JT O’Neil
JT O’Neil
About JT
Expert Analysis
Eric Bretz | Prep Lacrosse Scout
Having watched O’Neil in the spring with New Canaan, I had an idea of his game, but he put on a show in his matchup against the Annapolis Hawks. I had him going 8/13 from the faceoff X and he looked virtually unstoppable, winning faceoffs in any direction he chose. He’s a strong guy with quick hands and a low center of gravity and he’s hard to stop with a full head of steam towards the net. The Army commit is not afraid to push the ball in transition after a clean face-off win. In today’s game, to have a FOGO who is able and confident enough to handle the ball adds another playmaker on the field that the defense needs to account for. While he didn’t score in this game, he helped Eclipse come out on top with an overtime win in muddy and rainy conditions.
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Read EvaluationEric Bretz | Prep Lacrosse Scout
O’Neil has had a dominant junior season for the Rams, crushing opponents with a face-off win percentage right around 85 percent. He is a strong, athletic, and scrappy player with the ability to win the draw forward or through the legs. The Army commit can also shoot the rock. He is confident with the ball in his stick and makes smart plays, whether that’s shooting the ball or passing it off.
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Read EvaluationDan Arestia | Prep Lacrosse Scout
I’ve always considered the faceoff specialist an honorary member of the defensive unit. At the end of the day, the critical part of his job is making sure the other team isn’t playing offense as much as they want to. What could be more defensive than that? O’Neil is the latest in what is becoming a very strong tradition of dominance at the face-off spot for the Rams. Currently a junior, he has had an excellent year at the X. Against Wilton, I unofficially had him not losing a faceoff all day. O’Neil has a current comp to a college player like Machado Rodriguez at Yale. Rodriguez plays at 100 mph at all times. It’s maximum velocity. O’Neil, on clean wins, plays the same way. He wants to push up the field, he wants to attack the goal. He looks for chances to push tempo and force defenders into decisions about sliding to him to stop the shot. At New Canaan, a clean win forward for O’Neil means the point of the break has to decide between staying home, or sliding to O’Neil and leaving Michigan-bound sharpshooter
Doster Crowell
Doster
Crowell
5'10" | 170 lbs | A
New Canaan | 2024
CT
on the point. Not an enviable position. O’Neil’s face-off unit as a trio will often include one of the above-mentioned poles or BU-bound
Brayden Robie
Brayden
Robie
5'10" | 165 lbs | D | Left Hand
New Canaan | 2025
CT
, plus two-way midfielder
Thomas Garcia
Thomas
Garcia
5'11" | 185 lbs | M | Right Hand
New Canaan | 2024
CT
.
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