2021 LOYOLA LACROSSE TABLE OF CONTENTS
Women’s Lacrosse Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Men’s Lacrosse Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Rev. Brian Linnane, S.J. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Loyola Mission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Donna M. Woodruff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Women’s Coaching & Support Staff . . . . . . . . . . 26 Men’s Coaching & Support Staff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Women’s Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Men’s Roster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
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2021 WOMEN’S LACROSSE SCHEDULE DAY
D AT E
O P PONENT
L OCAT ION
TIME
Sat.
2/20
Syracuse
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
12:00 PM
Wed.
2/24
Towson
A
Towson, MD
5:00 PM
Sun.
2/28
Florida
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
1:00 PM
Wed.
3/3
Villanova
A
Philadelphia, PA
TBA
Sat.
3/6
* American
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
12:00 PM
Wed.
3/10
Georgetown
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
7:00 PM
Sat.
3/13
* Navy
A
Annapolis, MD
12:00 PM
Sat.
3/20
* Bucknell
A
Lewisburg, PA
4:00 PM
Sat.
4/3
* Lehigh
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
1:00 PM
Sat.
4/10
* American
A
Washington, DC
12:00 PM
Sat.
4/17
* Bucknell
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
6:00 PM
Sat.
4/24
* Navy
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
1:00 PM
Saturday
5/1
* Make Up Date
Thursday 5/6
# Patriot League Semis
TBA
Saturday
# Patriot League Finals
TBA
5/8
Fri/Sat
5/14 - 5/15
! NCAA First Round
TBA
Fri/Sat
5/21 - 5/22
! NCAA Quarterfinals
TBA
Fri/Sun
5/28, 5/30
! NCAA Final Four
TBA
BOLD indicates home game Schedule subject to change * Patriot League game; # – Patriot League Championships; ! – NCAA Tournament
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2021 MEN’S LACROSSE SCHEDULE DAY
D AT E
O P P ONENT
L OCAT ION
TIME
Sat.
2/13
Richmond
A
Richmond, VA
W, 8-7 OT
Sat.
2/20
Virginia
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
5:00 pm
Sat.
2/27
Utah
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
11:30 am
Sat.
3/6
* Lehigh
A
Bethlehem, PA
TBA
Sat.
3/13
* Lafayette
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
2:00 pm
Sat.
3/20
* Bucknell
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
2:00 pm
Sat.
3/27
+ Towson
A
Towson, MD
TBA
Sat.
4/3
* Navy
A
Annapolis
TBA
Sat.
4/10
* Army
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
1:00 pm
Sat.
4/17
* Navy
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
1:00 pm
Sat.
4/24
* Lafayette
A
Easton, PA
2:00 pm
Sat.
5/1
+ Georgetown
H
Ridley Athletic Complex
6:00 pm
Fri.
5/7
# Patriot League Semis
TBA
Sun.
5/9
# Patriot League Finals
TBA
Sat/Sun 5/15 - 5/16
! NCAA First Round
TBA
Sat/Sun 5/22 - 5/23
! NCAA Quarterfinals
TBA
Sat/Mon 5/29, 5/31
! NCAA Final Four
TBA
BOLD indicates home game Schedule subject to change + Possible Make Up Date for Patriot League Game – game will be rescheduled or cancelled * Patriot League game; # – Patriot League Championships; ! – NCAA Tournament
LOYOL AGREYHOUNDS.COM
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REV. BRIAN LINNANE, S. J. LOYOLA UNIVERSITY ’ S 24 TH PRESIDENT The Rev. Brian F. Linnane, S.J., president of Loyola University Maryland, brings a wealth of experience as an educator deeply immersed in the Jesuit traditions of academic excellence and the promotion of faith and justice. A native of Massachusetts, he formerly served at a sister Jesuit institution, the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts, as assistant dean and associate professor of Religious Studies. Father Linnane entered the Society of Jesus in 1977 and was ordained to the Roman Catholic priesthood on June 14, 1986. He earned an A.B. degree, magna cum laude, from Boston College in 1977 and an M.A. from Georgetown University’s department of government in 1981 before under-taking divinity studies at the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley, where he received a master’s degree in 1986 and a Licentiate in Sacred Theology in 1988. He earned master’s degrees from the Yale department of Religious Studies in 1990 and 1991, and a Ph.D. in religious studies concentrating in religious ethics in 1994.
