ALL IAC GP (13-5, 4-1): IAC Champions Bullis (15-3, 5-0): IAC Regular Season Champions 1. Midfield (Penn) #28, Sr. 2. SSDM (Hampton) #0, Jr. 3. SSDM (Navy) #17 * POY, Sr. 4. Defense #88, Sr. 5. Goalie (Dickinson) #6, Sr. 6. Fogo #25, Sr. Landon (10-6, 3-2): 1. Attack (GU) #2, Jr. 2. Midfield (Vermont) #4, Sr. 3. Midfield (Holy Cross) #8, Jr. 4. Defense (Bowdoin) #27, Sr. 5. Defense (Hopkins) #29, Sr. 6. Defense (Dartmouth) #9, Jr. St. Albans (9-9, 2-3): 1. Attack (Bowdoin) #13, Sr. 2. Defense (Brown) #51, Jr. 3. Goalie #19, Jr. 4. Fogo #14, Jr. EHS (11-7, 1-4): SSSAS (4-9, 0-5): 1. Attack, #6, Jr. |
I thought we were talking about the strengths of SSDMs (preventing offense) in which Bullis' #0 is one of the best. |
| Really did a great job vs STA. |
If they could handle a stick, they’d stay on. The invention of the position hurts the game. |
Bad take. Did you watch Bullis play this year? Or Prep or Landon for that matter? |
| Many times. The d mids at Landon were terrible and could barely run and cradle. The GP kid is a good lax player but is literally the 7/8th best short stick on the team. Seeing how short benched Bullis was, you'd think the 2 d mids would stay on more often but they didn't. Why, bc they can't pass or shoot. |
| SJC is another example. Is anyone really saying 3 of the 4 d mids should have played as much as they did. |
Bullis has a small roster, it's a much smaller school than GP - they have a very short bench, so they need to conserve players. Wade is going to be an impact player for Navy in the years ahead. There is a reason why he was voted as the IAC POY of the year. Did you watch the Princeton - Penn State game yesterday? Wade's older brother was the best player on the field yesterday. And instead of attacking players on an anonymous message board, why don't you state the name of the GP middie you hyping up. |
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Did you watch the Princeton - Penn State game yesterday? Wade's older brother was the best player on the field yesterday. WADE'S COUSIN - NOT BROTHER |
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Of all the side quests this thread could pursue, we've decided that attacking the SSDM position is the one.
Multiple things can be true, especially in high school: - good SSDMs are extraordinarily valuable - some SSDMs become so because of bad stickwork or offensive ability Another thing worth noting that gets lost from summer lax dad logic is that high school games are significantly longer than club games, with players logging way more mileage and minutes. Playing two ways for huge portions of these games isn't sustainable for entire seasons without degrading performance and increasing fatigue and injury risk. Additionally, specialization increases practice time for kids on that side of the ball - more time for offensive and defensive players to get reps on what they'll do more of in games. Both the realities of fatigue/game duration and the value of specialized practice push for the SSDM position. Add in the value of good SSDMs and the position is here to stay. |
GP faithful must still be pissed off as he gave prep the middle finger as Wade was a Mater Dei graduate and chose Bullis over the Hoyas |
Making the point. If the 2 mids were so great, why weren't they at least a small part of the offense to give some rest. Maybe then Bellistri did a very poor job of coaching. The offense was gassed at the end of the season. You're not supposed to name names on the board until they graduate. All 3 attack and the first 5 mids had better skill and size then the superstar. GP wins the title though, so coaching isn't questioned. |
| Since the introduction of d mids as a thing after 2010 scoring in the NCAA has actually gone down. Since the inception of the shot clock in 2019, scoring still hasn't gone up. The over coaching of offense to defense specialty lines actually reduces offense because of the amount of time it takes to set up as the clock is winding down. |
ALL IAC GP (13-5, 4-1): IAC Champions Bullis (15-3, 5-0): IAC Regular Season Champions 1. Midfield (Penn) #28, Sr. 2. SSDM (Hampton) #0, Jr. 3. SSDM (Navy) #17 * POY, Sr. 4. Defense #88, Sr. 5. Goalie (Dickinson) #6, Sr. 6. Fogo #25, Sr. Landon (10-6, 3-2): 1. Attack (GU) #2, Jr. 2. Midfield (Vermont) #4, Sr. 3. Midfield (Holy Cross) #8, Jr. 4. Defense (Bowdoin) #27, Sr. 5. Defense (Hopkins) #29, Sr. 6. Defense (Dartmouth) #9, Jr. St. Albans (9-9, 2-3): 1. Attack (Bowdoin) #13, Sr. 2. Defense (Brown) #51, Jr. 3. Goalie #19, Jr. 4. Fogo #14, Jr. EHS (11-7, 1-4): 1. Midfield (Providence) #11, Sr. 2. Midfield (Dickenson) #10, Sr. 3. Attack (Utah) #7, Sr. SSSAS (4-9, 0-5): 1. Attack, #6, Jr. |
Bellistri is a great coach and will be missed. #19 is cousin Are you saying the 3 attack and 5 mids from GP are better than the 3 attack and 5 mids from Bullis? |