Bill Tierney will receive five months of encomiums as he navigates his final season as Denver’s lacrosse coach, richly earned tributes for a man with remarkable staying power in a sport that has transformed in so many ways during his career.
As Tierney noted Friday in the wake of his retirement announcement, he’s doing it on his terms. Which is apt, considering how much his terms have shaped college lacrosse in the last 35 years.
He built a legacy at Princeton, winning six national titles at a program that was an Ivy League afterthought and even less relevant nationally prior to his arrival.
The sport’s tilt toward defense in the 1990s? Tierney was at the vanguard of that trend, melding his own ideas and former Johns Hopkins assistant Fred Smith’s principles into the framework of a scheme that gave a generation of offenses fits.
Then he looked west, took over at Denver after the 2009 season and tacked on another title in his sixth year with the Pioneers — all the while fostering lacrosse’s growth in the Rockies and leaning prominently on Canadian talent that grew more prevalent in Division I in the last decade.
“I’ve always been a dreamer,” Tierney said. “I’ve always set probably outlandish goals for myself and my team and my family. When I came here, it was [for] a very selfish reason. I could have stayed at Princeton. I just felt I had one more challenge left in me.”
The final part of that challenge awaits this spring. The second-to-last part of that challenge was figuring out just when and how to walk away.
Tierney agreed to a contract extension through 2024 in December 2019, providing some wiggle room for when he would eventually step aside. Then the pandemic hit, a once-a-century jolt that wasn’t in anyone’s coaching handbook — even one as extensive as Tierney’s.
“In the past two years, I’ve felt more stress — put upon by myself — to achieve, to do better, because I felt we had made a promise to this place,” Tierney said. “We had made promises to young men. I just wanted to make sure I fulfilled those promises.”
After contending with super-sized rosters the last few seasons and a spring without an NCAA tournament berth, Tierney began discussions with associate head coach Matt Brown about departing.
Yet the time wasn’t right, especially since he didn’t feel like the Pioneers’ culture was where he wanted it. The decision would have seemed too abrupt, too sudden after a 9-6 season ended with a Big East semifinal loss.
A strong, invigorating fall convinced him the culture problem was solved.
“I wanted to get us back,” Tierney said. “I’ve always said leaving all these jobs, starting with leaving junior high teaching jobs and coaching jobs and everything else, two things: I wanted to make it better than I found it and secondly, leave the cupboard full. I didn’t think at the end of last year our cupboard was full.”