Father Linnane joined the Religious Studies department at Holy Cross in 1994. His scholarly publications are extensive, covering the disciplines of fundamental moral theology, health care ethics, and virtue ethics. He served as assistant dean at Holy Cross from 2003 to 2005 and was named a Loyola University Maryland Trustee in 2000. He currently serves as a member of the boards for Marquette University, University of Detroit Mercy, Loyola Blakefield, and the Greater Baltimore Committee. He is also chair of the Board of Directors of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities. In July 2005, Father Linnane became the 24th President of Loyola University Maryland. During his presidency, Fr. Linnane has overseen the completion of Loyola’s $100 million Bright Minds, Bold Hearts campaign, the opening of the Ridley Athletic Complex, the designation change to Loyola University Maryland, and the transition to the Patriot League. Under his leadership, Loyola has experienced increased diversity, equity, and inclusion among the campus community. Fr. Linnane also inspired the vision for Messina, Loyola's distinctive interdisciplinary living and learning program for first-year students.
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THE LOYOLA MISSION Loyola University Maryland is a Jesuit, Catholic university committed to the educational and spiritual traditions of the Society of Jesus and the development of the whole person. Accordingly, the University inspires students to learn, lead, and serve in a diverse and changing world.
comprised of the School of Education, the Sellinger School of Business and Management, and Loyola College—the University’s college of arts and sciences. Loyola also operates Clinical Centers in Baltimore and has two graduate centers in Timonium, Md., and Columbia, Md.
At Loyola, this means that the curriculum is rigorous and faculty expectations are high. With majors and minors in 38 academic fields, Loyola offers an undergraduate program grounded in the liberal arts, focused primarily on developing undergraduate students as well-rounded scholars and leaders who are distinctly prepared to succeed in every aspect of their lives.
In addition to academic coursework, Loyola’s Jesuit mission is carried out through a variety of programs and events sponsored by various Uni-versity departments, including Campus Ministry and the Center for Community Service and Justice.
Our students come from diverse geographic, cultural, and ethnic backgrounds, which adds to the rich and varied experiences of our community. In addition, Loyola offers a variety of study abroad programs, exchanges, and affiliations in countries such as Spain, New Zealand, Thailand, Ghana, and Australia. Loyola also has a strong community service program, Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program, and athletic program. Graduate degrees at the master’s and doctoral levels are also available in a wide range of programs and areas of study. The University is
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When Jesuit priests founded Loyola in 1852, they looked to the very heart of their order for inspiration in choosing a name. They found their inspiration in St. Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus, and that’s how Loyola became the first institution of higher education in the United States to bear his name. To this day, we remain committed to the ideals embodied by the Society of Jesus throughout its rich history. Those Jesuit ideals include an emphasis on academic excellence, the importance of the liberal arts, and cura personalis — the education of the whole person. We strive to live up to the ideals set by St. Ignatius, and know they are integral to what Loyola has become.
LOYOL AGREYHOUNDS.COM
History
Founded in 1852, Loyola University Maryland is the ninth oldest American Jesuit institution of higher learning.
Rankings
Loyola University Maryland is No. 4 among the best universities in the North region in the U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges” guide for 2019.
Campus
Loyola University Maryland maintains a traditional collegiate campus in northern Baltimore City, which primarily houses Loyola’s undergraduate programs, campuses in Timonium and Columbia that focus on graduate programs, and the Loyola Clinical Centers with locations at Belvedere Square and in Columbia, Md.
Students
5,473 undergraduate and graduate students from 40 states and 43 countries.
