3. MARYLAND
2018 record: 14-4 (4-1 Big Ten)
Last seen: Never quite climbing out of an early six-goal hole against Duke in the NCAA semifinals; the 13-8 defeat brought an end to the Terrapins’ national title defense.
Senior starts lost: 77 of 180 (42.8 percent)
Senior scoring departing: 151 of 329 points (45.9 percent)
Initial forecast: Here’s the full list of schools to make more than five consecutive NCAA tournament semifinal trips, as Maryland now has: Syracuse (22, 1983-2004), Johns Hopkins (12, 1976-87), Maryland (9, 1971-79), Duke (8, 2007-14) and North Carolina (7, 1980-86). That would be some pretty good company Maryland would join if it makes it to Philadelphia next year, and no one should count out the Terrapins even in the face of some considerable losses. Maryland graduates a couple starters on offense (Tewaaraton finalist Connor Kelly and fifth-year midfielder Tim Rotanz), but junior Jared Bernhardt (40 goals, 16 assists) and sophomores Bubba Fairman (26 goals) and Logan Wisnauskas (35 goals, 15 assists) provide a fine foundation at that end of the field. Bryce Young graduates, but fellow defenseman Curtis Corley is back for another run after a strong junior season. It’s tempting to point to goalie Dan Morris’ graduation as potential hole, but it’s worth making the same point as two years ago when Morris inherited Kyle Bernlohr’s starting spot: When was the last time Maryland received lousy goalie over the course of a full season? Relieved of the hoopla surrounding a national title defense, John Tillman’s program should again sit on the short list of national championship contenders. If one of the offensive returnees can develop into full-fledged star (a la Kelly or Matt Rambo) and some of this year’s supporting cast take a step forward (such as Anthony DeMaio and Will Snider), look out. The Terps could be in line for a second title in three years.
2. DUKE
2018 record: 16-4 (3-1 Atlantic Coast)
Last seen: Dropping the national championship game to Yale, falling a victory shy of the program’s fourth NCAA title this decade.
Senior starts lost: 88 of 200 (44 percent)
Senior scoring departing: 180 of 422 points (42.7 percent)
Initial forecast: Coach John Danowski is not boastful and he tends to take a wide-angle view of things. So it was a bit telling in the aftermath of the Blue Devils’ Memorial Day loss that he said, “I think the theme is ‘We’re going to be back.’ When we do, this experience, we’ll draw from it.” It was a matter-of-fact analysis, and he’s right to be confident, even with some noteworthy losses. That starts with Tewaaraton finalist Justin Guterding (66 goals, 47 assists), whose relentless personality came to reflect a Duke team that made it make to the semifinals for the first time since 2014, and also includes fifth-year senior goalie Danny Fowler. But seven of the top nine scorers are back, a group that starts with senior-to-be Brad Smith (29 goals, 36 assists) and also includes finisher Joe Robertson (48 goals, 12 assists) on attack and fast-rising midfielder Nakeie Montgomery. Faceoff man Brian Smyth played well in the second half of the season, and Joe Stein won 56.0 percent of his draws as a freshman. With Guterding and his senior class successfully getting Duke back to the final weekend of the season, it’s plenty possible a deep and experienced team finishes the job next year. Figure out the goalie situation – a caveat that accompanied each of the Blue Devils’ eventual national champs – and Duke could be next year’s favorite.