How helpful is it that St. Bonaventure sits in a lacrosse-rich region?
It’s going to help tremendously. There’s so much lacrosse around the area. That small little area is like an untapped market. There’s not really a lot of lacrosse. They’ve been trying to grow the game there with youth lacrosse. There's lacrosse all around. Theres competition. Obviously, from a Canisius standpoint, a Hobart standpoint, Syracuse — as everyone starts to evolve, you try to find what that right little geographical area is for you, where you can make some inroads.
You can see as the game's continued to evolve and grow, rosters are starting to evolve into areas or have players from areas that maybe you don’t necessarily always go and recruit. Again, we’re going to try to make an impact in the upstate market, absolutely. We’re going to make an impact on the Southern Ontario market. We’re going to try to make an impact in Pennsylvania and Ohio and Michigan. I don’t want to sit there and say ‘Hey, we’re just going to focus on and 90-mile radius.’ But we will focus on that. There’s just too much lacrosse being played and too many good players all over the country and in Canada that if we’re doing the things that we need to do, we can find those guys. That’s the exciting part about this.
Mark Matthews texted me congratulations, which was awesome and I’m happy he did that and appreciated it. He said ‘Hey, maybe I’ll come play for you because I have a year of eligibility.’ I said obviously he didn't and we laughed about it. He was like ‘Good luck with the squad next year,’ I was like ‘I don’t have any players.’ There’s some club lacrosse at St. Bonaventure so I’m excited to coach and see what’s there. There’s just this energy. It’s there. With all the experiences that I’ve had over 19 years and the international experience, having the opportunity to work with guys like John Grant Jr., that whole thing. As I continue to evolve, we have to find those guys, because they had the opportunity to evolve in college, as well. They were dreaming of playing in the NLL and the MLL and internationally. You have to have that goal already in mind, or that marriage won't work.
How would you characterize the attitude toward lacrosse on campus?
Everybody on campus is pumped. It checks a lot of boxes. It’s a sport that in short order, if you fund it correctly, you can get to a level that you’re nationally recognized, and that’s great for St. Bonaventure University. You have the opportunity to recruit and make some inroads maybe in some states and areas that St. Bonaventure, people there aren’t familiar with. From an enrollment standpoint, there’s an advantage to that because more kids are coming to the institution.
Then you’re talking about building an alumni base, which will take a little bit of time. They are excited and ready to go and tackle this vision. Even within all the other sports, what [Athletic Director] Tim Kenney has been able to do there, with a new softball field and upgrading sports in terms of resources. There’s a really nice momentum moving forward. That’s exciting to be a part of. We talk and here’s what they say. They say ‘Listen, if you can just get them to come to campus, they’ll commit. You just have to get them there.’ That’s where I’m just like, ‘yeah, I can build a winner here.’