75years 75years - Phillips Exeter Academy
Transcription
75years 75years - Phillips Exeter Academy
Picking Up Stick ZIG WRONSKY the Exeter Celebrates 75 Years of Varsity Lacrosse By Brian MacPherson ’02 ne afternoon, Nino Scalamandre ’80 found himself on a lacrosse field in an Exeter uniform. OK, that’s not entirely true. He found a part of himself. The tip of Scalamandre’s right index finger was cut off by a stick check in a game against Deerfield Academy in 1980. He had taken a shot—scored a goal even—only to discover a defender’s stick had sheared off his fingertip. Play stopped as both teams scoured the field. Eric Bergofsky P’98, P’02, in his second year as the program’s head coach, found the piece of skin.“Nino, I don’t think this is going to be any use to you,” Bergofsky said. Less than two weeks later, his finger still bandaged and bloodied, Scalamandre scored four goals in another game. “He just wasn’t going to be denied,” Bergofsky reflects. “He was such a tough kid.” Scalamandre’s goals clinched a 5-4 win over Andover, a team the Big Red had lost to in 14 of the teams’ last 15 meetings. All of those losses were at the hands of an Exonian and former captain of Exeter’s lacrosse team—Bob Hulburd ’38. In 1956, Hulburd took over the foundering Andover program, one that had suffered 26 defeats against Exeter in the first 30 years of play, and turned it into a perennial power. The 1980 victory over Andover marked a reversal of fortunes for the Exeter lacrosse team. Deerfield had beaten the Big Red five years in a row prior to Scalamandre’s senior year, and college junior varsity teams had won eight straight against Exeter prior to that season. “We used to get slaughtered regularly by everybody,” Scalamandre says. O YEARS 28 The Exeter Bulletin spring 2009 LACROSSE STICK GRAPHIC, WIKIMEDIA 75 Now, as it celebrates its 75th anniversary, Exeter is considered a dominant force in New England Division I prep school lacrosse.The resurgence of the boys varsity team has yielded 25 winning seasons out of the last 29 and a winning percentage of over 65 percent. This spring, Exeter varsity lacrosse turns 75. Beginnings ica lacrosse players from the boys and girls Modern lacrosse is a team sport in which 10 players on each side use a stick with a mesh pocket at the end to pass, catch, carry and shoot a small rubber ball at a goal. Considered America’s first sport, lacrosse evolved from a game played by dozens of North American Indian tribes. A game could last for two to three days, involve 100 to In the span of its history, PEA has produced dozens of high school and collegiate All-Amerteams, yet the sport remains accessible to Exonians from a variety of athletic backgrounds. spring 2009 The Exeter Bulletin 29 (Above) PEA’s first official lacrosse team the direction of Coach Norman Hatch. (Below) Nino Scalamandre ’80 fends off an opponent. Scalamandre scored four out of five goals in the 1980 win against Andover. Varsity Takes the Field It is difficult to trace the presence Exeter lacrosse had on campus between its initial adoption and the formation of the varsity program. Likely, student interest in the club sport waxed and waned.A September 23, 1883, Exonian op-ed reads:“We are glad to see that the lacrosse spirit has been revived in the school, and that steps have been taken to make it an assured and permanent success. All that is now necessary is a little more enthusiasm in the school at large, and a more generous individual support.” Exeter lacrosse eventually found that support in Norman Hatch ’29 (Hon.); P’44, P’49, an instructor in Latin who began teaching at the Academy in 1923. In 1933, “Hatchie,” who had lettered in lacrosse at Harvard in 1921, established an informal lacrosse program.Two years later, he coached the first varsity team to a 5-2 record, with a pair of wins over the University of New Hampshire freshman team and a win over Andover. Under Hatch—and later under language instructors Bob Kesler ’47 (Hon.); P’58, P’60, P’67 and Alan Vrooman ’50, ’52 (Hon.)—most players took up lacrosse as part of the school’s extensive club program. Hatch, who coached at the club level after three years as varsity coach, identified and trained the best club players for the varsity team. This became a standard practice through the 1940s and ’50s—and one that 30 The Exeter Bulletin spring 2009 PEA ARCHIVES (2) began its season in the spring of 1935 under 1,000 players, and encompass several miles between goal posts, as players used sticks to catch and toss a deerskin ball to their teammates. French Canadians were the first European settlers to adopt the sport, which they began to play in the early 1800s, naming it after a French stickball game called jeu de la crosse. In 1856, the Montreal Lacrosse Club established the first written rules of the game, which helped standardize field dimensions and the number of players. By the 1870s, lacrosse was being adopted and played on college campuses in the United States. In a letter printed in The