Class Size
Student/Faculty ratio: 12:1
Programs
More than 35 undergraduate programs; nine graduate programs through its three schools: Loyola College (Arts and Sciences), the Sellinger School of Business and Management, and the School of Education. Loyola features a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the nation’s oldest academic honor society.
Experiential Learning
Students at Loyola University Maryland know that the classroom can only take them so far when it comes to preparing for the workplace and the world. Through service learning, internships, work study and cooperative education, Greyhounds from all majors find ways to apply their studies in professional settings before they graduate. More than 60% study abroad.
Athletics
18 varsity sports; competes in the Patriot League
Financial Aid 83% of undergraduate students received Loyola-funded grants and scholarships. Graduate Success
Within six to nine months of graduation, 95% of our graduates are employed or in graduate school, and salaries of our alumni trend over 30% higher than predicted by mid-career. More important, both alumni and employers have singled out the distinctive Jesuit aspects of Loyola graduates as primary engines of their enduring success, both professionally and personally.
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DONNA M. WOODRUFF
ASSISTANT VICE PRESIDENT & DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Donna (Mulhern) Woodruff, an administrator with more than 25 years of experience in college athletics, was named assistant vice president and director of athletics at Loyola University Maryland in an event held May 23, 2017, at Ridley Athletic Complex. Woodruff came to Loyola after spending 13 years at Stony Brook University where she served as the Deputy Director of Athletics since July 2014. In her first two years at Loyola, the Greyhounds won six Patriot League regular-season and two conference tournament titles; the men's and women's lacrosse teams advanced to the NCAA Championships, winning games in both years in the tournament. She celebrated with the men's lacrosse team as Pat Spencer '19 was named the winner of the 2019 Tewaaraton Award and USILA Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award as the nation's top men's lacrosse player, the first such award for a Loyola student-athlete. Woodruff was named to the NCAA Men's Lacrosse Committee in 2019 and is serving a threeyear term with the group that selects the championships field and determines policy for the national organization at the sport level. She also is the Patriot League Athletic Director's liaison to the men's basketball coaches committee. In 2018, Loyola opened the Air Dome at Ridley Athletic Complex's Lugano Field, an indoor practice venue for Greyhounds lacrosse teams, as well as a training facility for other Loyola programs. The Greyhounds signed a multi-year agreement in 2018 with Van Wagner Sports and Entertainment under which VWSE will serve as the athletic department’s exclusive multimedia rights partner and sales agent for its corporate sponsorship program. The Greyhounds have unveiled several new internal and external initiatives during Woodruff's tenure on the Evergreen campus. In the summer of 2019, Loyola rolled out a branded charter bus that will carry Greyhounds teams through the region to competitions, increasing student-athlete and coach
support of other teams through the “One Hound Family” slogan, as well as increasing the Greyhounds’ involvement with University programs as she was the host of the Sister Cleophas Lecture with Olympic Champion Gabrielle Douglas. She has also hired three excellent head coaches through the start of 2019-20 season: Tavaras Hardy (men’s basketball), Joe Mallia (women’s soccer) and Megan Patrick (men’s and women’s rowing). At Stony Brook, Woodruff was the highestranking member of the Director of Athletic’s Senior Executive Team with oversight of 115 department staff members and a budget of $30 million. She joined the school on Long Island in May 2004 as an associate athletic director and senior woman administrator before garnering a change in title to senior associate director of athletics after just one year. Woodruff oversaw the Seawolves’ capital planning, financial operations, human resources, facilities and events, student-athlete development and compliance, among other areas of responsibility. She had direct supervision of Stony Brook’s men’s and women’s basketball, women’s lacrosse and volleyball programs, after having previously worked with several other teams. The 1990 graduate of the University of Pennsylvania managed the capital facility and construction projects for the $21.1 million renovation of Island Federal Credit Union Arena, as well as planned $5.7 million expansion of LaValle Stadium and $10 million indoor training facility. She has also managed renovations of the university’s pool, Joe Nathan Baseball Field, the Goldstein Family Student-Athlete Development Center and a track and field complex. The Philadelphia-area native was a member of the NCAA Division I Recruiting and Athletics Personnel Cabinet, serving a four-year term that ended in July 2016. She has been a featured speaker at Women Leaders in College Sports (formerly known as NACWAA, the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletic Administrators),
