Solomon to GTown
McGovern, Palma enter
Army: Marcus Hudgins (D)
Bellarmine: Matt Ury (LSM) #
Binghamton: Teddy Dolan (G) #-> Maryland, Kevin Winkoff (A) #
Boston U.: Christian Brofft (M)
Brown: George Pike (M) #, Darian Cook (A) #, Cameron Fiore (G) #, Andy Demopoulos (G)
Bryant: Logan McGovern (A) #
Bucknell: Alston Tarry (A) #
Colgate: Thor Adamec (LSM) #, Will Sidari (D) #, Ryan Decker (M) #, Brian Minicus (A) # -> Georgetown
Dartmouth: Peter Rizzotti (LSM) #, Danny Hincks (G) #->Georgetown
Delaware: Peter Ripperger (G) #
Denver: Tim Sheehan (M), Ethan Kriss (FO), Alex Simmons (A/M) # -> Syracuse
Drexel: Brennan Greenwald (LSM) #
Fairfield: Kyle Borda (M) #, James Corasaniti (G) #, Tyler Wuchte (M) #, Trevor Ford (M) #, Patrick Drake (M) #, Brendan Dreyer (M) #, David Dorsett (M) #, Brian Reda (A) #
Georgetown: Dylan Watson (A) #
Harvard: Austin Madronic (A) #, Jackson Hartje (LSM) #, Oliver Hollo (LSM/D) #
High Point: Devon Buckshot (A), Tyler Hendrycks (A)
Hobart: Derrek Madonna (M) #, Ryan Dickson (FO) #
Hofstra: Jacob Addeche (G) #
Holy Cross: Peter Dobbs (G) #, Chris Conlin (D) #-> Notre Dame, AJ Fox (G) #
Lehigh: Tommy Schelling (A) #, Cole Kirst (A) # -> Syracuse
LIU: Richie LaCalandra (A) -> St. Joe's
Loyola: Riley Seay (M) #
Marquette: Hudson Thomson (A)
Maryland: Jack Schirtzer (D), Michael Ubriaco (LSM) #
Mercer: Sean Goldsmith (A) # -> UNC
Michigan: Ronald Fisher (M), John Kiracofe (G)#, Gavin Legg (LSM) #
Mount St. Mary’s: Jake Kreiger (M) #, Jared McMahon (A) #, Connor McMahon(M) #
North Carolina: Jacob Kelly (A) # ~> Georgetown, Nicky Solomon (A) # -> Georgetown
Notre Dame: Davis Allen (M) #, Griffin Hawthorne (D) #
Penn State: Brody Firestein (M), Lake Baker (FO)
Providence: Richie Hughson (FO)-> Penn State
Quinnipiac: Owen Boss (A), Will Abbott (M) #
Robert Morris: James Christoforatos (D) #
Sacred Heart: Donovan Lacey (M) # -> Maryland
Saint Joseph’s: Jake Engelke (A)
Siena: Sean Swenson (D)
St. John's: Jonathan Huber (A) #-> Stony Brook
Stony Brook: Anthony Palma (G) #
Syracuse: Tucker Dordevic (M) #->Georgetown, Mikey Berkman (A) #, Jack Savage (FO), Shahe Katchadurian (G), Jack Kennedy (D), Matteo Corsi (A/M)
Towson: Mo Sillah (LSM) #, Drew Martin (M) #
UMBC: Nick Dupuis (A)
Vermont: Thomas McConvey (M) # -> UVA, Salvatore Iaria (M)
Yale: Joe Neuman (FO) #, Chris Fake (D) #, Brian Tevlin (M) #, Luke Eschbach (M) #
Division 2/3
Amherst (D3): PJ Clementi (A) #
Catholic (D3): Kevin Crowley (A) #
Christopher Newport (D3): Brady Altobello (M) #
Gettysburg (D3): Griffin Gallagher (M) #, Tate Keinzle (DM) #
Salisbury (D3): Jarrett Bromwell (M) #
St. Lawrence (D3): William Helm (G) #
Kenyon (D3): Joe Bolea (ssdm) # -> Syracuse
Key
* = in the portal for 2024 season
# = Graduate Transfer
BOLD = most recent update
Transfer Portal 2023
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Thanks for highlighting the changes above the list.
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Davis Allen(ND) taking grad year @ Fairfield.
Looks like Gtown is the 2023 Rutgers
Looks like Gtown is the 2023 Rutgers
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
I actually will disagree with you here. RU has an excellent graduate program - it’s part of the reason they’ve been so successful in the portal. I just think handley to RU isn’t a reality - while I would love it though. Maybe Mitch gets in his ear…
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Has anything official on Conlin to ND come out? Or just hearsay from my comments on page 1?
