BOB SHAW
A three-time All-American at Cornell, Shaw graduated in 1972 as the highest-scoring midfielder in Ivy League history at the time. He finished his career with 86 goals and 123 points, none more memorable than his game winner with 2:01 left to beat Army in the 1971 NCAA semifinals. The Big Red went on to defeat Maryland for the championship that year — the first for college lacrosse under the NCAA umbrella. Shaw remained active as a club player for 12 years and also played for the world championship-winning 1974 U.S. Men’s National Team.
KYLE SWEENEY
Before Brodie Merrill and Michael Ehrhardt, there was Kyle Sweeney. The three-time All-American at Georgetown and two-time U.S. Men’s National Team member will become just the second long-stick midfielder inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame. He’ll join Steve Mitchell (class of 2014), who put the position on the map at Johns Hopkins in the 1980s. The first Georgetown men’s player to be enshrined into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame, Sweeney still ranks sixth in program with 229 career ground balls. He was a seven-time MLL All-Star, four-time MLL champion and two-time U.S. Men’s National Team member, earning All-World honors and a gold medal in 2010.
DEVON WILLS
Wherever Wills went, she made history. A trailblazer out of Colorado, Wills was a three-time All-American goalie at Dartmouth. She led the Big Green to the NCAA championship game in 2006, then embarked on an unprecedented international career during which she started in goal for three gold medal-winning U.S. teams (2009, 2013 and 2017) and twice earned All-World honors. She was also a field player for the U.S. team that competed in and won the lacrosse competition at The World Games in 2017 — the sport’s first appearance at the multi-sport Olympic-style event. In 2013, Wills became the first woman to sign with an MLL team, earning a spot in training camp with the New York Lizards the following summer. Wills is currently the head coach at Harvard.