LOYOL AGREYHOUNDS.COM
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and she was a part of the 2010-11 Sports Management Institute Class. In 2011, she was a recipient of the NACWAA Administrator of the Year for her work with the Seawolves. Woodruff’s participation in college athletics dates to her days at Penn where she was a standout field hockey and lacrosse player for the Quakers. She was a five-time All-Ivy League selection, earning the honors three times in lacrosse and twice in field hockey. She was a National Field Hockey Coaches Association All-America honorable mention recipient following her senior season, and she also earned regional All-America honors from the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Coaches Association. She led Penn to the 1988 NCAA Semifinals and was named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team, to date the only Quaker player to be so honored. Woodruff was recognized for her excellence on the field as a member of Penn’s Athletic Hall of Fame Class X in May 2017. After graduation, she joined Penn’s field hockey and lacrosse coaching staffs as an assistant coach. She worked with the Quakers’ lacrosse team from 1991-95 and the field hockey program from 1991-2000. In 1996, she joined the athletic administration at Penn, working in a variety of roles. Today, she still serves as a member of the Penn Field Hockey Alumnae Board having served as the chairperson for several years prior to her arrival at Loyola.
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While at Penn, she also served as the regional administrative director for the United States Field Hockey Association Olympic Development Program from 1993-96. In that role, she managed and organized more than 650 athletes, 80 coaches, 15 athletic trainers and 15 site directors for participation in six months of training sessions following a curriculum developed by the National Coaching Staff. Woodruff has been a member of the University of Pennsylvania Field Hockey Alumnae Board since 2007 and currently serves as the Chair of that board. She moved to nearby Villanova University in December 2000 where she worked as the Wildcats’ director of administrative services for athletics until May 2004 and her departure for Stony Brook. There, she oversaw the athletic department’s internship program and equipment operations and was a departmental liaison to several campus entities. Woodruff earned a Bachelor of Arts in English from Penn in 1990 and later received a Master of Science in Education with a concentration in higher education administration in 2000. She was a standout student-athlete at Marple Newtown High School in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, where she was inducted to the hall of fame in 2007. The former Donna Mulhern is married to Mark F. Woodruff.
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JEN ADAMS
HEAD COACH • 13TH SEASON ∙ MARYLAND ’01 Innovative. Difference-Maker. Creative. Stellar. Spectacular: All words used to describe Jen Adams throughout her illustrious playing career on the collegiate and international levels. Those same adjectives hold true for her coaching and leadership styles as she enters her 13th season at the helm of the Loyola women's lacrosse program in 2021. At LoyoLA Entering the 2021 season, Adams has a career record of 158-66 in 12 years. The three-time IWLCA Mid-Atlantic Region Coach of the Year has led Loyola to eight NCAA Championships appearances in a nine-year span from 2010-19. During the 2020 campaign, which was shortened due to the COVID19 pandemic, the Greyhounds were a perfect 5-0 on the year, defeating four ranked opponents and earning their highest end-of-year national ranking (No. 3) in the IWLCA Coaches’ poll since 2003. Included in the win total were victories over #24 Johns Hopkins (16-7), #4 Florida (17-6), #19 Penn State (22-12) and #9 Penn (19-15). Since coming to Loyola, Adams has directed a resurgence of the program back