AN AUSTRALIAN LACROSSE ICON, Sue “Melli” Sofarnos died unexpectedly Sept. 19, 2020. She had just returned from an ocean swim and parked her car to drop off flowers for an elderly friend when she had a heart attack. She was 59.
Sofarnos played on five World Cup teams. She made the All-World team in 1982, won a gold medal in 1986 and was a three-time Australian team captain in 1989, 1993 and 1997. Sofarnos stayed on as a coach, serving as an assistant on the world champion 2005 team and leading Australia to a silver medal as the head coach in 2009.
Sofarnos was the general manager of this team — the one for which her daughter will finally play five years after tearing her ACL on the eve of the 2017 games in England.
“I still can’t believe she’s not here, to be honest. How am I functioning? My mom’s dead. It just happened one morning as we were heading to training. How your life can change in an instant,” Hayley Sofarnos said. “If you can ever find a silver lining, it’s in the way our team has come together around that in our shared loss and how we continue her legacy.”
Sofarnos’ legacy stretched far beyond Australia. She competed ruthlessly but loved generously.
On the field, Sofarnos was borderline mean.
“You didn’t want to get in her way,” Dougherty said.
Off the field, goofy as all get out.
“That’s how she did everything. It was passion,” Dougherty said of Sofarnos, whose silly side frequently manifested in spontaneous singing and dancing. “Competing against you, look out, she’s bringing it all. And if you’re partying with her, no doubt, she’s bringing it all.”
In a gesture that would seem almost unfathomable today, Sofarnos invited Dougherty to the Australian team celebration following their win over the U.S. in the 1986 World Cup final in Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. The two rivals struck up a friendship, spending time with each other’s families while on playing tours in the ensuing years. They talked about traveling the world together when they retired and their kids had grown.
Dougherty’s sister, Julie Williams, also played for the U.S. team when Sofarnos was in her prime as a player. They too grew close.
“Sue aka Melli is/was a dear friend,” said Williams, a 2002 National Lacrosse Hall of Fame inductee, in response to an email. “Hard to speak in past tense.”
Sofarnos never left anything unsaid — or unwritten. Hayley has a shoebox full of messages her mother scrolled in her loopy cursive to commemorate milestones or motivate her.
On a post-it note found in her laptop after she died, Sofarnos wrote in red ink, “Why am I here? What difference do I make? Why do I do what I do?” She answered with a series of adjectives others have since used to describe her. “Authentic. Caring. Compassionate. Service mindset.” And in all caps, “COMPETITIVE.”
Dougherty also has a handwritten note from Sofarnos, one wishing her friend good luck in the 1993 gold medal game after the U.S. knocked out Australia in the semifinals in Scotland.
“That is the sport defined,” Dougherty said.