Cornell lacrosse 2019
I'm thinking some of those too many penalties are from being overly aggressive in trying to overcome the faceoff deficit by creating turnovers.upprdeck
5-10 more possessions mean a lot for a team that shoots as well as Cornell does.. added to that a few less possessions by the Opp probably means a few less penalties and that helps the D as well..
Al DeFlorio '65
That's my takeaway. Right now, 9 of 10 teams in the top 10 in polls are at 50% (rounded to 2 digits). If you're down 3 with 3 minutes to play, if you score to cut the deficit to 2, and odds are 2 in 3 you'll lose the next faceoff.mike1960
To win games against quality opponents, I think there is a necessity to get around 50 percent.Trotsky
Interesting though that the top 10 in FO don't dominate the poll. Apparently it's neither necessary (Duke, Loyola, Cornell) nor sufficient (Lehigh, Holy Cross, Hobart).
The top teams play tougher competition, with tougher FOGOs, than do many of the teams with ostensibly higher faceoff win%. So I don't think you can really conclude much just by absolute faceoff win% ranking, other than that Cornell is absolutely atrocious and that we would likely be #1 in the country if TD Irelan had chosen us over Yale. I'm not really sure how people can fault the rest of the team--offense, defense, midfield, goalie--when our per-possession stats are incredible.Trotsky
Interesting though that the top 10 in FO don't dominate the poll. Apparently it's neither necessary (Duke, Loyola, Cornell) nor sufficient (Lehigh, Holy Cross, Hobart).
upprdeck
5-10 more possessions mean a lot for a team that shoots as well as Cornell does.. added to that a few less possessions by the Opp probably means a few less penalties and that helps the D as well..
And keeps the D fresher. (Like in hockey, when a team cycles in the offensive zone and wears down the other team's defense.)
He has next year, too. Probably feels he's one-upped his brother by going to Yale. I'm guessing seeing his brother going to Cornell was part of his motivation for wanting out of Albany.upprdeck
Still surprise Irelan didnt come to play his last year with his brother.
Al DeFlorio '65
Some time ago I compared the web sites of Cornell's and Yale's economics departments. I found Cornell's to be dry and mostly about fulfilling requirements, while Yale's was exciting and about why studying economics at Yale was special. So what's his major?
He's an economics major at Yale, I think, but was looking at the Dyson school at Cornell. Yale has no undergrad business school so econ is the closest major.Swampy
Maybe he just liked Yale more.
Some time ago I compared the web sites of Cornell's and Yale's economics departments. I found Cornell's to be dry and mostly about fulfilling requirements, while Yale's was exciting and about why studying economics at Yale was special. So what's his major?
Al DeFlorio '65
Al DeFlorio
He's an economics major at Yale, I think, but was looking at the Dyson school at Cornell. Yale has no undergrad business school so econ is the closest major.Swampy
Maybe he just liked Yale more.
Some time ago I compared the web sites of Cornell's and Yale's economics departments. I found Cornell's to be dry and mostly about fulfilling requirements, while Yale's was exciting and about why studying economics at Yale was special. So what's his major?
Well there you go!
[www.insidelacrosse.com]
The Case for Cornell
With its 11-9 win over Notre Dame, Cornell placed itself back in the at-large conversation with a victory that is currently against a top 10 RPI team. In the process, Cornell moves from No. 15 in last week’s RPI to No. 14, but more importantly, adds a second quality win to its resume to go along with its Towson victory. Last year at this time, Cornell was 10th in RPI and was in our projected bracket as an at-large team. So what are the reasons for selecting the Big Red as an at-large team this time around based on their body of work?
In terms of RPI, Cornell’s 14th rank would not be the lowest to ever get an at large, with teams such as the 2016 National Champion North Carolina Tar Heels getting in with an 18th ranked RPI. Still, teams such as Towson and Johns Hopkins rank ahead of them in RPI. While Johns Hopkins may not have any top 10 wins to compare to Cornell’s win over Notre Dame, Towson has its win over Loyola. In terms of wins against teams ranked 11th to 20th in RPI, Towson has two compared to Cornell’s one (a win over Towson).
