2024 Post Mortem
Posted: Mon May 06, 2024 2:13 pm
Delaware lacrosse ended its season on a pretty depressing note with a no-show game against Towson on Saturday. I have read several reviews about the game and most people point to the OT game against Fairfield as the reason the “worn-down” Hens got run off the field by the Tigers in the CAA finale. That seems like a pretty lazy excuse for the total domination that Towson showed on their home turf Saturday.
Fatigue didn’t lead to 25 turnovers, many of which were mistakes in substitutions through the box during clears. It was almost surreal that a team that was so disciplined (leading D1 lacrosse in the least turnovers per game) became so discombobulated with seemingly no answers. While some of that confusion was caused by the intense defensive pressure that Towson applied in the middle of the field, much more of it was self-inflicted.
The troubles started in earnest on Thursday night. If you watched the Hens defense in the Fairfield game, there is no way that you could come away feeling a single shred of confidence heading into the weekend. The Hens played Fairfield without LSM Patrick Gillin, who apparently got hurt at the end of the final regular season game against Towson. Without LSMs Gillin and Joe Speers (who suffered a season-ending injury three weeks earlier) it looked as if the Hens defense was playing together for the first time. Fairfield only needed to make two quick passes on offense to find a wide open shot due to awful/no slides. The Hens were lucky to survive the semi-final game and got bailed out by the relentlessness of Mike Robinson and excellence of Kevin Ellington in net. The desperate Hens turned to a zone midway through the Towson finale because of this lack of continuity on defense. The zone only exacerbated what was a futile effort to stop the sharpshooting Tigers.
Anyway, it was a good season that was unfortunately marred by key injuries to critical players. Delaware played the full year without captain Drew Lenkaitis and Riar Schell and they lost Logan Premtaj and Jason Kolar after the fourth game of the year. But the biggest loss was when All-CAA LSM Speers was injured at the end of the Stony Brook game. The defense was never the same without him over the last four games. Gillin, who was lost for the Fairfield semi, made a valiant effort to return against Towson, but was essentially playing on one leg.
What the Hens can look forward to in 2024-25
The Hens are losing a TON this year. Starting on offense the Hens lose two of the all-time greats at attack with JP Ward (110G 112A) and Mike Robinson (185G 58A) moving on. At midfield, the Acchione twins will be missed as well, leaving just one Canadian player on the roster. Defensively, Delaware loses Tate Wasson at close defense, Joe Speers at LSM and a pair of all-time great SSDMs Reed Kurtz and Aiden Fritz. They also lose SSDM John Scheivert who did a great job on the second rope unit. I would imagine that coach DeLuca will try to convince Seniors Drew Lenkaitis, Matt Montgomery and Kevin Ellington to come back for another year because they each have eligibility left. Ellington probably has options to transfer if he would like after finishing atop D1 goalies in save percentage. Hope he stays. Lenkaitis, after missing two straight seasons with injuries, might want to just get on with his life.
So, who do the Hens return next year? Delaware returns OJ Morris at FOGO following a surprisingly strong year when he won 57% of his faceoffs. Delaware also returns a promising young midfield unit with Brendan Powers, Tyler Owings, Hank D’Ambrogi and Jason Kolar. They will need to see what they can get from Ryder Villani, Brooks Bond, Owen McGee, Ethan Krauss and incoming freshmen Carson “Maverick” Smith and Bennett Parmer to augment this returning unit.
At attack the Hens return, all-CAA freshman team John McCurry (27G 6A). Coach DeLuca will need to find a playmaking QB and lefty sniper to replace Ward and Robinson. Sounds easy. The Hens have a great lefty sniper on the roster in sophomore Finn Morgan (11G 4A -42% shooting). They also have QB options in returning juniors Nick Fish, Riar Schell or incoming freshman from St. Augustine Prep (Charlie Kitchen’s high school), lefty Noah Plenn. DeLuca might also turn to the transfer portal to pick up an experienced attackman.
On defense, as mentioned earlier, DeLuca could bring back Kevin Ellington in goal and close defenseman Matt Montgomery (15GBs, 3CTs), who both played in just one game before this year, if they are interested in returning. That would be a great start. They also bring back all-CAA freshman Louie Atkinson at close defense. Atkinson had a terrific rookie season starting all 14 games and accumulated 12 GBs and 10 CTs. Gillin, who has improved dramatically this year, will be returning for his junior year and will be instrumental at LSM (16GBs and 10CTs). DeLuca had some young players on the second rope unit this year with freshman Ryder Buell (10GBs 5CTs) logging major minutes along with sophomores Troon Houlton (11GBs, 3CTs) and Rowen Marsell (6GBs, 3CTs). Hens will probably look to Nick Cowen for increased minutes after suffering a bunch of injuries his first three years in Newark. Delaware will also be welcoming in two very athletic 4-star defensemen from Baltimore – Lange Gaspar 6’2” 195lbs (Calvert Hall) and Liam Powell 6’1” 190lbs from Loyola Blakefield.
Prediction for 2025
The Hens are losing a lot of great players who just completed the most successful sustained period of lacrosse for the program. This ’24 graduating class finished 45-19 over that four year stretch with 3 regular season CAA titles, 2 CAA Championships and one NCAA quarterfinal appearance. I would imagine that ’24 will be a rebuilding year for this young squad, but I would not count them out for a CAA Championship in their final year in conference. Lots to look forward to. I’ll be back in the fall to give thoughts on that season with all of the newcomers on campus.
One question for Coach DeLuca - WHERE ARE THE CANADIAN RECRUITS? The most successful periods of Hen lacrosse were led by Canadian recruits. Late 90's John Grant Jr., late 00's Curtis Dickson and Jordan Hall 2010-2011 Curtis Dickson and Nick Diachenko, 2019-Present Tye Kurtz, Owen Grant, Mike Robinson, Reed Kurtz, Matt Acchione, Cam Acchione. Has the Canadian pipeline dried up for the Hens?
