Speckmann arrived at Nassau as a 24-year-old assistant coach. Two years later, he was running the show. Forty years after that, he retired with a 477-158-1 record, 20 NJCAA championships and 39 trips to the final four. The six-time NJCAA Coach of the Year coached more than 200 junior college All Americans and more than 100 players that became NCAA All-Americans after moving on.
And to think, a few years before Speckmann started coaching lacrosse, he was a baseball player. But he’d pitch for his Oceanside High School team and the next day his arm would hurt so badly he couldn’t make the throws from shortstop. Springtime on Long Island can be long and boring for a baseball player. A lot of sitting around and feeling cold.
“When you’re not hitting, baseball isn’t a whole lot of fun,” Speckmann said. “On the field next to us, I was watching the lacrosse kids have a grand old time.”
Speckmann switched sports as a junior and took to it immediately. He played basketball — his coach was Roy Kessinich, father of Quint, the ESPN lacrosse analyst — and said lacrosse felt like basketball with a stick in your hand. He went on to Cortland, where he starred in football (he was the holder on the first 60-yard field goal in NCAA history) and lacrosse. He played under Al Pisano, who helped build Cortland into a Division III power before moving east to run the team at Army.
Fifty years later, Speckmann praises his coaches the same way the legions that played for him do now.
“I was really fortunate to play for guys who really knew the game well,” Speckmann said.
Speckmann quickly showed he too was a coach who knew the game. Even in the early years, Nassau scrimmaged four-year schools and held its own. Speckmann thinks he probably sent 15 kids to Cornell in the 1970s and ’80s. At one point, 1975 he guessed, he looked at the NCAA North/South All-Star game and realized seven or eight of the players had been at Nassau two years earlier.
“We helped them get to some really good schools that without lacrosse, they wouldn't have had the chance,” Speckmann said. “We developed a tradition. It just got bigger and bigger as it went.”