Head to head is a criteria of the selection process and one that would help give the edge to Cornell over Towson if the final at-large spot were to be decided between those two programs.
Another criteria that the committee will look at is average RPI win and average RPI loss. In terms of average RPI loss, Cornell has a rather compelling story.
Average RPI loss is defined as the average RPI of all opponents to whom a team has lost. While Cornell has four losses, all four are to teams currently in the top 5 in RPI, with Yale recently replacing Virginia in the top 5. Their average RPI loss is 3.5, which ranks tops in DI lacrosse. Dating back to 2010, any team with an average RPI loss of 5 or less has qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
Last year, Virginia (10th in RPI) had a similar resume to Cornell, ranking first in the country in terms of average RPI loss (5.2) while going 0-4 against top 5 RPI teams and 2-1 against RPI teams ranked Nos. 6-10. Their resume was enough to get them in the Tournament as an at-large against No. 6-seed Loyola.
For Cornell, their remaining schedule provides opportunities for them to add another quality win. While Brown and Princeton are both hovering around .500, the Ivy League Tournament could provide Cornell a great chance to improve its resume, as the conference ranks third in average RPI and has two of the Top 5 RPI teams in the country.
—B.C.
Inside Lacrosse
Another criteria that the committee will look at is average RPI win and average RPI loss. In terms of average RPI loss, Cornell has a rather compelling story.
Average RPI loss is defined as the average RPI of all opponents to whom a team has lost. While Cornell has four losses, all four are to teams currently in the top 5 in RPI, with Yale recently replacing Virginia in the top 5. Their average RPI loss is 3.5, which ranks tops in DI lacrosse. Dating back to 2010, any team with an average RPI loss of 5 or less has qualified for the NCAA Tournament.
Next week, HvY is now irrelevant to the ILT. Here are the remaining scenarios:
B>D C>Pr: Pe,Y,C,B
B>D Pr>C: Pe,Y,(B,C,Pr)*
D>B C>Pr: Pe,Y,C,B
D>B Pr>C: Pe,Y,Pr,C
* depends on Princeton's margin of victory (capped at 6 max) over Cornell:
MOV = 1,2: C,B
MOV = 3,4,5: B,Pr
MOV = 6: Pr,C (wrong before, now fixed)
Not sure you're right. The key clause is ambiguous because of a grammatical error. The clause reads "teams [plural] with the greatest goal differential gets [singular] higher seed (6-goal maximum differential per game)." If it should be singular, as it reads in the next tie-break criterion, the team [singular] with the greatest differential would get the 3-seed, and the 4-seed would be determined by head-to-head.CU77
C>B, Pe>D, Pr>H today.
Next week, HvY is now irrelevant to the ILT. Here are the remaining scenarios:
B>D C>Pr: Pe,Y,C,B
B>D Pr>C: Pe,Y,(B,C,Pr)*
D>B C>Pr: Pe,Y,C,B
D>B Pr>C: Pe,Y,Pr,C
* depends on Princeton's margin of victory (capped at 6 max) over Cornell:
MOV = 1,2: C,B
MOV = 3,4,5: B,Pr
MOV = 6: Pr,B
Al DeFlorio '65
Al DeFlorio '65
Then Cornell is -2, and eliminated from the tie (and the ILT). Then B gets the #3 seed because they beat Pr.Al DeFlorio
What if Pr wins by 5, so both Pr and B finish +1?
I didn't previously realize that this tie-breaking system can be so wacky. If Cornell is losing to Princeton late by 3, 4 or 5 goals, then they should score some own goals so that they lose by 6 or more.
Similarly, Princeton should have lost to Brown by 6 or more, instead of by 4. Then Princeton would get in to the ILT by beating Cornell by any margin. As it is, they must win by 3 or more to get in.
CU77
Then Cornell is -2, and eliminated from the tie (and the ILT).Al DeFlorio
What if Pr wins by 5, so both Pr and B finish +1?
Where does it say that in the criteria? It should, but I don't see it.
That's what I wrote on the lax forum backup thread. Robin Harris and company better hope Cornell wins or they could be dealing with a real fiasco.
