High Point University Lacrosse Season Preview 2026
- Tyler
- 5 days ago
- 5 min read

The 2026 season arguably represents the most important inflection point in the history of High Point men’s lacrosse since the program’s national breakthrough a decade ago.
This is not a rebuilding year. And it’s no longer a transition year.
But is it THE YEAR?
This is Year Two of John Crawley, and for the first time since joining the Atlantic 10, High Point enters a season with continuity, elite specialists, and a clearly defined competitive identity.
What comes next will determine whether HPU remains a perennial contender that rarely breaks through — or if the Panthers return to their championship and nationally ranked ways.
🧱 Setting the Scene: Year One
John Crawley inherited one of the most abrupt roster cliffs in the country.
Between the 2024 and 2025 seasons, High Point lost:
Brayden Mayea (program’s all-time leading goal scorer)
Jack VanOverbeke (elite distributor and athlete)
Nick Rizzo and Jack Sawyer (veteran reliability)
Longtime head coach Jon Torpey (Brown)
An entire system and staff infrastructure
Mayea and VanOverbeke weren’t just stars — they were PLL-caliber players, with both reaching the professional ranks. The cabinet wasn’t just lighter.
It was bare.
So Crawley’s first year wasn’t about domination.
It was about stabilization, with an eye toward the future.
📊 The 2025 Result: Better That it First Looked
On paper
7–9 overall
3–2 in A-10 play
A-10 Regular Season Runner-Up
A-10 Championship Game appearance
Under the surface
Finished 2nd in the league with a roster still reeling from historic attrition
Returned to the championship game for the second time since joining the A-10
Put eight players on postseason award lists
Re-established national credibility
Statistically, HPU ranked middle-to-lower in most offensive categories within the six-team A-10:
5th in goals per game
5th in shots per game
5th in shooting percentage
5th in man-up efficiency
But the two places where High Point quietly separated themselves?
Faceoffs (2nd in conference)
Goaltending (1st in saves per game)
Those two facts explain why 2026 projects very different.
🔁 The Core Returns
High Point brings back:
77.7% of points
73.3% of goals
86.0% of assists
99.5% of goalie minutes
100% of faceoff reps
80.3% of ground balls
A huge amount of attrition meant extensive playing time for young players — and now those same players return with another year in the system and the weight room.
The Backbone
FOGO: Luca Accardo
Goalie: Zack Overend
If you’re building a mid-major contender in modern lacrosse, that is the exact order you want.
HPU will be in most games against almost all competition because they have elite talent at the X and between the pipes.
💫 Specialists Being Special
Luca Accardo — The Possession Advantage
Accardo isn’t just good. He’s transformative.
Program records in faceoff wins and ground balls
Preseason All-American recognition
Compared by Crawley to Mike Sisselberger (Lehigh legend, PLL All-Star)
In 2026, High Point starts most games with a mathematical edge.
That changes how you coach, how you defend, and how patient you can be offensively.
Zack Overend — The “Goalie U” Line Continues
HPU has quietly become Goalie U:
Austin Geisler → Tim Troutner → Zack Overend
Overend’s 2025 season was historic:
195 saves (A-10 leader)
.544 save percentage
23 saves vs Saint Joseph’s (program record)
A-10 Defensive Player of the Week
All-Championship Team
He faced 617 shots last season — and survived it.
In 2026, the goal is simple: Don’t ask him to face that many again.
🏀 The Offense: From Hero Ball to Basketball?
Under Torpey, High Point featured some absolute studs:
Dan Lomas. Asher Nolting. Kevin Rogers. Brayden Mayea. Jack VanOverbeke.
Star power was never an issue.
But John Crawley’s offense is not about isolation heroes. It’s about:
Motion
Spacing
Second and third dodges
Decision-making over raw athleticism
If that sounds like basketball it’s because that’s how Crawley wants it.
Key Returners
Justin Wixted: The point guard. Electric with the ball, now more mature as a decision-maker.
Owen Bunten: Led the team in goals; poised for a shooting efficiency jump.
Carson Robins: Healthy again after an injury-affected start last year.
Ryan Hynes / Collin Rovere / Ian Cann: The engine room. Veteran midfield IQ.
This group doesn’t need a 50-goal scorer.
They need four guys at 20+, and the system supports it.
🛡️ The Defense: Younger, Longer, More Deliberate
While offense was never a concern under Torpey, the defense often was. Crawley has spent 18 months professionalizing the defensive identity.
Leaders & Emerging Pieces
Captain Luke Dermon: Leader, example-setter
James Westbrooks: Competitive, physical, assignment-ready
Caio Stephens: LSM with range and disruption ability
Cole Motter: Glue guy. Prepared. Dependable
Add in the coaching presence of Jack Posey (PLL) and the mission is clear:
Fewer track meets. More possession leverage.
🧬 The Newcomers: Identity Over Flash
This roster includes:
19 new players
2 transfers
17 freshmen
Names to Watch
Charlie Killen (MF): Immediate contributor profile
David Manzo (LSM): Toolsy, fits Crawley’s defensive mold
Will Swartz: Charlotte product, ready for an expanded role
This class is half Torpey but re-recruited by Crawley.
It may lack headline star power, but it’s built on fit, and that should pay dividends.
🏆 The A10: A Gauntlet
With Delaware joining the conference, the A-10 is no longer just difficult.
It’s brutal.
Tier Breakdown
The Favorites: Richmond, Delaware
Contender: High Point
Wildcard: Saint Joseph’s
Grinders: UMass, Hobart
High Point’s edge? Specialists and retention.
🕷️ Arachnophobia
Richmond isn’t just a rival. They’ve been a reckoning for the Panthers.
4–16 all-time
Lost the last 8
Seven season-ending losses
4 championship games
3 semifinals
They are disciplined. Ruthless. Structurally sound.
Richmond looks even better this year — but:
They lost their starting goalie
They lost their elite FOGO
HPU returns both of theirs
Possessions alone won’t win it.
What Must Change
Minimize turnovers
Force unsettled clears
Long possessions — ice the game
Physical crease defense vs Littlejohn
Ball denial on Aidan O’Neil
April 24th at Vert Stadium is not just a game. It’s a referendum.
🗓️ The Schedule: No Hiding In the NonCon
⚓️ at Navy (season opener)
🐏 at UNC
🌰 at Ohio State
🐬 Jacksonville (neutral site vs longtime rival)
⚔️ vs Virginia
🐻 at Cornell (reigning national champs)
Crawley scheduled this on purpose.
If this team survives February and March, it will be hardened for April.
🔮 The Verdict
High Point in 2026 is not chasing a past version of itself.
This team is:
Deeper
Smarter
Better positioned structurally
Built to win close games
Built to survive poor shooting nights
Built to beat anyone with patience and discipline
The specialists give them a chance in every game.
The system gives them sustainability.
The question is execution — especially against Richmond.
Ceiling: A-10 Champion, NCAA berth
Floor: Conference semifinalist
Reality: The most complete HPU roster since 2019, but maybe still a year out
The program has crossed the bridge from Torpey. Now it just needs to climb with Crawley.


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