There’s eagerness in Kim Hillier’s voice. She speaks as if time is of the essence. In reality, her time is just getting started.
Hillier, named Drexel’s women’s lacrosse coach on August 5, didn’t enter the summer looking for her first NCAA head coaching gig. She was perfectly content at Stony Brook as Joe Spallina’s associate head coach. The only way she’d leave Long Island, a place where she went to high school and college and spent much of her coaching career, was for the right opportunity.
This one fell into her lap.
“I was blown away going into [the campus visit] with no intentions,” Hillier said. “I was like, ‘I have everything I need right now in my life at Stony Brook.’ For me, it was going to take a lot to take this leap. [Athletic Director Maisha Kelly] came over from Bucknell, and I was her first hire. I felt like royalty walking onto campus with how much of a focus women’s lacrosse was.”
Drexel, then coached by Jill Batcheller, enjoyed an historic 2021 season. The Dragons accrued a program-record 13 wins and danced for the first time in the NCAA tournament. Armed with a high-octane offense, Drexel became a CAA force despite coming into the season as an afterthought.
Batcheller left this summer for Villanova — a dream job of hers, as she told USA Lacrosse Magazine’s Brian Logue — leaving the door open for new leadership of a team returning an enviable wealth of talent from last spring.
“I was never going to take a head coaching job just to say I was taking a head coaching job. It had to be worth my time,” Hillier said. “The depth of this team, it’s insane.”
The 2022 roster is ripe with experience and firepower. Colleen Grady (48 goals, 41 assists), Karson Harris (61 goals, eight assists) and Lucy Schneidereith (58 goals, three assists) return as a one of the more dangerous trios in the sport. Corinne Bednarik (30 goals, 11 assists) will provide further depth in the midfield.
Zoe Bennett, the goalie who influenced Drexel’s postseason aspirations, returns between the pipes after a 150-save campaign. Maura Cissel, a graduate student, transferred in from Arizona State to help fortify the draw — an area at which Drexel already boasted considerable talent with Harris, Hayleigh Simpson and Grace Harding returning.
Taking a page out of Spallina’s book, Hillier was primed to hype up her players. That excitement again evident through the phone.
“The leadership from Lucy Schneidereith, my goodness. She epitomizes the word ‘leader,’” Hillier said. “Zoe Bennett, she’s great. Colleen Grady, being a lefty feeder and dodger, you’re going to see a ton of great things from her. Karson Harris, in my opinion, is one of the best midfielders in the country — and that will be made known this year through her play.”