Tumolo came to Wagner after being an assistant to head coach Katrina Dowd at Oregon for two seasons, following stints at Syracuse and Florida under Gary Gait and O’Leary, also as an assistant.
She follows in the footsteps of Rowan – the former Seahawks coach and fellow former Orange attacker who took over at Albany on June 21 – and now heads the program her younger sister, Kimmy, was a part of from 2013-2016. Wagner won the Northeast Conference championship in 2016 and 2018, earning its first-ever NCAA tournament win against Mercer in May.
“I feel like this is where my heart belongs and the level I want to be at as a first head coach,” Tumolo said. “There’s so much potential there. I think Katie Rowan has done an amazing job the past three years and I have big shoes to fill. …. We’ve been a part of teams where you’re like sisters and you’re family. You’d do anything for your family and that’s how I’m going to coach because that’s so important to have that bond. If you have that bond on and off the field, then it’s going to create a winning culture.”
Wills, the former USC associate head coach, aims to do the same at Harvard, which has won one NCAA championship in 1990 when Carole Kleinfelder led the program. Collectively, Ivy League women’s lacrosse teams have hoisted the national championship trophy four times, with Princeton earning the other three in 1994, 2002 and 2003 under current head coach Chris Sailer.
The Crimson are coming off a 6-9 season and finished at the bottom of the conference standings, but Wills is confident the program has the potential to become a powerhouse in the Ivy League.
“Yale men’s lacrosse, [the 2017 NCAA champion], proves the point that the Ivies can’t be counted out just because they’re limited by their hours,” said Wills, who was also an assistant at Denver and Dartmouth. “It’s a sport that the Ivies really excel in and compete at that national level and in the national spotlight. … I realize it’s a ton of work that has to happen and I think the girls know that too, but I think if you start small and get better every day, then it will take care of itself.”
With her Ivy League background, earning All-American honors in goal for the Big Green, Wills felt specifically drawn to Harvard. It was one of her “dream school[s] to work at,” she said.
“Having been in the Ivy League as a player, I always respected the athletes at Harvard,” Wills said. “The balance the Ivy League provides the student-athletes is always appealing to me. I didn’t realize how valuable that was until I graduated many years later. That’s why I was eager to get back to the Ivy League.”
Tumolo and Wills now start their head coaching careers eyeing excellence – and perhaps encouraging their players to try out for Team USA.
“You coach the way you played,” Tumolo said. “Who would think a Wagner girl would try out? But I want, one day, that they can get that call. The sky’s the limit.”