9. York
And with one final game, York’s “Conehead Line,” as coach Brandon Childs called them, has departed. Translation: Thomas Pfeiffer, Hunter Davis and Brendan McGrath, the Spartans’ starting attack trio since 2017, have graduated with 693 combined career points. That could have been even more if not for McGrath missing a sizable chunk of 2018 with a season-ending injury. The blows don’t stop there, as defensive lynchpins Kevin Witchey and J.D. Beck are also heading out, as is faceoff specialist Billy Sasso and midfielder Brad Casale. A new era is here for York, and odds are there will be growing pains. Then again, York has made the quarterfinal round of the NCAA tournament three of the past four seasons, so there’s a high standard to live up to.
8. Denison
As NCAC rival Ohio Wesleyan waxed, Denison waned en route to its fifth conference championship and a postseason run that ended in an NCAA quarterfinal loss at Salisbury. How will the Big Red cope with losing five of their seven top scorers to graduation? Attackman Peter Pittroff returning for his senior season, already having scored 250 points. Long-stick midfielder Chris Broderick and defenseman Sam Dyson are also back, as is starting goalie Reeves McKenney. So don’t expect Denison to fade too far.