It happened. With Reese in the thick of things, Maryland added to Timchal’s first NCAA title in 1992 by going undefeated back-to-back to win it all in 1995 and 1996, then went a combined 39-4 and took home two more in 1997 and 1998. Three more would follow immediately.
“Cathy wanted to make a difference from the day she got here,” Timchal says. “Her ability to stand up as a leader on and off the field, backed by her obvious ability to play the game exceptionally well, prepared her to be a great coach.”
Former Maryland superstar Jen Adams, a fellow Hall of Famer widely considered the greatest player in the game’s history, spent one year as a Maryland teammate with Reese. She was a senior when Adams was a freshman, having landed in College Park from Australia in January 1998.
It would be a pivotal experience for Adams, who has been linked with Reese ever since. Reese would coach Adams under Timchal, and they would coach together briefly at Maryland.
When Reese accepted her first head coaching job at Denver in 2003, Adams joined her. When Reese replaced Timchal at her alma mater, Adams followed, and would later take over at Loyola. The pair still runs an elite summer camp every year.
“I will never forget walking into the Maryland locker room for the first time, a deer in the headlights,” Adams says. “Cathy’s presence stands out from the moment you meet her. She has always commanded a presence and filled a room. You want to follow her. I don’t know if I’d still be in America if Cathy hadn’t taken me under her wing.
“As a coach, she strikes the perfect balance between making it fun as a player and pushing you very hard to be successful. She’s insanely competitive. If you got on board with her, you knew you were backing a winner. I would have been shocked if she hadn’t become a coach.”
With 302 coaching victories behind her and a Hall of Fame induction shortly ahead, Reese says she is too busy attacking the next day to dwell much on such recognition.
“I learned so much about how to do this job from Cindy and from my time in Denver — recruiting, scheduling, motivating,” Reese says. “The Hall of Fame is huge honor, but when you get into the world of coaching, you don’t take much time for reflection. You’re always working on the next thing.”
The National Lacrosse Hall of Fame, a program of US Lacrosse, was established in 1957 to honor men and women who by their deeds as players, coaches, officials and/or contributors, and by the example of their lives, personify the great contribution of lacrosse to our way of life. The Class of 2019 will be officially recognized at the induction ceremony in Hunt Valley, Md., on Saturday, Oct 19. Tickets for the event, sponsored by RPS Bollinger and the Markel Insurance Company, are available at uslacrosse.org/HOF.