Army defeated defending NCAA champion Maryland in the first round of the NCAA tournament Saturday to advance to the quarterfinals for the first time since 2010.
With the Black Knights set to play Penn State at Navy, of all places, we revisit this 2019 magazine feature on coach, father and leader Joe Alberici.
JOE ALBERICI STARTED GIVING A VERSION OF THE SPEECH that caps off the Army summer boys’ lacrosse camp around eight years ago. He calls it the “Tough Guy Talk.” He’s received more letters and emails in support of the message than he can count. He thinks he’s just saying what the parents are thinking, but with a little more emotion. Some parents have told him they’ve affixed quotes from the talk onto their refrigerators.
Being tough doesn’t entail being the strongest or most skilled. Alberici has a different definition.
“It’s about giving everything you have to everything you do,” he said. “100 percent, 100 percent of the time.”
Alberici divides toughness into three categories: on the lacrosse field, in the classroom and in life. Vital to “being a tough guy in life” is inclusion.
“It’s right to be inclusive,” Alberici told the campers and their parents on July 18th as he paced on the track at Shea Stadium. The Hudson River shimmered in the background.
“Kids that don’t look like you, don’t talk like you, don’t have all the nice things that you do, maybe don’t think as well as you do — don’t exclude them. That doesn’t take any toughness at all.”
A two-minute clip of the talk posted on the Army men’s lacrosse Twitter account received more than 46,000 views.
A one-minute version from Alberici’s address to younger campers a week earlier had over 124,000.
“The most important message from one of our sport’s best,” then-USA Lacrosse CEO Steve Stenersen replied on Twitter.
“It’s a message that my players get every day they’re with me,” Alberici says while sitting in his office at Michie Stadium on the first day of fall practice in September. “We call it being a West Point man.”
In Alberici’s office, there’s a sign that says “I Play For You.” It features the name of every player in the 102-year history of Army lacrosse. There’s also a lunch box which a cadet carries to every practice and game. Alberici started the tradition in 2008. It symbolizes the blue-collar mentality and toughness he wants to instill.
Family. Toughness. Tradition. Alberici identified these as the Army’s core values. The three words are on the team’s training shirts — and on the wallpaper of Alberici’s iPhone.
“What I failed to say,” Alberici says after he described his surroundings, “is that there’s still more pictures of my family then there is of that stuff.”