Exonian on September 23, 1882, the writer claims, “Andover seems to be getting the start of us in this popular game. Last year a club was formed there and several games were played. . . . A club has been formed at Williston as well as Andover, and surely Exeter don’t [sic] want to be behind in any athletic interest.” The following Saturday’s Exonian reads, “The suggestion made by Dr. Perkins that the game of lacrosse be introduced in the school was very favorably received, and it looks now as if the project was sure of success.” With an initial membership of about 50, Exeter became one of the first secondary schools in the nation to offer lacrosse as a club sport. It would not be until 1935 that the school officially recognized it as a varsity sport. PEA ARCHIVES BRADFORD HERZOG was extremely successful. Dur ing Kesler and Vrooman’s coaching tenures, Exeter had seven undefeated seasons and another seven seasons where only one game was lost between 1938 and 1961. During that time, many graduates went on to play for Ivy League teams like Princeton and Yale, and 23 of those players were named to college All-America lacrosse teams. One such player, Stewart Lindsay ’52, grew up in the lacrosse hotbed of Baltimore, MD. Lindsay had a stick in his hand in grammar school and became Exeter’s first star. “[Coach] Kesler,” Lindsay remembers with a chuckle,“said I was the first ringer he ever had.” Lindsay went straight to varsity and never played for a lacrosse club at Exeter, but he could tell how important clubs like that were to students. “Because of the really good club program… quite a few didn’t make the varsity until their senior year. But they were well-grounded in the fundamentals” says Lindsay, who later starred at Syracuse and earned a place in the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame. The fundamentals, at first, were all coaches worried about. Lindsay held the school record for goals in a career (100) for almost half a century and the school record for goals in a season (49) for even longer than that—in large part because only a few of those who followed had his depth of experience.A lacrosse boom in the United States, in which youth participation in the sport would grow 500 percent in less than a decade, was still more than 40 years away. Even Bergofsky, who became head coach of the boys program in 1979, didn’t pick up a lacrosse stick until he was 13—and he was from Baltimore. He just happened to grow up in one of the few city pockets lacrosse hadn’t permeated yet. Bergofsky picked up the game when he joined a boys club and took to it immediately. He played at Johns Hopkins University for four seasons, winning a share of the national title in 1970 and reaching the final of the NCAA lacrosse tournament in 1972, the second year of the tournament’s existence. Five years later, he arrived at Exeter as a math instructor and an assistant lacrosse coach. A year later, he became the eighth head coach of the boys teams, a position he still holds. The first Exeter girls varsity team was formed in 1972, the year after the Academy went co-ed. Unlike the boys sport, there is seldom rough contact between players, and protective eyewear wasn’t introduced until 2002. A Game for Everyone The girls varsity program was introduced in the spring of 1972, a year after women were first admitted to the Academy as day students. Most prospects for the boys lacrosse team had grown up playing sports like basketball or soccer. Before Title IX (the 1972 U.S. legislation that mandated equality for funding of sports for boys and girls), however, many girls had no easy access to team sports. “Back then, we were just hoping for kids who had some agility and could hold on to a ball,” says Kathy Nek- (continued on page 100) spring 2009 The Exeter Bulletin 31 Picking Up the Stick (continued from page 31) ton P’85, P’98, who became head coach of the girls lacrosse team in the spring of 1974. The October 1972 issue of The Phillips Exeter Bulletin gave a positive summary of the program’s debut: “Despite losses to Abbott Academy, the girls lacrosse team, coached by Karen Timmer, had a good season and gained much experience that will help the squad next year. The team displayed spirit and talent in victories over St. Paul’s and a 13-3 crushing of Sacred Heart.” According to Nekton, girls lacrosse was, at first, “very much a private-school sport. . . . I hesitate to say this the way it’s going to sound, but it was acceptable for ladies to play field hockey and lacrosse.” Rosabelle Sinclair, an alumna of St. Leonards in Scotland—a private school where lacrosse was first played by girls in 1890—introduced the sport at Bryn Mawr School in Baltimore in 1926. She advocated for the sport’s acceptance in the United States because she felt it was,indeed,ladylike: a non-contact activity that preserved a girl’s femininity and grace. Perceptions about women in sports have since evolved, but the nature of girls lacrosse remains largely the same. Protective eyewear