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Re: Transfer Portal 2023
I think your thoughts are correct. Handley appears to have another year at Penn if the rumors are true but even if he didn't RU seems unlikely destination. The Bryant kid who just entered seems like an RU fit though, could see them going after him.Njlaxx11 wrote: ↑Mon May 23, 2022 7:31 pmI actually will disagree with you here. RU has an excellent graduate program - it’s part of the reason they’ve been so successful in the portal. I just think handley to RU isn’t a reality - while I would love it though. Maybe Mitch gets in his ear…
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Re: Transfer Portal 2023
He’s a very good player but I read here how size is all that matters and he’s 5’7” 165. Incongruous with the myriad of comments made by Big Ten fans about the Big Ten.
Now I love those cowboys, I love their gold
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
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- Posts: 564
- Joined: Sun Mar 03, 2019 10:31 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
5'7" but with the heart of a lion. There was a great feature on him by IL last month regarding his battle with Cystic Fibrosis. Somewhat surprised he's transferring as the article gave the impression that he and Pressler had formed a strong bond. But then again if he's set to graduate and has two years of eligibility remaining, a change of scenery makes a ton of sense whilst pursuing a graduate degree.
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- Posts: 23826
- Joined: Sat Feb 23, 2019 10:53 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Hobart has played against him 4x in the last two years so I’m quite familiar. There was something totally rank and broken at Bryant this year though because they returned everything from their 21 team that gave UVA healthy run from FOGO to attack (fully healthy ORourke in 22) and goalie and they were embarrassed and run off the field 4-5x. Think they were as high as 13 in some preseason polls off of performance, unlike some teams that get slotted high every year. It was evident before Hobart 4x’d them in the semis, they just got healthy against the soft part of the NEC schedule but there was something below the surface so not surprised guys aren’t clamoring to spend an extra year there.
Now I love those cowboys, I love their gold
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
I have a question that's probably going to sound facetious or off-topic, though I really don't mean it to be. I wonder if somebody could give me a quick 101-level overview of the world of bogus one-year "management" degrees?
I mean, I know plenty of people with MBAs, but they all got them in what I think of as the traditional way -- applied several years post-college after significant work experience. There, my sense of their basic intellectual seriousness and focus more or less tracks where the schools they went to show up in the rankings. E.g., my sophomore year roommate was the most self-disciplined guy I've ever met: would talk my ear off about business strategy until 9:30 PM, at which point -- oops, time to sleep, goodnight. He went to Booth.
But when we're talking about lacrosse players moving on from their undergrad school and becoming a degree candidate and eligible athlete at a new school, we're not talking about that, right? I mean, I remember it being a big deal that Connor Buczek actually got into Cornell's MBA program straight out of undergrad -- that was very rare in itself -- and he was balancing that against playing in the MLL, not the much more stringent demands of playing for a college team.
So the typical thing for a grad transfer parachuting into a new school, I guess, is to get a bogus one-year "management" degree. Questions about that:
1. Do all business schools offer such degrees? From idle googling, it seems like Fuqua and Mendoza put them front and center; it's not obvious if Wharton or Darden offer them at all.
2. To the extent such degrees are valuable, does where you got it from really matter?
3. To the extent where you got it from does matter, do the business school rankings you find on USNWR (which I assume are mostly focused on MBAs) accurately capture the prestige hierarchy of bogus one-year "management" degrees? Or are there some places that are more respected for bogus one-year "management" degrees than they are for business education generally? Or vice versa?
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- Posts: 23826
- Joined: Sat Feb 23, 2019 10:53 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
They are pieces of paper. I got an MBA w less than 2yrs full time post Bachelors work experience (picked up a new PT job that was +/- 40-50hrs a week ultimately through most of grad school) and can say first hand that if you don’t have 4-5yrs post undergrad you’re wasting the opportunity and only scratching the potential capacity of an MBA program which is functionally to career transition and teaching one how to be middle management though it’s largely been bastardized, especially finance focused MBA programs in the top 25, by kids who do 2-3yrs building pitchbooks on deals until 3am and generally being hazed by their MD then go back into IBanking/pe as an associate because they couldn’t make the “A to A” directly.Homer wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 12:16 amI have a question that's probably going to sound facetious or off-topic, though I really don't mean it to be. I wonder if somebody could give me a quick 101-level overview of the world of bogus one-year "management" degrees?
I mean, I know plenty of people with MBAs, but they all got them in what I think of as the traditional way -- applied several years post-college after significant work experience. There, my sense of their basic intellectual seriousness and focus more or less tracks where the schools they went to show up in the rankings. E.g., my sophomore year roommate was the most self-disciplined guy I've ever met: would talk my ear off about business strategy until 9:30 PM, at which point -- oops, time to sleep, goodnight. He went to Booth.
