NO. 51 GOES NO. 1 AND KICKS OFF ATLAS OVERHAUL
The lasting image of the 2020 college lacrosse season was Cornell’s Jeff Teat methodically changing directions before firing a sidearm shot around a Penn State short stick defender and into the back of the net to tie the score at 17 with 18 seconds left at the Crown Lacrosse Classic.
“Where most guys force their way to the goal, he was patient,” said Cornell head coach Connor Buczek, who played for the Atlas the past two summers but was picked up in the 2021 expansion draft by Cannons LC after being left unprotected by Atlas head coach Ben Rubeor. “It was right in character with how he operates. It can be the most high pressure situation you can think of or a practice. He’s just serene on the surface and competitive as hell.”
The Big Red won 10 seconds later on a Angelo Petrakis goal. The contest was widely considered the game of the year at that point. It was also the last time we saw Teat in action. The Ivy League canceled the season three days later. Teat returned to Cornell this spring for a fifth year and lived at home Brampton, Ontario, last fall to preserve his undergraduate status. Yet small group practices and training sessions in Ithaca have had to suffice as his competitive outlets after the Ivy League announced earlier this spring that it would not allow league competition.
Penn, Brown and Dartmouth did manage to play their first games of 2021 last weekend against local opponents. The Big Red have no such games on their slate.
Despite Teat’s lack of visibility this spring, Rubeor cited his experience in the 2018 World Games as a barometer for Teat’s ability to compete and succeed on the biggest stage.
“His performance against the best players in the world and being the leading scorer for Team Canada made my decision one where I was pretty excited,” Rubeor said on the NBC Sports draft broadcast last night.
Teat will be 11th player from the Hill Academy to join the PLL. North Carolina midfielder Tanner Cook, taken 15th overall by the Chaos, makes it a dozen for Brodie Merrill’s Pride.
“It makes me feel old for sure, if I didn’t feel old already,” said Merrill, the lacrosse director at the independent school in Ontario founded in 2006 for “dedicated student athletes,” not to mention one of the most decorated defenseman in the history of the sport who now plays for Cannons LC. “But it’s definitely really cool to see and get to play with a couple [Hill alums] this summer.”
With the selection, Teat becomes the third player ever to be picked first in both indoor and outdoor pro lacrosse drafts. He was taken first overall by the New York Riptide in last fall’s NLL draft. The last time a player achieved the distinction was in 2015, when Lyle Thompson was selected first in both the MLL (Florida Launch) and NLL (Georgia Swarm) drafts.
Safe to say that pick holds up.
Teat was drafted 12th overall in the 2020 PLL college draft by Andy Towers and Chaos LC, when the four-time All-American’s status remained uncertain. Since Teat returned to school, he was re-entered into the 2021 draft pool.
After stocking up on draft picks in trades dealing Paul Rabil, Rob Pannell and Ryan Brown, Rubeor had six selections, tied for the most with Chaos. He ended the first round by taking Virginia midfielder Dox Aitken with the eighth overall pick. Like Aitken, Rubeor wore No. 6 at Virginia.
BACK-TO-BACK, AGAIN, FOR DUKE DUO
While Michael Sowers and JT Giles-Harris, last night’s second and third picks, have made headlines for the past five years with their play, few might know that the 2021 U.S. Lacrosse Magazine Preseason Players of the Year at their respective positions had already been selected with consecutive picks in a previous draft.
This past fall, Sowers — Princeton’s all-time leading scorer who’s continued to dice defenses as a graduate transfer in Durham — was the first name off the board in the inaugural Duke Outdoor Lacrosse League draft. Senior midfielder Nakeie Montgomery, who also served as the head coach of team Peithos in the intrasquad series of scrimmages, did not need long to hand in his team’s first pick.
“When they drafted Mike, obviously we had to draft JT,” Montgomery said. “That’s just how that works. They’re the two best players in the country. When they say iron sharpens iron, it’s pretty cool to watch that actually happen all fall.”
Sowers currently ranks fourth in career points in NCAA history and provides Andy Copelan and Waterdogs LC an offensive quarterback from day one. He also reunites with former Tigers teammate Zach Currier. Ryan Brown, who Copelan acquired this offseason by trading the 11th pick in the college draft to Atlas, must be salivating at the prospect of the open looks and pinpoint accurate passes he’ll get this summer.
Giles-Harris — the 2019 ACC Defensive Player of the Year and one of four defenseman to make the 25-nominee list for this year’s Tewaaraton Award — fills an immediate need for Tim Soudan and Chrome LC after Soudan revealed last night that Tom Rigney would not be available this summer due to military commitments.
“He’s good at everything,” Soudan said of Giles-Harris. (The same could be said of the jack, or rather master, of all trades Ryan Terefenko of Ohio State. Soudan couldn’t contain his enthusiasm knowing he got arguably the steal of the draft and a shutdown short stick defensive midfielder at pick No. 12.)
Towers also provided the opposite of a poker face when taking NCAA goals king and Penn State sharpshooter Mac O’Keefe with the sixth overall pick.