This article appears in the April Midwest edition of USA Lacrosse Magazine. Join our momentum.
Mark Greaney has become the Johnny Appleseed of lacrosse in Michigan, crisscrossing the state since the fall to spread the game to new communities.
Last September, Greaney’s Premier Lacrosse Group (PLG) launched its Play250 initiative, hosting low-cost introductory clinics for boys and girls in grades 3-8.
Based in Ann Arbor, PLG targeted five Michigan communities — Detroit, Canton, Lansing, Livonia, and Ann Arbor — as well as Toledo, Ohio, where Greaney collaborated with local partners to host the clinics.
“We wanted to make a difference in our own region by providing new lacrosse opportunities,” Greaney said.
Play250 hosted three clinics in each location, usually on successive Sundays, where kids learned fundamentals like throwing, catching, scooping and shooting. Each participant received a stick and a ball that was theirs to keep. The cost was $20 per player.
Greaney targeted 250 as the total number of participants, and thus, sticks that would be given away. His goal was met when PLG wrapped up the last of the clinics in Ann Arbor in February.
“We’re thankful to the great network of people that helped get so many kids involved,” Greaney said. “We succeeded in making an impact.”
Originally from Troy, a northern suburb of Detroit, Greaney’s passion for the game goes back to seventh grade.
“I remember my first stick and the time I spent trying to figure out how to use it,” he said. “Now, we’re trying to help other young players to fall in love with the sport.”
After a successful high school career at Detroit Jesuit, Greaney eventually became a four-year collegiate starter at Wheeling Jesuit in West Virginia, where he finished his career as the NCAA Division II team’s all-time scoring leader with 161 goals.
Greaney’s coaching journey began almost immediately after college. He traveled overseas with the English Lacrosse Association before returning stateside for coaching stops at Michigan, Arizona and Detroit Country Day. Along the way, Greaney also served as president of the Michigan Youth Lacrosse Association.
“I really have a passion for coaching,” he said. “I considered what I love to do the most before launching PLG in 2012.”