But when we're talking about lacrosse players moving on from their undergrad school and becoming a degree candidate and eligible athlete at a new school, we're not talking about that, right? I mean, I remember it being a big deal that Connor Buczek actually got into Cornell's MBA program straight out of undergrad -- that was very rare in itself -- and he was balancing that against playing in the MLL, not the much more stringent demands of playing for a college team.
So the typical thing for a grad transfer parachuting into a new school, I guess, is to get a bogus one-year "management" degree. Questions about that:
1. Do all business schools offer such degrees? From idle googling, it seems like Fuqua and Mendoza put them front and center; it's not obvious if Wharton or Darden offer them at all.
2. To the extent such degrees are valuable, does where you got it from really matter?
3. To the extent where you got it from does matter, do the business school rankings you find on USNWR (which I assume are mostly focused on MBAs) accurately capture the prestige hierarchy of bogus one-year "management" degrees? Or are there some places that are more respected for bogus one-year "management" degrees than they are for business education generally? Or vice versa?
But how could you manage or understand how to manage anything other than drug and alcohol consumption at 24-25? If that?
Now I love those cowboys, I love their gold
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Awesome
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Wow and he's from Jersey, ND over a Rutgers team in final 4, what is he thinking.
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- Posts: 97
- Joined: Tue Oct 02, 2018 6:59 pm
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
The counter to all of that depending on where you did undergrad and the jobs that degree did or didnt unlock for you, there may be value in doing the one year and being able to use the job placement resources/network of ND, UVA, Michigan, Duke etc....Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 6:37 amThey are pieces of paper. I got an MBA w less than 2yrs full time post Bachelors work experience (picked up a new PT job that was +/- 40-50hrs a week ultimately through most of grad school) and can say first hand that if you don’t have 4-5yrs post undergrad you’re wasting the opportunity and only scratching the potential capacity of an MBA program which is functionally to career transition and teaching one how to be middle management though it’s largely been bastardized, especially finance focused MBA programs in the top 25, by kids who do 2-3yrs building pitchbooks on deals until 3am and generally being hazed by their MD then go back into IBanking/pe as an associate because they couldn’t make the “A to A” directly.Homer wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 12:16 amI have a question that's probably going to sound facetious or off-topic, though I really don't mean it to be. I wonder if somebody could give me a quick 101-level overview of the world of bogus one-year "management" degrees?
I mean, I know plenty of people with MBAs, but they all got them in what I think of as the traditional way -- applied several years post-college after significant work experience. There, my sense of their basic intellectual seriousness and focus more or less tracks where the schools they went to show up in the rankings. E.g., my sophomore year roommate was the most self-disciplined guy I've ever met: would talk my ear off about business strategy until 9:30 PM, at which point -- oops, time to sleep, goodnight. He went to Booth.
But when we're talking about lacrosse players moving on from their undergrad school and becoming a degree candidate and eligible athlete at a new school, we're not talking about that, right? I mean, I remember it being a big deal that Connor Buczek actually got into Cornell's MBA program straight out of undergrad -- that was very rare in itself -- and he was balancing that against playing in the MLL, not the much more stringent demands of playing for a college team.
So the typical thing for a grad transfer parachuting into a new school, I guess, is to get a bogus one-year "management" degree. Questions about that:
1. Do all business schools offer such degrees? From idle googling, it seems like Fuqua and Mendoza put them front and center; it's not obvious if Wharton or Darden offer them at all.
2. To the extent such degrees are valuable, does where you got it from really matter?
3. To the extent where you got it from does matter, do the business school rankings you find on USNWR (which I assume are mostly focused on MBAs) accurately capture the prestige hierarchy of bogus one-year "management" degrees? Or are there some places that are more respected for bogus one-year "management" degrees than they are for business education generally? Or vice versa?
But how could you manage or understand how to manage anything other than drug and alcohol consumption at 24-25? If that?
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- Posts: 23826
- Joined: Sat Feb 23, 2019 10:53 am
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
This started w Handley. If you’re coming from UPenn??Young Warrior wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 8:05 amThe counter to all of that depending on where you did undergrad and the jobs that degree did or didnt unlock for you, there may be value in doing the one year and being able to use the job placement resources/network of ND, UVA, Michigan, Duke etc....Farfromgeneva wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 6:37 amThey are pieces of paper. I got an MBA w less than 2yrs full time post Bachelors work experience (picked up a new PT job that was +/- 40-50hrs a week ultimately through most of grad school) and can say first hand that if you don’t have 4-5yrs post undergrad you’re wasting the opportunity and only scratching the potential capacity of an MBA program which is functionally to career transition and teaching one how to be middle management though it’s largely been bastardized, especially finance focused MBA programs in the top 25, by kids who do 2-3yrs building pitchbooks on deals until 3am and generally being hazed by their MD then go back into IBanking/pe as an associate because they couldn’t make the “A to A” directly.Homer wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 12:16 amI have a question that's probably going to sound facetious or off-topic, though I really don't mean it to be. I wonder if somebody could give me a quick 101-level overview of the world of bogus one-year "management" degrees?
