When did Tufts switch to a zone scheme on defense? Seems to have made a difference in the last several games. Were they a zone team when they played Union and Midd? Also, seems like Bredahl may have a chance to break Uppgren's single season scoring record, assuming they can win a couple games in the NCAA's. Believe he should easily break it if Tufts makes the final.warriorslax17 wrote: ↑Sun May 08, 2022 3:08 pm Tufts looked strong today. Should be a good tournament where the NY state teams will prove challenging, but clearly Tufts is the team to beat in New England.
NESCAC
Re: NESCAC
I drive a Dodge Stratus.
Re: NESCAC
I don’t think it’s their primary set, but they’ve been mixing it in and it’s been really effective. Thought it gave Bowdoin tons of problems.
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Re: NESCAC
Maybe I am over confident here, but I think Bowdoin has a promising path in the tournament. They will have a tough matchup with RIT looming but should be exciting to see what they can do.
Re: NESCAC
At this point, we don’t really have a point of comparison for the NESCAC aside from Tuft’s win over Lynchburg and their loss to Union. Optimism is good though…warriorslax17 wrote: ↑Mon May 09, 2022 9:47 am Maybe I am over confident here, but I think Bowdoin has a promising path in the tournament. They will have a tough matchup with RIT looming but should be exciting to see what they can do.
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Re: NESCAC
It has been their primary defensive scheme for the last few weeks of the season...and I expect that to continue throughout the playoffs until another team demonstrates that it can effectively attack it (or even attack it at all).
On that point, despite the unfortunate distribution of superpower teams on one side of the bracket (RIT, Saint John Fisher, Salisbury, and Tufts), the Jumbos can find one silver lining in their tourney path, related to the zone scouting/prep issues created by the back-to-back game structure:
On the first weekend, they have a walk-thru first round on Saturday, then play Saint John Fisher/Catholic the next day, meaning that the winning Cardinals team will have no time to properly scout/practice against a zone.
Should they win that Sunday game, they will likely play Salisbury in the QF the following weekend, and southern teams notoriously struggle against zones (for example, Cabrini vs. Wes in 2017 and Salisbury vs. Wes in 2018). Win and you get RIT the next day, who will face the same scouting/prep dilemma as the winning Cardinals team the prior weekend (SU is the epitome of man-to-man, 1v1 D; Tufts is polar opposite running a zone; who/how do you prep?).
Last edited by charliefayispredator on Wed Mar 22, 2023 7:54 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: NESCAC
Potential point of optimism for Bowdoin could be faceoffs/controlling possession. Montemorano graduated and RIT's new FOGO has been really hit or miss against good faceoff guys this season. 10/34 against SJF (Post) and 9/30 against Union (Paolatto/Byrne) in two one-goal wins, 14/29 against York (Facciponti) and 13/24 against Clarkson (Hansen) in two wins by comfortable margins. If Bowdoin can be 2/3 or above on faceoffs? Good stuff. If it's closer to 50/50, RIT is going to score a ton of goals and I'm not sure Bowdoin will be able to keep up.
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Re: NESCAC
They could just prep for it now? They have a full week. Do you actually think that these teams spend the whole week prepping for only one opponent? Fisher is likely spending 90% of their week prepping for Tufts.charliefayispredator wrote: ↑Mon May 09, 2022 4:06 pmIt has been their primary defensive scheme for the last few weeks of the season...and I expect that to continue throughout the playoffs until another team demonstrates that it can effectively attack it (or even attack it at all).
On that point, despite the unfortunate distribution of superpower teams on one side of the bracket (RIT, Saint John Fisher, Salisbury, and Tufts), the Jumbos can find one silver lining in their tourney path, related to the zone scouting/prep issues created by the back-to-back game structure:
On the first weekend, they have a walk-thru first round on Saturday, then play Saint John Fisher/Catholic the next day, meaning that the winning Cardinals team will have no time to properly scout/practice against a zone.
Should they win that Sunday game, they will likely play Salisbury in the QF the following weekend, and southern teams notoriously struggle against zones (for example, Cabrini vs. Wes in 2017 and Salisbury vs. Wes in 2018). Win and you get RIT the next day, who will face the same scouting/prep dilemma as the winning Cardinals team the prior weekend (SU is the epitome of man-to-man, 1v1 D; Tufts is polar opposite running a zone; who/how do you prep?).
Re: NESCAC
Don’t overthink it.charliefayispredator wrote: ↑Mon May 09, 2022 4:06 pmIt has been their primary defensive scheme for the last few weeks of the season...and I expect that to continue throughout the playoffs until another team demonstrates that it can effectively attack it (or even attack it at all).
