Marek Tzagournis prefers to pass.
It’s no coincidence the bulk of his Ohio high school boys’ lacrosse record 447 career points came on assists.
“I like getting other people wide-open shots,” Tzagournis said. “That’s the best thing is just to get people in position for easy goals, making it easy for other people, because there’s a point where you can make it easy for yourself, but I think making it easy for people on your team makes your team that much better and makes you that much more successful.”
Asked about that state record, Tzagournis did what he does best.
The Dublin Jerome senior passed.
Tzagournis readily passed the credit on to his coaches and teammates.
“It just shows the success of not only me, but the entire team over the past three years,” Tzagournis said. “I think it especially helped with the style we play. We played super fast, and our coaches let us play freely.”
Rather than talk about his stellar work commanding the field for the Celtics, the Denver commit immediately credited his record to the fact that their high-octane attack looks to take 60 shots per game. Still, regardless of Dublin Jerome’s pace, what Tzagournis has done is remarkable, and his state record is even more incredible given that the COVID-19 pandemic wiped out his entire freshman season.
Per Celtics coach Andy Asmo, Tzagournis would have started that year and likely racked up another 75 points. Instead, Asmo had to wait a year for Tzagournis’ debut.
It was worth the wait, as Tzagournis helped Dublin Jerome capture its first Division I state title. This year, Tzagournis and the Celtics captured another.
Tzagournis is the USA Lacrosse Midwest Boys’ Player of the Year.
“It was super cool,” Tzagournis said of Dublin Jerome’s 2021 and 2023 state titles. “The first state championship, when we came out of the locker room and we saw so many people there, the entire stadium, one side of the field, and after winning that, you could see the happiness.”
How exactly did Tzagournis break Ohio’s career points record without having a freshman season? Well, he quickly made up for lost time, including a whopping 150 points (62 goals, 88 assists) as a sophomore. Just like that, Tzagournis was on pace to make history.
His early success shouldn’t have come as a surprise.
Tzagournis was born into the sport. That includes his older brother, Chase, starring for the Celtics and earning Ohio High School Midfielder of the Year honors in 2022. That also includes myriad older cousins, uncles and his father, Mike, playing for neighboring Upper Arlington.
That gave Tzagournis a head start, literally, as he began playing the sport a year earlier than most Dublin kids as he played up on his older brother’s teams.