Especially the victories. Harden is no stranger to championships. He won one coaching the Wilton (Conn.) High School boys in 1992, won another at The Lovett School in Atlanta in 2005. He and his wife, Dawn, moved in 2006 with their children, Kendall, Lindsay and Cole, to Terrace Park, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati with a population of about 2,500.
“For all these years, he was Cole’s dad,” Robinson said. “As I got older, he was involved in the program. He became a never-ending lacrosse resource.”
Harden started coaching in the Mariemont boys’ program in 2006 and started helping the girls’ program in 2014, when Kendall was a senior. He can do both because field space is limited, so the boys and girls practice and play back-to-back, never overlapping. Harden has shared a part in four Mariemont boys’ state titles, including in 2017, when Cole was a junior.
“Each championship has its own flair and uniqueness,” Harden said. “Last year, when it was the boys and my son, that was a great experience. This year with the girls, seeing them grow and develop as a team was just as special. If you can’t enjoy a championship, you have a problem. Something’s not right in your head. It’s too much fun not to enjoy.”
Harden almost doubled up on championships this season. Cole and the Mariemont boys lost, 15-13, to DeSales in the state semifinals.
“It was a fun ride,” Harden said. “They just ran into a very good team in the state semifinals. They gave them a good run and they ended up winning it. You can’t be ashamed of losing by two goals to the eventual state champion. We could have won that game had a couple bounces gone the other way.”
Mariemont poses with its trophy after a 15-13 victory over Chagrin Falls on June 2 to capture its first Ohio Division II state championship in the program’s first appearance in the state final.
Harden served as head coach of the Mariemont girls’ team in 2016 and 2017 and got the team to the regional final last year. He stepped down to be able to follow Cole’s senior year more closely and allow Ferry, head coach until 2014, to return to the top post. Ferry was thrilled when Harden stayed on as an assistant.
“He does so much,” Ferry said. “Tactically, he knows the game so well because he personally played at such a high level. He loves to study the game. Every year he reads and re-reads the new rulebook. He gives the girls quizzes on the rulebook because he’d get a kick out of them not knowing the answer. He’d help break down zone defenses. He’d help kids set up ways to break down a face guard, anything from a tactical standpoint.
“More than that, he’s a relationship guy. The girls know he cares about them. From an inspirational point of view, you watch the way that he deals with adversity, and he has such a positive demeanor through it all. It helps us when we get down five goals with four and a half minutes to go to have the guts to fight adversity too and get there in the end.”
Donations to the GForce Initiative that go directly to The Harden Family Trust in support of Harden can be made here.