No one ever quite knows what new beginnings will bring about, but senior attackman Michael Reilly has a pretty good sense of what the Liam Gleason era could mean for Siena lacrosse.
“When your coach is saying, ‘let’s have a lot of fun,’ everyone is flying around,” Reilly said. “From my experience, this is the best we’ve ever played.”
The buzzword “fun” gets tossed around a lot nowadays with the Saints, especially in the early portions of Gleason’s first year in charge. He’s taken over for John Svec after four consecutive losing seasons, returning to where he began his college coaching experience as an assistant and defensive coordinator from 2008-10.
Most recently, Gleason was with Albany, where he helped that program to six straight NCAA tournaments. It’s those Albany days under Scott Marr and his high school coach, Tom Rotanz, that shaped this upbeat, energetic coaching style. Now, Gleason is cracking jokes and getting to know his players as people and student-athletes, much like his mentors did.
“We’re going to hold them to a standard and accountable, but I’m not a drill sergeant,” Gleason said. “When you’re a coach, the best and most genuine ones are themselves. When you try to be someone you’re not, people see through it. I’m having fun coaching the game. When I’m not having fun, I’m not being the best coach I can be.”
That’s not all Gleason is changing, though. He’s implemented new schemes, a two-way midfielder system and a set of new clears. The Saints even read “The Energy Bus” by Jon Gordon, a self-help book that outlines 10 steps to living a positive life, and held weekly discussions about different chapters.
But can that Albany-esque style work at Siena? Time will tell, Gleason said.
“It’s taking off some of the tension and stress away from guys,” Gleason said. “For me, that’s when you play your best lacrosse. When you’re nervous of making mistakes and what the response from the coach will be, you’re not playing your best lacrosse. Then again, do we have three preseason All-American attackmen like last year [at Albany]? No, but we don’t need to.”
Instead, Gleason inherits a program that finished second to last in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference last year and is a long ways from three NCAA tournament appearances between 2009 and 2014.
Leading scorer Chris Robertson, a Second Team All-MAAC player in 2018, has graduated, and three of six double-digit scorers return. Gleason said “three or four” freshmen from a 15-player class he inherited should contribute right away. Meanwhile, his first true recruiting class won’t come until 2020, with the Class of 2019 in flux upon Svec’s departure. Gleason said he plans to increase recruiting efforts on Long Island and re-open that Catholic school pipeline.
Reilly will have graduated by the time those labors come to fruition, but he feels this new, youthful coaching staff (including former Albany assistant Derrick Eccles and Robert Morris assistant Tim Cox) will go a long way in reviving the program.
“It makes a difference with a younger [coaching] group leading the way,” Reilly said. “It really does make a big difference because they can relate to us and aren’t that far removed from their own playing careers either.”
As Gleason’s style takes root, the reality is Siena has a small senior class. The current seniors entered as 11 freshmen, but only five remain, with a sixth transferring in from Assumption College. They’ve gone 9-30 across their first three seasons, and entered the program two years removed from an NCAA tournament appearance and MAAC title.
Things, simply, haven’t panned out.
“When you have a senior class that’s stuck through it all together and wants to do well, it says a lot,” Reilly said. “It goes from the juniors to the sophomores to the freshmen. When they see that leadership, especially with this new coach and staff and style of play, I think we can do a lot. We’ve had the talent over the years.”
So what’s a realistic aim for Siena during its first year under Gleason? That’s the million-dollar question — one where he points to how no team has dominated the MAAC. In fact, the last repeat champion was Providence College in 2006 and 2007, but it’s now in the Big East.
That means making the playoffs and seeing what happens from there. It’s not a program in need of an overhaul, Gleason stressed, but perhaps just a new outlook and approach.
“Once you get to the playoffs it’s anyone’s game,” Gleason said. “Our first goal is to make the MAAC playoffs. That’s something that we’re capable of and maybe going far. That’s yet to be done with this group of guys.”