Fran Sennas’ favorite memories of the SSM Games are usually not the contests themselves, but rather the little moments in and around them. There’s the arrival of the varsity team every year, who try to surprise her. There’s the dinner the night before for the JV and varsity teams that many times morphed into a dance party. Fran addressed the teams. She’d tell stories about her daughter, but also talk strategy. The teams then received small gifts like sunglasses, a water bottle or light-up earrings.
The items are always a fluorescent yellow — the official color of the SSM Games.
“It’s very fitting that it’s that bright yellow color,” said Nyack varsity head coach Kathryn Perrella, who captained the team her senior year in 1997 and played at Notre Dame. “When you see that bright yellow, it just makes you smile.”
The players wear yellow ribbons adorned with an SSM logo in their hair during the games. You can tell how many times someone has participated in the event by the number of yellow ribbons attached to her backpack. Spend enough time around Nyack — the Rockland County village 30 miles north of New York City that’s just above the Tappan Zee Bridge — and you’ll likely spot one hanging on a car’s rearview mirror.
All those in attendance one year received five-inch lengths of yellow ribbon.
“Just stick it in your pocket,” Graham instructed everyone she handed them to. “One day you’ll come across it and it will make you happy when you find it.”
Fran Sennas, Stacey’s mother and a longtime lacrosse official, ties a yellow ribbon to a Nyack (N.Y.) youth girls’ lacrosse player’s hair during the Stacey Sennas McGowan Memorial Games in 2016.
The spirit of the event is a fitting tribute to Sennas McGowan, who possessed the rare ability to turn any occasion into a celebration. “Hers was a hug that would essentially render every other hug you’ll ever receive in your entire life a complete insult to hugging,” Corry said in her eulogy.
Sennas McGowan was the type of person who would stage an impromptu dace party during a finals study session at Nyack to dissipate everyone’s stress, then get an A on the test the next day. Who less than two weeks after she found out a colleague on the equities trading desk’s first Grateful Dead concert was at the Boston Garden on May 7, 1977, tracked down and gave him a cassette tape of the first set from that performance.
“I was in awe of her and to this day, she continues to be the epitome of how women on Wall Street should be,” Blythe Berents, vice president at Merrill Edge in Boston, wrote in the guestbook on Sennas McGowan’s 9/11 Living Memorial page.
On the day internet banking was unveiled, Sennas McGowan traded millions of shares. She never once left her post. “It was her nature as a fighter to complete the task in front of her and not give up,” Edward Jones financial advisor and BC alum Neil Kirk, who worked on the equities desk at Sander O’Neill from 1998-2000, recalled in his blog titled “Vinyl Magic.”
“She simply would not, could not stop,” Kirk continued. “The tumultuous activity did exact a physical toll, however, as Stacey experienced horrific back spasms after the market closed and she was taken out of the office by way of stretcher after a visit with EMTs. As expected, she returned to her post the next day to continue trading.”
Graham saw that resilience and calm demeanor up close when she played with Sennas McGowan on the inaugural girls’ lacrosse team at Nyack in 1977 — five years after Title IX passed. They used to braid each other’s hair before games. One of only two teams in Rockland County, they’d have to travel to Westchester and other neighboring counties to find competition. A multi-sport athlete who played tennis and was an accomplished swimmer, Sennas McGowan soon distinguished herself on the lacrosse field too.
“Even at that young age we could feel that this was growing and we were part of it,” Graham said. “We were in the front seat of that bus.”