to national prominence. Inheriting a squad that posted a 6-10 record in 2008, Adams turned that into an 11-6 mark in 2009 and an 11-7 record in 2010. Her 2011 squad won its first of two-straight BIG EAST Championships, returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2004 and tied a school record for wins in a season, posting a 17-3 record. Her 2015 squad tied that record with a 17-5 mark and won a second-straight Patriot League title, while the 2016 team gave Adams five conference championships in six years, as it won its third-consecutive Patriot League Championship. In conference play, Adams’ squads have dominated. In the last seven completed seasons, her teams have posted an overall record of 58-2 in regular-season conference contests, including an unblemished 52-0 mark in Patriot League play for 26
six-straight undefeated Patriot League Regular Season titles - the longest active win streak in the NCAA. Her Greyhounds have also claimed six league tournament titles – back-to-back BIG EAST Championships (2011, 2012) and four Patriot League titles (2014, 2015, 2016, 2019). The BIG EAST title in 2011 was the first for the program, while 2014 win was the school’s first-ever Patriot League Championship, a League it joined for the 2013-14 school year. Nationally, nine of Adams’ squads have began the season ranked in the top-15 of the IWLCA Preseason Coaches Poll, while Loyola's stretch of four-straight years ranked in the preseason top-10 made the Greyhounds one of just seven programs in the NCAA to be ranked among the nation’s top-10 teams from 2012-15. As a member of the BIG EAST Conference, Adams picked up co-BIG EAST Coach of the Year honors in 2011 and led the Greyhounds to back-toback BIG EAST Tournament titles, a 27-12 record in conference games and a 4-2 mark in tournament action. Four times in her five years with the conference, she guided a Greyhound to a major conference award, with Grace Gavin being tabbed the BIG EAST Attack Player of the Year in both 2010 and 2011, and Marlee Paton and Kellye Gallagher picking up midfielder and defender of the year honors, respectively, in 2012. Paton and Gallagher also became the program’s first pair of first-team All-Americans since 2003 that year. Adams didn’t miss a beat in transitioning to the Patriot League in 2014. Tabbed as the League’s preseason favorite each of her first six years, Adams has been named the League’s Coach of the Year five times (2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019) and brought 14 major awards to the Greyhounds, including three-straight Patriot League Defensive Player of the Year accolades to Maddy Lesher. Adams has coached 13 IWLCA All-Americans, with seven being repeat honorees, and one Tewaaraton Award finalist. She’s collected 23 All-America, 52 All-Mid-Atlantic Region and 74 all-conference
LOYOL AGREYHOUNDS.COM
honors for her players, while 24 major conference awards have gone to Loyola throughout Adams’ tenure. Three of the program’s eight three-time All-Americans have played under Adams: Marlee Paton ’14, Taryn VanThof ’15 and Maddy Lesher '16. Before LoyoLA Prior to coming to Loyola, Adams served as the associate head coach under Cathy Reese at the University of Maryland during the 2007 and 2008 seasons. She was also an assistant to Reese at the University of Denver from 2004-06. At Maryland, Adams rejuvenated the Terrapins offense to play in her up-tempo attacking style. In her first season as associate head coach, Maryland scored 287 goals, the most it had recorded in a season since 2001, Adams' senior year. In 2008, Adams helped Maryland ascend to a No. 2 rank nationally. The Terrapins finished with an 18-3 record and were ranked sixth in the NCAA in goals scored and second in total points. CoAChIng InternAtIonALLy Adams took a break from the college game during the summer of 2012 and 2015 and assisted her sister, Trish, at the Under-19 World Championships. The Adams duo led the U-19 Australian National Team to a silver medal in 2012 and to the semifinals in 2015. She will serve as the Australian's U-19 Co-Head Coach with former Greyhound Stacey (Morlang) Sullivan for the 2019 World Championships. AS A PLAyer Adams is regarded as the finest female lacrosse player of all time. Putting together arguably the greatest collegiate women's lacrosse career in the sport's history, Adams led Maryland to four-straight