I didn't previously realize that this tie-breaking system can be so wacky. If Cornell is losing to Princeton late by 3, 4 or 5 goals, then they should score some own goals so that they lose by 6 or more.
Al DeFlorio '65
Al DeFlorio
CU77
Then Cornell is -2, and eliminated from the tie (and the ILT).Al DeFlorio
What if Pr wins by 5, so both Pr and B finish +1?
Where does it say that in the criteria? It should, but I don't see it.
That's what I wrote on the lax forum backup thread. Robin Harris and company better hope Cornell wins or they could be dealing with a real fiasco.
I didn't previously realize that this tie-breaking system can be so wacky. If Cornell is losing to Princeton late by 3, 4 or 5 goals, then they should score some own goals so that they lose by 6 or more.
Unfortunately another reason to give up on college lacrosse. At least until they get their sh*t together.
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005
[www.insidelacrosse.com]
“They’re like Gretzky-Kurri,” says Dan Teat....
14. Cornell 41. Colgate (played 2018, and lost) 65. St. Bonaventure 70. Binghamton (played 2018)Playing Lehigh we got the #27 RPI team instead of Bucknell #34.
Hobart is up to #26 in RPI and also-got-votes in the poll this week.
1. Penn State
2. Marylandd
3. Duke
4. Yale
5. Penn
Saturday opponent Princeton is marked as also Receiving Votes.
Media poll [www.insidelacrosse.com] has Cornell #9, +1 places. The top 5:
1. Penn State
2. Maryland
3. Duke
4. Penn (was 5)
5. Yale (was 4)
Also receiving votes: Princeton
In RPI, Cornell is 14, Princeton 26, Brown 31.
Also, an interesting Tourney related post by Dom Starsia (inside lacrosse)
Starsia: A 'Leap of Faith' to Allow Automatic Qualifiers into NCAA Tournament
[www.insidelacrosse.com]
towson win helps us , but still not sure why they or loyola or even maryland are seen as locks.
maryland is now 1-4 vs teams that will be in, they are getting alot of value over beating Penn in game 1 when they were playing game 3..
we with a loss will be 2-5 with Hobart as a shot to add another.
upprdeck
maryland is now 1-4 vs teams that will be in, they are getting alot of value over beating Penn in game 1 when they were playing game 3..
Don't think NC$$ takes this into account. Another way Ivies get screwed.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
quality tweets | bluesky (twitter 2) | ALAB Series podcast | Other podcasts and writing
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
On the plus side, ESPN+ would've auto-billed again on Wednesday, so we were able to cancel 'til next hockey season...
Always looking for the silver linings.
Beeeej, Esq.
"Cornell isn't an organization. It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
- Steve Worona
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
The search for a FOGO guy begins.
mike1960
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
The search for a FOGO guy begins.
The current roster has five FOGOs, with no seniors and only two juniors (Raz & Hunter Hughes). We also have Angelo Petrakis, nationally the #2 class-of-2019 FOGO coming next fall.
In terms of recruiting & searching for a FOGO, what more can the coaches do?
Well, the new guy is good news but i think it's fair to read "the search for a FOGO begins" to mean "the search for a FOGO who doesn't lose most of his faceoffs, like the ones this year, begins" is a fair way to read Mike's point. Who cares how many are on the roster right now if none of them were successful?Swampy
mike1960
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
The search for a FOGO guy begins.
The current roster has five FOGOs, with no seniors and only two juniors (Raz & Hunter Hughes). We also have Angelo Petrakis, nationally the #2 class-of-2019 FOGO coming next fall.
In terms of recruiting & searching for a FOGO, what more can the coaches do?
quality tweets | bluesky (twitter 2) | ALAB Series podcast | Other podcasts and writing
ugarte
Well, the new guy is good news but i think it's fair to read "the search for a FOGO begins" to mean "the search for a FOGO who doesn't lose most of his faceoffs, like the ones this year, begins" is a fair way to read Mike's point. Who cares how many are on the roster right now if none of them were successful?Swampy
mike1960
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
The search for a FOGO guy begins.
The current roster has five FOGOs, with no seniors and only two juniors (Raz & Hunter Hughes). We also have Angelo Petrakis, nationally the #2 class-of-2019 FOGO coming next fall.