I mean, I know plenty of people with MBAs, but they all got them in what I think of as the traditional way -- applied several years post-college after significant work experience. There, my sense of their basic intellectual seriousness and focus more or less tracks where the schools they went to show up in the rankings. E.g., my sophomore year roommate was the most self-disciplined guy I've ever met: would talk my ear off about business strategy until 9:30 PM, at which point -- oops, time to sleep, goodnight. He went to Booth.
But when we're talking about lacrosse players moving on from their undergrad school and becoming a degree candidate and eligible athlete at a new school, we're not talking about that, right? I mean, I remember it being a big deal that Connor Buczek actually got into Cornell's MBA program straight out of undergrad -- that was very rare in itself -- and he was balancing that against playing in the MLL, not the much more stringent demands of playing for a college team.
So the typical thing for a grad transfer parachuting into a new school, I guess, is to get a bogus one-year "management" degree. Questions about that:
1. Do all business schools offer such degrees? From idle googling, it seems like Fuqua and Mendoza put them front and center; it's not obvious if Wharton or Darden offer them at all.
2. To the extent such degrees are valuable, does where you got it from really matter?
3. To the extent where you got it from does matter, do the business school rankings you find on USNWR (which I assume are mostly focused on MBAs) accurately capture the prestige hierarchy of bogus one-year "management" degrees? Or are there some places that are more respected for bogus one-year "management" degrees than they are for business education generally? Or vice versa?
But how could you manage or understand how to manage anything other than drug and alcohol consumption at 24-25? If that?
Sure McConvey gets to tell folks he got a sheepskin form UVA after UVM but a kid going from LIU to St Joes, St Johns to StonyBrook, Sacred Heart to UMass?
Anyone going to Syracuse (I kid because I’m still a CNY guy at heart but it was too easy)
But employers beyond simpleton Junior HR screeners are hip to the content of your time spent and context. Especially LOB managers.
Conversely I deferred my Citi FICC rotational program summer of 01 when they were handing deferrals to compete with Silicon Valley 1.0 for bodies and was in Czseky Krumlov with a backpack when 9/11 hit and I came back and the position like so many others were gone when I came back (like a IVY commitment to the process it’s not like I could sue for the job) and had to audible on the fly when I got back stateside that Nov. if we hit an economic downcycle (like was coming in Q4 2019) before Covid allowed absurd monetary sterilization and stimulus that’s getting unwound now) and jobs are less easy to obtain next summer…
Like everything else it’s all opportunity cost. But now I’m talking an extra year of lacrosse in college vs working rather than one school vs another regarding the value of it. For me, get a technical 1yr where you can at least point to some focus-acctg, MS in finance, international
Studies, marketing. Management is so generic it’s just not valuable for a 22-23yr old (or int he Rutgers kids cases 27yr olds - I kid)
Now I love those cowboys, I love their gold
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Love my uncle, God rest his soul
Taught me good, Lord, taught me all I know
Taught me so well, that I grabbed that gold
I left his dead ass there by the side of the road, yeah
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
I enjoy the talk about relative future value of these degrees coming straight from undergrad.
That being said, it’s probably just awesome to be given another year to do something you love (lacrosse) and get a degree from an elite school while you do it. I would definitely tell my younger self to go enjoy being a college student for another year in the same situation.
That being said, it’s probably just awesome to be given another year to do something you love (lacrosse) and get a degree from an elite school while you do it. I would definitely tell my younger self to go enjoy being a college student for another year in the same situation.
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Being a student is a great gig, though most students don't recognize. A prime example of youth being wasted on the young.Hoya wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 11:10 am I enjoy the talk about relative future value of these degrees coming straight from undergrad.
That being said, it’s probably just awesome to be given another year to do something you love (lacrosse) and get a degree from an elite school while you do it. I would definitely tell my younger self to go enjoy being a college student for another year in the same situation.
My sense has always been the all MBAs are pretty worthless, with the true value of an elite B-school education being the connections and network building with fellow classmates.
Re: Transfer Portal 2023
Yeah, I tend to agree with that. You have the whole rest of your life to work, being a college athlete isn't an opportunity that'll ever come around again.Hoya wrote: ↑Tue May 24, 2022 11:10 am I enjoy the talk about relative future value of these degrees coming straight from undergrad.
That being said, it’s probably just awesome to be given another year to do something you love (lacrosse) and get a degree from an elite school while you do it. I would definitely tell my younger self to go enjoy being a college student for another year in the same situation.
My question was, assuming you've decided that equation is worth it, does it really make much difference where you go to get the degree?