier in concept than reality, especially when faced with a hole at a certain position. Luckily for Chaos fans, Andy Towers faced no such restrictions.
“I'm fortunate in that we have no glaring positional needs, so I can go after whoever I want,” Towers said last week.
He did. Last year, Towers focused his first two picks on the defensive end with Johnny Surdick (No. 6 overall) and Jack Rowlett (No. 7). This year he went in the other direction. Despite fielding the second-highest scoring offense during the 2019 regular season, the Chaos were the only team to use both picks in the 2020 college draft on that side of the ball.
In the first round, Towers took Matt Gaudet (No. 5 overall) from Yale, whose 142 career goals rank third in program history. The selection adds another scoring threat to an already deep and box-centric attack unit that featured Connor Fields, Josh Byrne and Miles Thompson last summer. They accounted for two of the flashier plays in 2019: Thompson’s behind-the-back near-side goal against Atlas in Week 2 or Fields to Byrne’s double-behind-the-back connection in Hamilton, Ontario, which is Gaudet’s hometown.
Towers’ second pick hails from less than an hour’s drive away from Hamilton and is another Ivy League product. He’s also arguably the most intriguing pick and emblematic of the challenges that the PLL head coaches faced while planning for this year’s draft.
If Jeff Teat’s status regarding his plans for next year was certain, he would have been off the board long before Towers selected him with the No. 12 pick.
“My only concern, is there enough playing time to go around?” analyst Ryan Boyle said on the broadcast after the selection.
The three-time USILA All-American and two-time captain at Cornell looked like he was poised to lead the undefeated Big Red (5-0) to a playoff run before the season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We really have an appreciation for dodgers, and not necessarily passers and finishers in the Americanized Division I game,” Towers said in an interview earlier this spring. “I think because of that, Jeff Teat isn't adequately appreciated. Look at the success he had at the World Games when he played with guys that could consistently break down their defenders with quickness and acceleration. He was an All-World attackman at 20 years old. That shows you just how dominant he is. I would almost be willing to say that he is more dominant at what he does well than what anybody else [in the college game] is dominant at what they do well.”
Unlike Princeton and Yale, Cornell has not announced officially whether the university will allow 2020 seniors to take advantage of the NCAA’s eligibility relief.
The pick also poses an added risk because if a player drafted decides to return to school, he would re-enter the draft pool for 2021. With the wealth of options already at his disposal, Towers sounded as comfortable with the decision as Fields looks when he throws a behind-the-back pass.
“Someone that is as talented as Jeff is worth the risk,” Towers said on the broadcast.
The Chaos were not the only team to add depth to an area of strength. The Whipsnakes bolstered the league’s second-stingiest defense in 2019 by adding Sean New (No. 7 overall) out of Holy Cross and short stick defensive midfielder Matt Hubler (No. 14) from Johns Hopkins.
“There are some special positions that you need to have additional depth for something like this,” Stagnitta said last week, referring to the fanless and fully quarantined PLL Championship Series that will include 20 games in 16 days in lieu of the league’s regular touring model. “We're evaluating where we feel like it's important that we have extra quality of depth that maybe we wouldn't have if it's just a regular one game a week.”
Despite selecting Charlie Cipriano fourth in the expansion draft and signing two goalies (Tate Boyce and Reed Junkin) from the player pool in March, Waterdogs head coach Andy Copelan added another goalie when he took Matt DeLuca (No. 8 overall) from Delaware with the first pick in the second round.
“It's going to be a long, grueling three weeks,” Copelan said last week. “So you need to be very strategic with how you assemble that roster.”