Lousiville women’s lacrosse has its next coach. The school announced Monday that former Canisius and Canadian national team coach Scott Teeter will join the Cardinals program.
The Louisville Courier Journal reported earlier Monday that, just weeks after firing coach Kellie Young amid a tumultuous offseason that saw multiple players leave the program, the Cardinals had offered Teeter that head coach position. Teeter, who had coached Canisius for 16 seasons, accepted the school’s offer.
"We are thrilled to hire Scott Teeter, who has a tremendous coaching pedigree, to lead our women's lacrosse program going forward," said interim director of athletics Vince Tyra in a press release. "We have established a winning tradition, advancing to the NCAA Tournament the last four seasons, and we wanted someone who could help build on that tradition. Scott fits that mold, he's very well known in the lacrosse community, and most importantly, he's been a winner."
Teeter joins a Louisville program that endured a fall season in the headlines.
In August, the team granted the release of nine players including goalie Brittany Read and junior midfielder Meghan Siverson. An additional five players left the program in October and early November.
On Oct. 25, the Louisville Courier Journal reported that a former player Madeline Beck filed a lawsuit against the school, claiming negligence on the part of the lacrosse staff. She said that she was “hospitalized after lacrosse staff forced her to overwork herself during a conditioning activity and athletics personnel failed to provide satisfactory medical care.”
Less than two weeks after news of the lawsuit broke, the school fired Young, who had been the program’s only coach since it began in 2006. She finished her Louisville career with a 106-66 record.
Teeter joins the Louisville women’s lacrosse program looking to clean the slate. He helped transform a non-competitive Canisius program into one of the nation’s most consistent mid-majors, making the NCAA tournament four times in the last seven seasons.
A graduate of Canisius, Teeter led the Golden Griffins to six conference titles and is the winningest coach in MAAC history with 130 victories. He was voted MAAC Coach of the Year on four occasions.