Created in 1957, the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame seeks to honor the best of the best. Players, coaches, officials and game contributors who have shaped and pioneered the sport since its early origins in the United States are among the over 400 enshrinees.
Saturday evening, nine new inductees will join this group as they are officially welcomed into the Hall of Fame. Hosted by US Lacrosse and sponsored by RPS Bollinger Sports & Leisure and the Markel Insurance Company, the festivities will take place at The Grand Lodge in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The event is sold out.
This year’s inductees – four men and five women - represent virtually all levels of play. Their achievements include excellence in high school, college, national and international lacrosse.
The Class of 2018 features Kevin Cassese, Leigh Buck Friedman, A.J. Haugen, Alex Kahoe, Phyllis Kilgour, David Morrow, Ryan Powell, Denise Wescott, and Tami Worley Kirby.
“I Iove the sport of lacrosse and can honestly say that I gave everything that I had to it. And yet, this sport has given me so much more,” Haugen said. “The friendships that I made, the places I got to visit, being able to compete at the highest levels, and being able to represent this country were honestly reward enough for playing this great game. So to be honored like this is truly incredible.”
All four men and two of the women’s inductees represented the United States in international competition during their careers.
Morrow won world championships with Team USA in 1994 and 1998, while Haugen, Powell and Cassese each represented the U.S. men during the 2000s. Friedman was a member of the women’s 1975 undefeated touring team in Great Britain. Kahoe spent eight years in the national team program.
“When you get the opportunity to be around the best of the best that our sport has to offer, and I’m not just talking about players, but also support staff and coaching staff and administrators, it makes you a better person,” said Cassese, who now serves as men’s head coach at Lehigh University.
Tami Worley Kirby, who won two national championships at Penn State in the 1980s and played on four national semifinal teams during her college career, says that there’s no secret formula for success.
“Believe in yourself and believe in your dreams. If you believe it, you can achieve it,” she said. “Work hard and be the best that you can be, and you will get places. Stay positive, because things will happen along the way, but that’s okay. Learn from them and keep moving forward.”
One of the other common threads among this year’s inductees is their passion in giving back to the game. In addition to success as players, many of them have transitioned into coaching and teaching.
Wescott, who has coached college teams for over three decades, has also served as a lacrosse clinician around the world, visiting 18 different countries to help teach the sport.
“It’s not just about your school and what’s going to make you better,” she said. “How can we make lacrosse grow and how can we make lacrosse better? We take care of each other. It’s a small enough sport that we have to be more globally thinking. To know that you’ve helped change what the world of lacrosse looks like is overwhelming.”
Upon induction, each inductee will have a plaque in their honor added to the Hall of Fame gallery in the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame & Museum, located at US Lacrosse Headquarters in Sparks, Maryland.