“When I got there, [then-athletic director] Andy Geiger said to me as part of the process, ‘We’re either going to drop the program or we’re going to sink our teeth into it,’” Breschi said. “It was a gradual process.”
Ohio State started offering lacrosse scholarships in 2000. The team moved to Jesse Owens Memorial Stadium, a new multi-sport facility, in the fall of 2001. The Buckeyes made the NCAA tournament in 2003 and 2004 and advanced to the quarterfinals in 2008 — the same year Breschi convinced then-football coach Jim Tressel to allow the team to stage a lacrosse game as an opening act for the annual spring football game. The Showdown in the Shoe set regular season attendance records three years in a row, culminating in a crowd of 31,078 that saw Ohio State beat Air Force in 2010.
A 1990 North Carolina graduate and two-time U.S. national team defenseman as a player, Breschi left for his alma mater following the 2008 season. Ohio State hired Myers, Breschi’s top assistant, two months later.
After Myers led the Buckeyes to their first final four and a national championship game appearance in 2017, an anonymous donor kickstarted the campaign for a stadium and training facilities occupied exclusively by the Ohio State men’s and women’s lacrosse teams. Seeing archrival Michigan and Big Ten foe Penn State unveil new lacrosse-only venues in 2018 and 2019, respectively, only added to the fundraising momentum.
But the pandemic almost brought the project to its knees.
“For six months there, I thought there was no shot,” Myers said. “Then a glimmer of light. But when we do come out of it, everything costs twice as much. Back to the drawing board. Raise more money.”