This article appeared in the April edition of US Lacrosse Magazine. Don’t get the mag? Join US Lacrosse today to start your subscription.
Michele DeJuliis loved being a cop. She just loved teaching more.
After graduating as a four-time Penn State All-American in 1998, DeJuliis strove to make a difference.
She joined the Baltimore City Police Department and its SWAT team. Elite as she was, though, DeJuliis missed lacrosse.
“Coaching lacrosse was a lot safer,” she said with a laugh. “My police escapade was short-lived.”
In 2001, DeJuliis founded Ultimate Lacrosse, a club based in Philadelphia and New Jersey for girls in fifth through 11th grade.
The Baltimore native’s sign for a change was travelling north every weekend to train young women with Princeton All-American and 2001 U.S. gold medalist Crista Samaras, who then owned XTEAM, a club later bought by Trilogy Lacrosse.
“I missed teaching,” said DeJuliis, who later became a Princeton assistant for eight seasons. “That’s when I knew this is what I would be doing for the rest of my life. We wanted to move forward with the club because we thought we could make a greater impact.”
Alongside Chris Robinson of M&D, Carol Rose of the Yellow Jackets and Samaras, DeJuliis fostered a club culture that valued multi-sport athletes.
Ultimate Lacrosse’s mission molded into one dedicated to personal and lacrosse development.
“Character counts. Manners matter,” said DeJuliis, captain of the 2009 U.S. gold medalists.