national titles from 1998-2001, including a 21-0 record in 1999 and a 23-0 mark in 2001. Adams put together arguably the best collegiate lacrosse career of any player in the collegiate ranks during her tenure at Maryland from 1998 -2001. She racked up honors like she scored goals and recorded assists and was named to the NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse 25th Anniversary Team in April 2007. The Brighton, South Australia native, was named the three-time national player of the year and was the first recipient of the Tewaaraton Trophy in 2001. Adams set every scoring record for the Terrapins - season and career - helping them win national titles in each of the four seasons she spent in College Park. She finished her storied career with 267 goals, 178 assists and 445 total points. Her marks for total points stands today as an NCAA record, and her goals total is still a record at Maryland. In addition to her career marks, Adams had single-season performances that also rank amongst the best in Maryland and NCAA history. During her Tewaaraton-winning senior season, Adams led the nation with 88 goals, 60 assists and 148 total points, setting school single-season marks in the process. Those season totals only added her name one rung higher, as she had set school records with 81 goals, 55 assists and 136 total points the previous season. Adams' efforts were not limited just to the lacrosse field. In addition to her three All-America honors as a player, Adams earned the 2000 and 2001 Honda/Broderick Award for women's lacrosse excellence in the classroom and on the field. She also garnered CoSIDA Academic All-America First Team honors as a senior. She was also named the National Attacker of the (Continued on page 28) 27
(Continued from page 27)
PLAyIng InternAtIonALLy On an international level, Adams has been a member of the Australian National Team since winning the U-19 World Championships in 1995. She went on to represent Australia at the senior level, including captaining them to a 14-7 defeat of the United States in the gold medal game of the 2005 World Cup. She scored four goals, and assisted on three others, in the gold medal game and earned All-World honors after leading all players with 26 assists and 47 total points. Adams was also a member of the Australian National Team that took home the silver medal the 2009 Women's World Cup in Prague, Czech Republic. Adams recorded a team-high 15 goals and led the tournament with 26 assists and 41 total points in the World Cup and recorded a goal and a pair of assists against the United States in the gold medal game. In 2013, Adams tore her ACL during training camp prior to the games, but captained them to a silver medal in Oshawa, Canada.
Year in 1999, 2000 and 2001 and earned Atlantic Coast Conference Female Athlete of the Year laurels in 2000 and 2001.
In addition to her participation with the Australian National Team, Adams has been a clinician around the world and is the primary spokeswoman for STX Women's Lacrosse. Adams graduated from Maryland in 2001 with a bachelor of arts degree in sports marketing.
CoAChIng StAff
28
DANA DOBBIE
CAROLINE HAGER
CHARLOTTE NESER
ASSISTANT COACH
ASSISTANT COACH
13th Season Maryland ’08
10th Season Loyola ’11
DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS
LOYOL AGREYHOUNDS.COM
7th Season Drexel ’12
CHARLEY TOOMEY
HEAD COACH • 16TH SEASON ∙ LOYOLA ’90 The 2021 season will be the 16th as head coach at Loyola for Charley Toomey, a school where he has put his stamp on the Loyola men's lacrosse program as a disciplined, tough, athletic and skillful unit. The Greyhounds ascended to the top of college lacrosse in 2012, winning Loyola's first-ever NCAA Division I Championship. Toomey has directed the Greyhounds to an even 100 wins, an average of 12.5 per season since 2012 (excluding the shortened 2020 campaign), and he enters the 2021 with a 150-71 career record in his first 15 years at Loyola. Early in the 2016 season, Toomey became the second coach in program history to reach and cross the 100-win plateau. He stands second on the program’s all-time wins chart behind his college coach, Dave Cottle (181-70, 1983-2001). As a head coach, Toomey has coached 43 USILA All-Americans, 77 all-conference selections, 21 conference positional or players or rookies of the year, a Tewwaraton Award winner and five finalists and 178 USILA Scholar All-Americans. Of the award winners, Pat Spencer became the most decorated player in program history during his 2019 senior season when he set the NCAA career record for assists and finished second all-time in points. He was the school's first winner of the Tewaaraton and the USILA Player of the Year Awards and became the school's first four-time All-American. In 2019, Toomey was named to the coaching staff of the U.S. Men's National Team as an assistant coach. He will serve with Team USA in preparation for, and competition in, the 2022 World Championships in British Columbia. He was also enshrined in the USLacrosse Chesapeake Chapter Hall of Fame in January 2019 for his accomplishments as a player and a coach. Under his direction, the Greyhounds won at least a share of three of the last six ECAC Championships 30