On that point, despite the unfortunate distribution of superpower teams on one side of the bracket (RIT, Saint John Fisher, Salisbury, and Tufts), the Jumbos can find one silver lining in their tourney path, related to the zone scouting/prep issues created by the back-to-back game structure:
On the first weekend, they have a walk-thru first round on Saturday, then play Saint John Fisher/Catholic the next day, meaning that the winning Cardinals team will have no time to properly scout/practice against a zone.
Should they win that Sunday game, they will likely play Salisbury in the QF the following weekend, and southern teams notoriously struggle against zones (for example, Cabrini vs. Wes in 2017 and Salisbury vs. Wes in 2018). Win and you get RIT the next day, who will face the same scouting/prep dilemma as the winning Cardinals team the prior weekend (SU is the epitome of man-to-man, 1v1 D; Tufts is polar opposite running a zone; who/how do you prep?).
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Re: NESCAC
Oh - for the love of God!... does anyone know how to STOP getting Instagrams from Tufts lacrosse!!!
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Re: NESCAC
Create a fake dossier linking that Instagram account to Russia and leak it to the FBI.UpperCorner22 wrote: ↑Tue May 10, 2022 12:41 pm Oh - for the love of God!... does anyone know how to STOP getting Instagrams from Tufts lacrosse!!!
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Re: NESCAC
HahahahaUpperCorner22 wrote: ↑Tue May 10, 2022 12:41 pm Oh - for the love of God!... does anyone know how to STOP getting Instagrams from Tufts lacrosse!!!
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Re: NESCAC
A bit overconfident, IMO. I think St Lawrence, assuming they dispatch the dragons, will be a stern test for the Polar Bears on Sunday.warriorslax17 wrote: ↑Mon May 09, 2022 9:47 am Maybe I am over confident here, but I think Bowdoin has a promising path in the tournament. They will have a tough matchup with RIT looming but should be exciting to see what they can do.
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Re: NESCAC
3-1 on the day for the ‘Cac. Expect to see 2 practicing next week in preparation for the quarters. Say what you want about the teams that won, but Amherst proved lots of people wrong this year. Excited to see them develop under Woods. Program is in great hands
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Re: NESCAC
Anyone else think it’s completely inappropriate for that Tufts coach to allow his team to score 33 goals. Classy.
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Re: NESCAC
Feels like no good way to go about it. Didn’t score the last 9:18 of the game and a lot of scorers so it wasn’t starters (bredahl didn’t seem to play much more than 25 minutes)Bystanders wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 10:31 am Anyone else think it’s completely inappropriate for that Tufts coach to allow his team to score 33 goals. Classy.
With these back to backs it’s important to build a lead and rest
People as much as possible. Would be nice if the 20 guys not allowed to dress could get some reps in a game like that as well.
Re: NESCAC
You must not have seen the game...the starting attack and goalie were pulled in the 2nd and back-ups played the majority of minutes for the remainder of the game. Not sure what else you can do with restricted bench sizes.Bystanders wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 10:31 am Anyone else think it’s completely inappropriate for that Tufts coach to allow his team to score 33 goals. Classy.
Re: NESCAC
As long as it isn't the starters running up the score after halftime, no. What are coaches supposed to do in games that are such mismatches, tell their backups to sit on the ball and take shot clock violations all afternoon? Isn't that more disrespectful of an opponent? Look at who was doing the scoring after halftime for Tufts yesterday. It was all backups, and their last goal was at the 9:18 mark.Bystanders wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 10:31 am Anyone else think it’s completely inappropriate for that Tufts coach to allow his team to score 33 goals. Classy.
Just for fun...Tufts' opponent today (St. John Fisher) beat Utica and Sage 29-3 and Nazareth 30-11 earlier this season. In all three games, SJF's starters were still in the game and still scoring goals well into the fourth quarter.
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Re: NESCAC
Just saying CNU stopped shooting at 29.
Not a huge deal and not on the boys.
On the coach.
Not a huge deal and not on the boys.
On the coach.
Re: NESCAC
Nope. It’s on the other team. Lacrosse games are sixty minutes long. If you think a coaching staff should tell backups to sit on the ball for 80 seconds and roll it out of bounds the whole second half, that’s your thing.
Also, not sure why 29 is the magic number for sportsmanship beyond selective outrage.
Also, not sure why 29 is the magic number for sportsmanship beyond selective outrage.
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Re: NESCAC
It is collegiate lacrosse, get over it.