Let’s cut to the chase about the biggest question heading into the NCAA semifinals and title game this holiday weekend in Connecticut.
Is it a championship, or is it a coronation?
Maryland has proven more or less untouchable while running the table to this point, a team brimming with ability and incentive. It has trailed in only four games. It faced a second-half deficit only once (April 16 against Ohio State). It has won seven times by double-digit margins. It has won by less than four just once (an 11-9 triumph at Notre Dame back on March 5).
Impressive stuff.
But guess what else is impressive? Cornell’s recovery from two poor performances at home in mid-April. Princeton’s belated start to the post-Michael Sowers era and thriving with a cast of dozens on offense. Rutgers, which always seemed to have the goalposts moved on it, setting a school record with 15 victories and earning the school’s first final four berth in any men’s sport since 1994 (men’s soccer).
Those are some tidbits salvaged from the cutting room floor in this annual alphabetical exercise. Consider this prep work for the weekend to come, an A-to-Z look at the four teams set to play on lacrosse’s biggest stage.
A is for Gavin Adler. Cornell’s ace defenseman who at 5-foot-8 and 180 pounds is a master technician, exceptional at using leverage to lock up opponents. Adler leads the Big Red in caused turnovers with 30, including a whopping 14 in his last four games.
B is for George Baughan. Another veteran Ivy League defenseman whose career was disrupted by the pandemic, Baughan was on his way to becoming a household name in the sport when the 2020 season was halted. The senior shares the team lead with 18 caused turnovers with long pole Andrew Song and will be a pivotal figure in Princeton’s semifinal against Maryland.
C is for Cornell. The Big Red are 13-4 and advanced to the semifinals with victories over Ohio State (15-8) and Delaware (10-8). Cornell will make its 14th appearance in the semifinals and its first since 2013. The Big Red own three NCAA titles (1971, 1976 and 1977).
D is for Anthony DeMaio. Now in his sixth year in Maryland’s program, the midfielder is the last player on the roster of the Terrapins’ last national title team remaining. DeMaio redshirted in 2017 but has scored 98 goals over the last five seasons — including 13 in four games this month in the Big Ten and NCAA tournaments.
E is for East Hartford. It’s the second consecutive year the season will end at Rentschler Field, which hosted a pair of quarterfinals in 2019 in addition to Virginia’s victory lap last Memorial Day. Championship Weekend will head back to pro football stadiums over the next four years, with Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field (2023-24) and Foxborough’s Gillette Stadium (2025-26) returning as sites.
F is for Zackary Franckowiak. The Rutgers short stick defensive midfielder is six years removed from his freshman year in Piscataway (in addition to his bonus year of eligibility because of the pandemic, he spent 2017 and 2018 in Russia on a Mormon mission). The only Scarlet Knight ever to play in two Big Ten title games (2016 and 2022), he’s also a pivotal part of a rope unit capable of creating headaches this weekend — especially when its depth could be an asset on Monday with a quick turnaround.