In terms of recruiting & searching for a FOGO, what more can the coaches do?
My point is just that the best coaches can do is to evaluate players, recruit the ones whom they project will be successful, and coach up the ones they recruit. On the first two tasks, our current coaches seem to be doing reasonably well. So three possibilities remain: 1) they're not doing a good job of coaching the FOGO's once they get here, 2) for whatever reasons, the players don't live up to the projections, and/or 3) the players get injured. This seems to have been the case with Raz this year.
Oh, one more thing. 4) The team runs into an historical talent like TD. This would make beating Yale exceptionally difficult, but it still wouldn't explain mediocre FOGO results against so many other teams.
Maybe we can get one of these guys to transfer.
Swampy
ugarte
Well, the new guy is good news but i think it's fair to read "the search for a FOGO begins" to mean "the search for a FOGO who doesn't lose most of his faceoffs, like the ones this year, begins" is a fair way to read Mike's point. Who cares how many are on the roster right now if none of them were successful?Swampy
mike1960
ugarte
nope. season's over.
Cornell beat 6 seed Towson and 7 seed Notre Dame this season, but losses to Yale (twice), Penn, Syracuse, and Penn St. were enough to keep Cornell out of the NCAA Tournament.[t.co]
— Raphy Gendler (@raphy_gendler) May 6, 2019
The search for a FOGO guy begins.
The current roster has five FOGOs, with no seniors and only two juniors (Raz & Hunter Hughes). We also have Angelo Petrakis, nationally the #2 class-of-2019 FOGO coming next fall.
In terms of recruiting & searching for a FOGO, what more can the coaches do?
My point is just that the best coaches can do is to evaluate players, recruit the ones whom they project will be successful, and coach up the ones they recruit. On the first two tasks, our current coaches seem to be doing reasonably well. So three possibilities remain: 1) they're not doing a good job of coaching the FOGO's once they get here, 2) for whatever reasons, the players don't live up to the projections, and/or 3) the players get injured. This seems to have been the case with Raz this year.
Oh, one more thing. 4) The team runs into an historical talent like TD. This would make beating Yale exceptionally difficult, but it still wouldn't explain mediocre FOGO results against so many other teams.
Maybe we can get one of these guys to transfer.
If Petrakis is truly one of the one or two best FOGO’s coming out of HS, we should be at least competitive at faceoffs next year. And I think Graham improved over the course of the season and can certainly be in the mix with the other guys coming back.
Just that it's not like having two fair-to-good linebackers, where the talent is additive. We will have a great FOGO coming into Cornell the year before the faceoff goes away.scoop85
If Petrakis is truly one of the one or two best FOGO’s coming out of HS, we should be at least competitive at faceoffs next year. And I think Graham improved over the course of the season and can certainly be in the mix with the other guys coming back.
FWIW, the media voters had Sowers, Spencer, and Teat as first-team in a pre-season poll, and Teat was first-team (both USILA coaches and IL media) as a freshman and sophomore. [www.insidelacrosse.com]
