17. HIGH POINT
2019 record: 13-3 (6-1 Southern)
Last seen: Turning in its only thoroughly noncompetitive game of the season at precisely the wrong time with a 15-7 drubbing at the hands of Richmond in the Southern Conference title game.
Senior starts lost: 44 of 160 (27.5 percent)
Senior scoring departing: 82 of 354 points (23.16 percent)
Initial forecast: So what’s next for the program responsible for one of the weirdest postseason resumes ever? The Panthers scored early victories at Duke and Virginia, but also lost to Jacksonville and St. John’s and were not even a close call for an at-large berth to the NCAA tournament. The good news? Attackman Asher Nolting (44 goals, 48 assists) is only halfway through his career and will again anchor an offense set to return six of its top seven scorers. The bad news? The one departure in that group is finisher Chris Young (44 goals), who along with goalie Tim Troutner Jr. leave a couple notable vacancies in coach Jon Torpey’s lineup. And now the dicey: High Point went 6-1 in one-goal games, and that sort of success in tight contests isn’t easy to replicate year over year. The Panthers may very well solve that problem by being better and avoiding as many close calls, but this past season made clear their best — and maybe only — path to the NCAA tournament is via the Southern Conference’s automatic bid.
16. NORTH CAROLINA
2019 record: 8-7 (1-3 Atlantic Coast)
Last seen: Nearly tripping up eventual ACC tournament champion Virginia in the event’s semifinals, a victory the Tar Heels needed to have any realistic hope of landing an at-large bid.
Senior starts lost: 76 of 150 (50.67 percent)
Senior scoring departing: 76 of 279 points (27.24 percent)
Initial forecast: It feels like an inflection point for North Carolina, which has missed back-to-back NCAA tournaments for the first time since 2005-06 and just graduated the last major pieces from its 2016 national championship team (namely midfielder Timmy Kelly and defenseman Jack Rowlett). The Tar Heels were never really that far off for much of this past spring, and a 2-5 record in games decided by two goals or less perfectly illustrates the close-but-not-quite nature of Carolina’s latest season. Joe Breschi’s bunch will be helped by a healthy Will Bowen (who would have contributed on close defense this year), but it needs an offensive centerpiece; Will Perry (26 goals) was the only Tar Heel to score more than 20 times this spring. With Virginia’s resurgence, the ACC is as daunting a neighborhood as ever for Carolina, which is just 23-22 since it hoisted the title trophy three years ago.