Fatigue didn’t lead to 25 turnovers, many of which were mistakes in substitutions through the box during clears. It was almost surreal that a team that was so disciplined (leading D1 lacrosse in the least turnovers per game) became so discombobulated with seemingly no answers. While some of that confusion was caused by the intense defensive pressure that Towson applied in the middle of the field, much more of it was self-inflicted.
The troubles started in earnest on Thursday night. If you watched the Hens defense in the Fairfield game, there is no way that you could come away feeling a single shred of confidence heading into the weekend. The Hens played Fairfield without LSM Patrick Gillin, who apparently got hurt at the end of the final regular season game against Towson. Without LSMs Gillin and Joe Speers (who suffered a season-ending injury three weeks earlier) it looked as if the Hens defense was playing together for the first time. Fairfield only needed to make two quick passes on offense to find a wide open shot due to awful/no slides. The Hens were lucky to survive the semi-final game and got bailed out by the relentlessness of Mike Robinson and excellence of Kevin Ellington in net. The desperate Hens turned to a zone midway through the Towson finale because of this lack of continuity on defense. The zone only exacerbated what was a futile effort to stop the sharpshooting Tigers.
Anyway, it was a good season that was unfortunately marred by key injuries to critical players. Delaware played the full year without captain Drew Lenkaitis and Riar Schell and they lost Logan Premtaj and Jason Kolar after the fourth game of the year. But the biggest loss was when All-CAA LSM Speers was injured at the end of the Stony Brook game. The defense was never the same without him over the last four games. Gillin, who was lost for the Fairfield semi, made a valiant effort to return against Towson, but was essentially playing on one leg.
What the Hens can look forward to in 2024-25
The Hens are losing a TON this year. Starting on offense the Hens lose two of the all-time greats at attack with JP Ward (110G 112A) and Mike Robinson (185G 58A) moving on. At midfield, the Acchione twins will be missed as well, leaving just one Canadian player on the roster. Defensively, Delaware loses Tate Wasson at close defense, Joe Speers at LSM and a pair of all-time great SSDMs Reed Kurtz and Aiden Fritz. They also lose SSDM John Scheivert who did a great job on the second rope unit. I would imagine that coach DeLuca will try to convince Seniors Drew Lenkaitis, Matt Montgomery and Kevin Ellington to come back for another year because they each have eligibility left. Ellington probably has options to transfer if he would like after finishing atop D1 goalies in save percentage. Hope he stays. Lenkaitis, after missing two straight seasons with injuries, might want to just get on with his life.
So, who do the Hens return next year? Delaware returns OJ Morris at FOGO following a surprisingly strong year when he won 57% of his faceoffs. Delaware also returns a promising young midfield unit with Brendan Powers, Tyler Owings, Hank D’Ambrogi and Jason Kolar. They will need to see what they can get from Ryder Villani, Brooks Bond, Owen McGee, Ethan Krauss and incoming freshmen Carson “Maverick” Smith and Bennett Parmer to augment this returning unit.
At attack the Hens return, all-CAA freshman team John McCurry (27G 6A). Coach DeLuca will need to find a playmaking QB and lefty sniper to replace Ward and Robinson. Sounds easy. The Hens have a great lefty sniper on the roster in sophomore Finn Morgan (11G 4A -42% shooting). They also have QB options in returning juniors Nick Fish, Riar Schell or incoming freshman from St. Augustine Prep (Charlie Kitchen’s high school), lefty Noah Plenn. DeLuca might also turn to the transfer portal to pick up an experienced attackman.
On defense, as mentioned earlier, DeLuca could bring back Kevin Ellington in goal and close defenseman Matt Montgomery (15GBs, 3CTs), who both played in just one game before this year, if they are interested in returning. That would be a great start. They also bring back all-CAA freshman Louie Atkinson at close defense. Atkinson had a terrific rookie season starting all 14 games and accumulated 12 GBs and 10 CTs. Gillin, who has improved dramatically this year, will be returning for his junior year and will be instrumental at LSM (16GBs and 10CTs). DeLuca had some young players on the second rope unit this year with freshman Ryder Buell (10GBs 5CTs) logging major minutes along with sophomores Troon Houlton (11GBs, 3CTs) and Rowen Marsell (6GBs, 3CTs). Hens will probably look to Nick Cowen for increased minutes after suffering a bunch of injuries his first three years in Newark. Delaware will also be welcoming in two very athletic 4-star defensemen from Baltimore – Lange Gaspar 6’2” 195lbs (Calvert Hall) and Liam Powell 6’1” 190lbs from Loyola Blakefield.
Prediction for 2025
The Hens are losing a lot of great players who just completed the most successful sustained period of lacrosse for the program. This ’24 graduating class finished 45-19 over that four year stretch with 3 regular season CAA titles, 2 CAA Championships and one NCAA quarterfinal appearance. I would imagine that ’24 will be a rebuilding year for this young squad, but I would not count them out for a CAA Championship in their final year in conference. Lots to look forward to. I’ll be back in the fall to give thoughts on that season with all of the newcomers on campus.
One question for Coach DeLuca - WHERE ARE THE CANADIAN RECRUITS? The most successful periods of Hen lacrosse were led by Canadian recruits. Late 90's John Grant Jr., late 00's Curtis Dickson and Jordan Hall 2010-2011 Curtis Dickson and Nick Diachenko, 2019-Present Tye Kurtz, Owen Grant, Mike Robinson, Reed Kurtz, Matt Acchione, Cam Acchione. Has the Canadian pipeline dried up for the Hens?