McAdorey did whatever his team needed.
With the Friars’ only true FOGO, Air Force commit Jordan Naso, banged up late in the season, McAdorey stepped up in some of the Friars’ biggest games to share some of the faceoff duties. He was solid at the X at a young age, with Team 91 Crush coach Joe Spallina telling McAdorey to model his game “like a Swiss Army knife” at the time.
And with that in mind, McAdorey took away some of the early momentum Chaminade’s dynamic duo of Will Lynch and Mac Rodriguez gained in the CHSAA Class AAA title game by battling them on faceoffs.
McAdorey opened the scoring 17 seconds into the title tilt. Both of his assists came in the second half. His second goal of the game with 1:02 left in the third quarter gave the Friars their first lead since his 1-0 tally. It was a lead St. Anthony’s would not relinquish.
“I figured, ‘Why not give it a try at the X and scrap it up and see if we can get some wins?’” said McAdorey, who was named the championship game’s MVP. “It worked out in our favor a bit. I was trying to put the team before everything and get that win at the end.”
Wieczorek said McAdorey’s lacrosse IQ is almost unmatched among players he’s coached, but McAdorey’s motor, which reminds of another former great in Peter Trombino, also sets him apart.
“Andrew’s motor never goes off,” Wieczorek said. “In practice, [he’s at] 100 miles per hour every day of the week. You’d have to tap him out to ask him not to go hard that day because he only knows one motion, one speed.”
It’s that entire skillset that Wieczorek believes will suit McAdorey well at Duke.
“I’d be very surprised if he wasn’t an impact kid right away, and he’ll have his chance there because, similar to Brennan, you can’t really build your defenses around stopping one or two kids,” he said. “You have to respect the ball and especially on the team he has, there’s a lot of weapons, and I think he’s going to benefit off that.”
McAdorey is a student of the game and understands the landscape, which is why he’s humbled to be named the Northeast and National Player of the Year.
“It’s such an honor,” McAdorey said. “There’s so much talent, this is kind of the lacrosse hotbed. There’s so many great players in the Northeast, and to get this award really means a lot.”
But McAdorey is more excited to see St. Anthony’s finish the season atop the Nike / USA Lacrosse National Top 25.
“That is huge,” he said. “That’s the main goal.”
A team guy through and through.