DeLuca spent the last two seasons as the top assistant at Harvard after two seasons as the defensive coordinator at Duke. He’s most known for his 18 years at Cornell as a player, assistant coach and then head coach. From 2011-13, he led the Big Red to a 37-11 record and 16-2 Ivy League mark. With Tewaaraton Award winner Rob Pannell leading the way, Cornell advanced to the NCAA semifinals in 2013.
DeLuca was fired the following fall, however, when the university found that seniors on the team had forced freshmen to consume alcohol in a hazing incident. He resurfaced at Duke and was on the coaching staff when the Blue Devils won the 2014 NCAA championship.
DeLuca’s wife, Laurie (Tortorelli), was an All-American goalie at Delaware.
“He brings to us an incredible knowledge of the game of lacrosse and an understanding that the University of Delaware is a very special place,” Rawick said of DeLuca, who is also the assistant general manager of the 2018 U.S. team. “We have such a passionate group of Delaware lacrosse alumni, and I know Ben will build a strong connection with them. There is absolutely no doubt that Ben will make our men's lacrosse program, this department and this university better.”
Ben DeLuca (left) poses with longtime Delaware men’s lacrosse coach Bob Shillinglaw, who retired this spring after 39 seasons.
The Blue Hens finished 7-8 this season, highlighted by a March 25 win over Rutgers, then ranked No. 1 in the national media poll. It was Delaware’s first-ever victory over a top-ranked opponent.
DeLuca will inherit a team that returns its top two scorers, Andrew Romagnoli and Charlie Kitchen, as well as second-team All-CAA long-stick midfielder Austin Haynes and CAA All-Rookie goalie Matt DeLuca.