St. Bonaventure already has a women’s lacrosse team, and there is optimism both programs can help each other. The Bonnies established women’s lacrosse in 2000, and it has struggled to gain traction in the Atlantic 10 over the last decade.
That team is now playing on a turf field installed three years ago, part of a facilities upgrade that also included the addition of lights. The men’s team will also play on that field.
Kenney said he hopes to have a fully funded men’s lacrosse program within five years. But how rapidly St. Bonaventure gets itself to 12.6 scholarships will be done in consultation with the team’s first coach.
Given his background, Kenney logically leaned on the advice of Massachusetts coach Greg Cannella when pursuing the men’s lacrosse plan with the school’s board of trustees. But the Long Island native also received input from Denver coach Bill Tierney and several administrators throughout the process.
Like many of the start-up programs over the last decade, St. Bonaventure will have a two-year build-up to a debut. That model has served the likes of Boston University, Marquette, Richmond and others well, allowing schools to collect two classes of recruits and establish a foundation before taking the field.
“It gives us lead time behind the scenes,” Kenney said. “We know it’ll be tough going the first two years, but after that I think we could be competitive immediately. It gives us time to get into a conference.”
There are some logical destinations since the Atlantic 10 doesn’t sponsor the sport with only three current men’s lacrosse programs (Massachusetts, Richmond and Saint Joseph’s). The Metro Atlantic and Northeast conferences both have a presence in western or central New York and could be fits.
There was one league Kenney wisely dismisses as a possibility for his fledgling program.
“Someone mentioned that the ACC needs a team [to regain an automatic NCAA bid],” Kenney recalled. “I said, ‘What are you, nuts?’”
No, a start-up program’s best home would probably not be with five perennial postseason contenders. But make no mistake, the Bonnies are not adding the sport simply for the sake of having a team. With so many other schools finding relatively quick in the success in the sport and Kenney already understanding the impact of men’s lacrosse at its highest level, St. Bonaventure intends to invest in this program.
“It was phenomenal to have 55,000 people at the championship and just the way they do the final four and the atmosphere around it with the culture of young kids coming to games with lacrosse sticks, it’s completely energizing,” Kenney said of his 2006 experience. “When you look at the image of St. Bonaventure, people immediately think of basketball. There’s plenty of room to associate the image of this school with lacrosse as well.”