2019 DI Men's Media All-Americans - First Team
A-Grant Ament, Jr., Penn State <--- 26G 83A 109 Pts (109 pts after NCAA 1st round; 6.8 ppg, best in D1)
A-Pat Spencer, Sr., Loyola <--- 43G 60A 103 Pts (career 143G 226A 369 Pts in 67 games)
A-Chris Gray, So., Boston U <--- 49G 62A 111 Pts (most total points in D1, 6.5 ppg)
M-Sam Handley, Fr., Penn
M-Dox Aitken, Jr., Virginia
M-Bryan Costabile, Jr., Notre Dame
FO-TD Ierlan, Jr., Yale
SSDM-Zach Goodrich, Sr., Towson
LSM-Isaac Paparo, Sr., UMass
D-Johnny Surdick, Sr., Army
D-Cade Van Raaphorst, Sr., Duke
D-JT Giles-Harris, Jr., Duke
G-Sean Sconone, Sr., UMass
Second Team
A-Michael Sowers, Jr., Princeton
A-Asher Nolting, So., High Point
A-Mac O'Keefe, Jr., Penn State
M-Chase Scanlan, Fr., Loyola
M-Max Tuttle, Sr., Sacred Heart
M-Ryan Conrad, Sr., Virginia
FO-Alex Woodall, Sr., Towson
SSDM-TJ Comizio, Sr., Villanova
LSM-Jared Conners, Jr., Virginia
D-Nick Mellen, RJr., Syracuse
D-Craig Chick, Sr., Lehigh
D-Chris Sabia, Sr., Penn State
G-Jacob Stover, Sr., Loyola
Third Team
A-Jared Bernhardt, Jr., Maryland
A-Daniel Bucaro, Sr., Georgetown
A-Jeff Teat, Jr., Cornell
M-Lucas Wittenberg, Sr., Georgetown
M-Nick Spillane,Sr., Penn State
M-Brendan Curry, So., Syracuse
FO-Kyle Gallagher, Jr., Penn
SSDM-Ryan Terefenko, Jr., Ohio State
LSM-Brett Kennedy, RSo., Syracuse
D-Chris Fake, So., Yale
D-Koby Smith, So., Towson
D-Gibson Smith, So., Georgetown
G-AJ Barretto, Sr., Army
Honorable Mention
A-Joey Epstein, Fr., Johns Hopkins <--- Inside Lacrosse top recruit
A-Jackson Morrill, Jr., Yale
A-Logan Wisnauskas, So., Maryland
A-Michael Kraus, Jr., Virginia
A-Jake Carraway, Jr., Georgetown
M-Connor Kirst, Jr., Villanova
M-Brad Smith, Sr., Duke
M-Jack Tigh, Sr., Yale
M-Tyler Dunn, Sr., Penn
M-Anthony DeMaio, So., Maryland
FO-Gerard Arceri, Jr., Penn State
FO-Conor Gaffney, Jr., Lehigh
SSDM-Danny Logan, Jr., Denver
SSDM-Peter Dearth, Jr., Syracuse
SSDM- Drew Schantz, Sr., Notre Dame
SSDM-Roman Puglise, So., Maryland
LSM-Brandon Salvatore, Jr., Cornell
D-Dylan Gaines, Sr., Denver
D-Curtis Corley, Sr., Maryland
D-Patrick Foley, Sr., Johns Hopkins
D-George Baughan, So., Princeton
G-Max Edelmann, RSr., Rutgers
G-Matt DeLuca, Jr., Delaware <--- no relation to Delaware HC Ben DeLuca '98 former Cornell HC
G-Tim Troutner, Sr., High Point
When Teat gets free and when there's a shooter free to take Teat's pass, he is the best player in lacrosse. As when he threaded that pass to Clarke Petterson to beat Princeton with 8 seconds left.
Here's a look at Clarke Petterson's game-winning goal, off a brilliant feed from Jeff Teat, as @CornellLacrosse defeats Princeton to secure the No. 3 seed in the upcoming @IvyLeague Tournament in NYC. pic.twitter.com/SCeVW02eBS
— Cornell Video (@CornellVideo) April 27, 2019
mike1960
Cornell is/was better than most of those teams in the final 8.
The problem is we lost to three of them, twice to Yale.
I'd say those are the three best teams remaining in the tournament. Penn State's lost only to Yale. Since their opener, Yale's lost only to Penn. And Penn hasn't lost to anyone since March 2.Swampy
mike1960
Cornell is/was better than most of those teams in the final 8.
The problem is we lost to three of them, twice to Yale.
Problem is the dopes on the committee have seeded them so only one can get to the championship game.
