Haugen’s initial season at Johns Hopkins in 1997 didn’t look like he was headed towards a Hall of Fame career. He struggled through that first season — one of the only regrets in his lacrosse career — finishing with just eight goals and five assists.
But he worked hard in the summer of 1997 to improve his game and bulk up, kickstarting a remarkable three-year run with the Blue Jays. His speed and ability to shoot with both hands helped him become a three-time first team All-American — one of just four Blue Jays middies to accomplish the feat.
A natural righty, he worked tirelessly to develop a left-handed shot.
“It got to the point where I used my left so much, I almost became a lefty, because I was so comfortable going to my left hand,” he said. “It was just a matter of dedicating myself to ‘Hey, these are the shots I’m going to get in the game and this is what I have to work on.’”
He finished his Hopkins career with 85 goals and 23 assists — at the time, third in school history for goals scored by a pure middie. He graduated in 2000 and entered straight into the newly founded Major League Lacrosse, helping the Long Island Lizards to two league championships.
But what he may take the most pride from was his time with the 2006 U.S. national team. Already a gold medalist on the 1996 U19 U.S. team, Haugen set out to make the senior team.
Meanwhile, his father was fighting multiple myeloma, a form of cancer that causes cancer cells to develop in the bone marrow. While Andy Haugen received treatment, his son went through the U.S. tryout in the heat of the summer.
Nothing in his lacrosse career gave A.J. Haugen more pride than telling his father he’d made the 2006 team.
“I wanted to make that team for him,” he said. “To go into that hospital room and to let him know that it happened was absolutely incredible. You set goals, but that was one thing I really wanted to do for him because I know how much it meant to him to see me play on that team.”
And he brought more good news to his father earlier this year — he made it into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame. He’s still making his father proud, years after his playing career ended.