A 2002 National Lacrosse Hall of Fame inductee and the 2009 USA Lacrosse Magazine Person of the Year, Tierney became the fastest coach in NCAA Division I history to achieve 400 wins, reaching the milestone in just 532 games, 62 games faster than his long-time friend and competitor John Danowski.
He started his college coaching career as an assistant at Johns Hopkins, helping to lead the Blue Jays to NCAA championships in 1985 and 1987. When he arrived at Princeton in 1988, the Tigers had not won a league championship, made an NCAA tournament appearance or produced a first-team All-American in 20 years.
“To me, he is without question the greatest lacrosse coach of all time and one of the greatest coaches any sport has ever seen,” said Jerry Price, Princeton’s senior communications advisor and historian. “To take one program that had never won an NCAA tournament game and lead it to the national title (and then five more after it) is an astonishing accomplishment. To do so with a second program is extraordinary.”
The son of a beverage truck driver and a nurse, Tierney grew up in Levittown, N.Y., and latched onto lacrosse as a student-athlete at Cortland State. He returned to Long Island to coach high school lacrosse at Great Neck South and Levittown Memorial, then spent three seasons as the head coach at RIT before joining the staff at Hopkins — jumpstarting one of the most memorable coaching journeys the sport has ever seen.
“When I go to my grave, I don't want them putting on my headstone how many national championships I had,” Tierney said. “I want them to put on my headstone that I loved my players.”
Coming off a 9-6 season in which it missed the NCAA tournament for just the second time in 13 years under Tierney, Denver opens the 2023 campaign Feb. 4 against Utah.