Pat Myers packed his things for a trip to Columbus, Ohio, earlier this week. He’d be visiting his family, who had already made it there, along with his brother Nick, who heads Ohio State men’s lacrosse program.
Now that August has arrived, Myers figured it was one of his last chances to relax before the rigors of the lacrosse season returned.
“It’s the calm before the storm,” he joked.
But this trip, at least figuratively, was a bit different. This time, he’d meet his brother as a fellow Division I head coach. After 16 years of coaching, Pat Myers got his chance.
This entire summer has been a new experience for Myers, who left his post as a Penn assistant to take over the head coaching position at Lafayette on June 4. He joined a Leopards program that has traditionally struggled nationally and in conference, but he’s hopeful he can change the culture in Easton, Pa.
“Being a head coach is something I’ve always dreamed of,” Myers said. “I was very happy with my position at Penn and didn’t really have any interest to leave, but when you look at taking that next step and becoming the leader of a program, you want to do it at a place with great people. When I was offered the job, the excitement not only in being a head coach, but to do it in a place that the people that were hiring you really believed in you and your vision is something I dreamed about.”
After Myers got the offer, he called his wife, Lauren. Next up was his brother, who had watched him succeed as an assistant at Penn, North Carolina, Bucknell, Cornell and Ohio State. He had talked coaching with his brother for years, but now Nick Myers was advising his brother on joining the Division I coaching ranks.
“I’m blessed to have a brother that is a head coach, one you can bounce ideas off of,” Myers said. “I’ve been able to bounce things off him and he’s done the same with me. Now, taking this next step, not that you're ever prepared to do this, but he is somebody that I believe in and trust to be really honest with me about what the first 60-90 days are going to look like and I can really lean on.”
In the end, it was an easy decision for Myers to make. The support pledged by Director of Athletics Sherryta Freeman and others within the athletic department gave him the belief that he could turn this program around.
Lafayette, playing in the ever-competitive Patriot League, hasn’t won more than four games since 2010. In fact, the Leopards have had one winning season (2010) since 1984.
But Myers isn’t focused on turning the switch right away. He’s still yet to step onto the field with his new team. In the meantime, he’s spoken with various players and voiced his excitement for getting started with the Leopards.
His objective: To build a new culture centered around togetherness and dedication to the game. It’s already a group that he called “tight-knit” — one that forged together after the tragic death of freshman teammate McCrae Williams in September 2017.
“Now, they’re going to be playing for their third head coach in three years,” Myers said. “They’re excited about building a cultural environment about brotherhood. That’s something I’ve heard them say. They know they need to do more from an extra-work standpoint and investing more time into their craft.”
In addition, Myers expects to change the fall practice schedule, moving them to 6 a.m. in Fisher Stadium — where Lafayette’s football team plays its games. While most of the athletic teams on campus practice in the late afternoon (teams cannot practice during the academic schedule from 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.), Myers’ team will get in practice early and be able to hit the weight room as a team.