was introduced in 2002, but no other pads are worn. Boys lacrosse players, on the other hand, have worn gloves and helmets since the sport’s inception; elbow and shoulder pads have been worn for decades. As girls lacrosse began to grow in popularity in the United States, stars began to emerge on Exeter’s varsity team. Sarah Nelson ’90 and the Holleran sisters— Demer ’85, Jenny ’86 and Lauren ’91— were among the first. Nelson played in three Women’s Lacrosse World Cups and coached the Harvard University lacrosse team for four seasons, and Lauren Holleran was named first-team All-America three times in her career at Dartmouth College. “Exeter, at that point, had a strong team,” Nelson says of her time with the Big Red. “I was shocked that I was lucky enough to make the team. I was surprised. . . .The kids who were interested in playing weren’t just interested in playing— they were interested in being good.” 100 The Exeter Bulletin spring 2009 Nelson, unlike most of her teammates at the time, had played lacrosse before, and this has continued to be the exception rather than the rule. Some of Exeter’s best female players in recent years—Amelia Wesselink ’04, a soccer and basketball star, and Ashley Hines ’05, a lifelong field hockey player—never played lacrosse before their first spring at Exeter. “It’s not all that hard of a sport to pick up,” Nelson says. “The biggest hurdle is being able to catch and throw the ball. You’d be surprised how quickly you can pick it up and go on to have a great career.” Both Wesselink and Hines found their niche on the defensive end—the most natural fit for strong athletes who have little experience with the sport. “There was always a place on the field for a girl who knows how to stay with somebody [on defense],” says Nekton. “You just hope she doesn’t have to carry the ball too often until she learns stick work a little more.” That wasn’t a problem for Wesselink and Hines. Wesselink eventually walked on to the lacrosse program at Division I Georgetown; during her senior season in 2008, she started all 19 of the Hoyas’ games. Hines, meanwhile, walked on at Division I Dartmouth, where she was elected a team captain this spring for her senior season. Lessons that Stick Greg Donohue ’01 had played baseball his entire life but he opted to give lacrosse a try, thanks to the urging of some of his buddies in his dorm, and on the football and hockey teams. “A couple of guys in Webster played, and I’d pick up their sticks and joke around with them,” Donohue says. “They’d laugh because I didn’t know what I was doing. I had no stick skills whatsoever.” Donohue’s first start—on defense, naturally—came midway through his prep year in 1998 against Pinkerton Academy, probably the best prep school team in New Hampshire, and a team that had beaten Exeter by a 10-1 score the year before. Bergofsky and his winless Big Red team devised a game plan in which they would spread out around the field to force the Pinkerton defense to follow suit, making it more difficult to double-team Exeter players. With defenders unable to help one another, Michael Saraceni ’00, who would become Exeter’s all-time leader in goals and assists for a single season, scored three of his four goals in the second quarter as the Big Red forced a stunning 10-8 upset. That same core of Exeter players would go 13-4 the next season and 15-3 the season after that, setting a school record for wins in a season, and setting the stage for the best decade in Exeter lacrosse’s 75-year history. In the past 30 years, 26 varsity players have been named High School All-Americans, and roughly 20 graduates, at any given time, play on college lacrosse teams at Division I schools like Harvard, Princeton, and Dartmouth, and top Division III schools like Middlebury, Bowdoin and Tufts. Twelve alumni have also been named to College All-America teams since 1980. For Donohue, a two-time college AllAmerican who grew up thinking lacrosse was just a sport for those who couldn’t hack it as baseball players, the Pinkerton game was a big turning point for him. “It was a steppingstone,” Donohue says, “that put the thought in our minds that we could be good one day if we worked at it. . . . I remember it was the first game that we won, the first time we felt like a team that year, and the first time I got excited about lacrosse.” Seventy-five years ago, Exeter and Andover met for the first time to play varsity lacrosse. Exeter won with a score of 96. This season, as the Big Red team celebrates three-quarters of a century, the two schools will face off again on Friday, May 22, at 7 p.m. at Phelps Stadium.The series record stands at 36-37-1 after 74 contests. Much has changed in the years since Hatch brought his first varsity team out onto the Exeter field, but luckily the sport itself remains unchanged—accessible and exciting for anyone who chooses to pick up the stick. For team and player statistics and more images of the boys varsity lacrosse team, visit www.exeter.edu/lacrosseboys.