Al DeFlorio '65
USILA DIVISION I ALL-AMERICANS FIRST TEAM Pat Spencer A Loyola Grant Ament A Penn State Michael Sowers A Princeton Jared Bernhardt A Maryland Bryan Costabile M Notre Dame Dox Aitken M Virginia Sam Handley M Penn Ryan Conrad M Virginia Johnny Surdick D Army JT Giles-Harris D Duke Cade Van RaaphorstD Duke Chris Sabia D Penn State Sean Sconone G UMass Jacob Stover G Loyola TD Ierlan FO Yale Jared Conners LSM Virginia Zach Goodrich SSDM Towson SECOND TEAM Chris Gray A Boston University Daniel Bucaro A Georgetown Jeff Teat A Cornell Mac O'Keefe A Penn State Brad Smith M Duke Chase Scanlan M Loyola Lucas WittenbergM Georgetown Nick Spillane M Penn State Chris Fake D Yale Nick Mellen D Syracuse Patrick Foley D Johns Hopkins Craig Chick D Lehigh AJ Barretto G Army Tim Troutner G High Point Alex Woodall FO Towson Isaac Paparo LSM UMass Ryan Terefenko SSDM Ohio State THIRD TEAM NAME POS COLLEGE Asher Nolting A High Point Michael Kraus A Virginia Jackson Morrill A Yale Joey Epstein A Johns Hopkins Max Tuttle M Sacred Heart Brendan Curry M Syracuse Nakeie Montgomery M Duke Bubba Fairman M Maryland Jack Kelly M Penn State Koby Smith D Towson Curtis Corley D Maryland Jack Rowlett D North Carolina Mark Evanchick D Penn Max Edelmann G Rutgers Reed Junkin G Penn Gerard Arceri FO Penn State Kyle Gallagher FO Penn Brett Kennedy LSM Syracuse T.J. Comizio SSDM Villanova HONORABLE MENTION NAME POS COLLEGE Simon Mathias A Penn Matt Moore A Virginia Brendan Sunday A Towson Jake Carraway A Georgetown Ethan Walker A Denver Clarke Petterson A Cornell Brendan Nichtern A Army Logan Wisnauskas A Maryland Brendan Gleason A Notre Dame Kieran Mullins A Rutgers Kevin Lindley A Loyola Ryan Lanchbury A Richmond Adam Goldner A Penn Tre Leclaire A Ohio State Nate Solomon A Syracuse Matt Gaudet A Yale Connor Kirst M Villanova Jack Tigh M Yale Tyler Dunn M Penn Tyson Gibson M Robert Morris Jamie Trimboli M Syracuse Colton Jackson M Denver Jack Jasinski M Ohio State Anthony DeMaio M Maryland Timmy Kelly M North Carolina Mitch Savoca M Richmond Jack Kielty D Notre Dame Gibson Smith D Georgetown George Baughan D Princeton Dylan Gaines D Denver Kyle Pless D Rutgers Logan Greco D Virginia Tyson Bomberry D Syracuse Nick Cardile D Penn State Aidan Hynes D Yale Matt Borges D Ohio State Brandon Jones D Air Force Matt DeLuca G Delaware Colby Kneese G Penn State Phil Goss G Brown Tate Boyce G Providence Conor Gaffney FO Lehigh Justin Inacio FO Ohio State Ryan McNulty LSM Loyola Noah Richard LSM Marquette Brandon Salvatore LSM Cornell Tommy Wright LSM Penn State Peter Dearth SSDM Syracuse Danny Logan SSDM Denver John Daniggelis SSDM Yale John Prendergast SSDM Duke
USILA
Loyola’s Pat Spencer has been named the national player of the year by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association, which released its annual All-American teams and award winners Thursday.
Spencer, who finished his career as the NCAA’s all-time leader with 231 assists and as the No. 2 all-time scorer with 380 points, won the Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award as the most outstanding player in Division I.
Penn State’s Grant Ament, Army’s Johnny Surdick, UMass’ Sean Sconone and Towson’s Zach Goodrich won the remaining awards.
Ament, who owns the NCAA single-season record with 91 assists going into this weekend’s national semifinal against Yale, earned the Lt. Col. J.I. Turnbull Award given to the nation’s top attackman.
Surdick won the William C. Schmeisser Award as defensive player of the year, Sconone took home the Ensign C. Markland Kelly Jr. award for outstanding goalie, and Goodrich got the nod for the Lt. j.g. Donald MacLaughlin Jr. Award as the top midfielder.
The USILA All-American teams are listed below [above]. Virginia, making its first NCAA semifinal appearance since 2011 this weekend, leads all schools with three first-team selections. Fellow final four participants Penn State and Duke landed two players each on the first team, as did Loyola.