when the Greyhounds were in that conference, and Loyola has won four of the five Patriot League titles since joining the conference in 2014. Loyola spent time as the No. 1 team in all national polls during the 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2019 seasons, a feat never before accomplished on the Evergreen campus. Toomey was also a member of the NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Committee, a group responsible for selection of the NCAA Championships field and administration of the tournament. He also has served as part of the U.S. Men’s National Team selection group as a coach and evaluator of the goalies during the initial tryout process. Toomey's dedication to the program stems from his long ties to the Loyola community, dating back to the day he stepped onto campus as a freshman student-athlete in 1986. He has been involved in 18 of the 26 NCAA D-I Tournament appearances in program history - three as a player, five as an assistant coach and 10 as a head coach. The 2021 season will be Toomey's 25th year as a coach for the Greyhounds and his 31st overall in the coaching profession. Including his four years as a standout goalkeeper for the Greyhounds from 1987-1990, 2018 will be his 29th year on the Loyola campus. While his ties to the past of Loyola men's lacrosse run deep, Toomey's vision and commitment to the future of the Greyhounds is even stronger. With Toomey at the helm, Loyola reached the NCAA Tournament for the 10th time in his 14 years as a head coach in 2019 and the seventh time in eight years. He was named the Patriot League Coach of the Year as the Greyhounds won their fourth conference regular-season title. The Greyhounds then reached the NCAA Quarterfinal round for the third time in four seasons. In 2018, the Greyhounds captured the Patriot League Championship for the fourth time in five years since joining the conference, winning both the
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regular-season and tournament crowns. Toomey's Greyhounds continued to be one of the most uptempo offenses in the nation, finishing sixth in the country in goals per game, while the defense also remained one of the best around in 2018. Loyola wrapped up the year with a 13-4 record and its third trip to the NCAA Quarterfinals in seven seasons. The 2017 Greyhounds were one of the most balanced teams in the nation, finishing 10th in NCAA Division I in scoring defense, allowing just 8.38 goals per game while scoring 12.38 to rank 11th in scoring offense en route to a 10-6 record. Loyola completed one of the finest years in school history in 2016, bouncing back from a 4-3 start to the regular-season to win 10-straight games. During that stretch, Loyola won the Patriot League Championship, coasting to a 14-6 victory over the U.S. Military Academy in the title game. The Greyhounds then won two NCAA Tournament games in rematches of games they lost to teams during the regular-season. Loyola logged 1611 win over Duke University when it hosted the Blue Devils in the NCAA First Round, and it then traveled to Columbus, Ohio, for the NCAA Quarterfinals. There, the Greyhounds downed Towson University, 10-8, to advance to Championship Weekend. Loyola finished the season with a 14-4 record, the third-most wins in program history, and it was ranked No. 4 nationally in the final media poll of the season by Inside Lacrosse. The 2012 Loyola squad set several program records and tied the NCAA Division I record for wins in a season with 18. The Greyhounds lost just a single game during the year, winning the ECAC regular-season and tournament championships en route to the national title. Toomey was named the 2012 recipient of the Morris Touchstone as the Division I Coach of the Year, and he earned his third ECAC Coach of the Year honor. During the year, the Greyhounds featured one of the most balanced teams in the nation, finishing fifth in scoring defense (7.51 goals allowed per game)
