“I loved to win,” Worley Kirby said. “I don’t know if you’re born with that instinct. I was fortunate to be surrounded by awesome teammates and players and they made it easier for the girls that scored goals. They could get you the ball anytime, anywhere.”
Worley Kirby, a member of the U.S. Women’s National Team program for six years and an alternate on the 1993 U.S. team that won in Edinburgh, Scotland, will be inducted in the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame with the Class of 2018 on Sept. 29 at the Grand Lodge in Hunt Valley, Md.
“She was a great all-around athlete,” said MaryAnn Foley Schiller, who will present her at the ceremony. “In terms of a lacrosse player, she was the same kind of player in high school that she was in college. She was steadfast. She never wavered. She was tough all the time, and she was a go-to person. She always got the job done.”
Schiller and Worley Kirby were neighbors growing up, but felt more like sisters after playing field hockey, basketball and lacrosse all through middle school and high school, then reuniting at Penn State for two sports. Worley Kirby had four boys, works as a full-time nurse, coaches middle school field hockey and volunteers as a high school lacrosse coach.
“She has a charisma about her, a spirit, she has a heart that is really pure and honest so she gives in her daily life and she would give on the field,” Schiller said. “She worked hard and it looked effortless. She was always the first. She would never say die. She raised the bar that way. All-around, she’s a winner.”
Worley Kirby was a lacrosse starter as a freshman, something she never expected. But she came in with a drive that carried her to stardom.
“I was always competitive,” she said. “Even growing up. Being the youngest of six, my brothers all played football, my dad coached football, so I would always go to their games. It wasn’t driven into us, but it was part of our lifestyle. We all played sports and it flowed naturally. I was always hanging out with my brothers, and whatever they did I wanted to do. I think a lot of my competitiveness and aggression came from my brothers. We were always roughhousing and playing. We always challenged each other. You grow up like that. It’s easy to be competitive at that level because that’s how we grew up.”