and eighth in scoring offense (12.05). Loyola's transition game was also vaunted during the year, and the Greyhounds unit has been heralded as one of the nation's best for several seasons. The 2010 season saw Toomey and Loyola return to the NCAA Championships for the third time in four years, playing in what would become an 'instant-classic' three-overtime game at Cornell. Loyola put together a 9-5 record for the second year in a row and reached as high as sixth in the national rankings during the season. In 2009 Toomey guided the Greyhounds to a 9-5 record, their best since 2002. Loyola finished 6-1 in the ECAC and finished as the league's co-champion, the second year in a row Loyola has won at least a share of the crown. According to the computer rankings, the 2009 Greyhounds played the third-toughest schedule in the nation, and they finished with an RPI of nine. Four of the Greyhounds' five losses came against teams ranked in the Top-10 nationally, and the five losses were by a combined seven goals. The team was not short of highlights, as P.T. Ricci and Shane Koppens were named USILA AllAmericans, and six Greyhounds earned All-ECAC honors. Ricci was the league Defensive Player of the Year, and Mike Sawyer was Rookie of the Year. In 2008, Toomey was recognized by his peers as ECAC Co-Coach of the Year for the second time in three years. He led the Greyhounds to the ECAC title with a 6-1 record in conference play. The title marked the program's first since joining the ECAC in 2005. In addition to his 22-6 ECAC record, Toomey's teams have lost just one ECAC home game and have never finished lower than tied for second in the final league standings. After weathering a challenging out-of-conference (Continued on page 33) 31
(Continued from page 31)
slate at the beginning of 2008, the Greyhounds hit their stride at the end of March. In a five-week span, the Greyhounds ripped off four wins, and they culminated the season by earning their 16th NCAA Tournament berth. The 2008 squad ranked among the top three in nearly every statistical category in the ECAC. Boasting an up-tempo offense, the Greyhounds were third in the conference in goals (9.29) and points per game (13.43). But true to Toomey's goalkeeper roots, the defense has also been a key ingredient to Loyola's success. In 2008, the Greyhounds allowed a league-low 39 goals in seven conference matchups (5.57 a game), an astonishing 18 goals lower than Hobart, which ranked second with 57. In his first season as head coach in 2006, Toomey was selected as ECAC Coach of the Year after guiding the Greyhounds to a 6-6 overall record and a 5-2 conference mark. The Greyhounds finished 4-1 at home that year, defeating No. 2 Georgetown (14-10), as well as conference foes Penn State and Rutgers. During his second year at the helm in 2007, Loyola accomplished its goal of returning to the NCAA Tournament. The storied program assembled an eye-raising tournament resume with marquee wins over then-ranked No. 1 Duke and Syracuse. Toomey served as defensive coordinator for the Greyhounds prior to his appointment as head coach. His contributions to the unit and to the program, along with his coaching style and work ethic, earned him recognition in Lacrosse Magazine, which featured him as one of the nation's top assistants in 2005.
Beginning his coaching career at his alma mater following his graduation, Toomey helped lead the 1991 and 1992 Greyhounds to the NCAA Tournament. He then moved on to the Naval Academy Prep School, where he worked as a head coach in 1993. Moving on to Navy, he was an assistant coach for the Midshipmen, working specifically with the goalies and defensive midfielders, helping guide the squad to the 1994 NCAA Tournament. Toomey served as the head coach at Severn School from 1996-98, leading the team to three successful seasons before returning to his alma mater in 1999. As a student-athlete at Loyola from 1987-90, Toomey was a two-time All-America selection at goalie, garnering honorable mention honors in 1989 and third-team accolades in 1990. He owns two of Loyola's top six single-game save performances in the cage, and ranks amongst the Greyhounds' all-time save leaders. His 22 saves against Rutgers in the 1990 NCAA Tournament also tie him for the top postseason mark in school history. He finished his career with an astonishing 25-5 overall record, and was the last Loyola goalkeeper to start an NCAA Championship Game, starting the 1990 NCAA Final against Syracuse. In the early 1990s, Toomey played professionally for the Baltimore Thunder and the Boston Blazers. He has also guided several professional goalies like Mark Bloomquist, Tim McGeeney and Michael Fretwell, Jack Runkel and Jacob Stover as a coach. Toomey and his wife, Sara, live in Anne Arundel County with their three daughters, Emma, Sophie and Lyla.
CoAChIng StAff
MATT DWAN
MARC VAN ARSDALE
STEVE VAIKNESS
CHRIS MYERS
COLLIN MCCARTHY
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ASSISTANT COACH
17th Season Loyola, ’95
5th Season Hobart, ’85
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