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lacrosse tournament; Dates: May 18–June 1, 1974: Teams: 8: Finals site: Rutgers Stadium Piscataway, New Jersey: Champions: Johns Hopkins (1st title) Runner-up: Maryland (3rd title game) Semifinalists: Cornell (2nd Final Four) Washington and Lee (2nd Final Four) Winning coach: Bob Scott (1st title) Attendance [1] 7,728 finals: Top scorer ...
The members of the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame are inducted by US Lacrosse and are enshrined at the ... Washington & Lee University 2017: Sweet, Brooks: Player ...
Washington and Lee has played VMI every year since 1986. VMI is W&L's next-door neighbor in Lexington, VA. From 1988 until 2019, the game was known as the “Lee-Jackson Lacrosse Classic”. The Classic was named after Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson. Lee served as W&L's president from 1865-1870 and Jackson was a professor at VMI from 1851 ...
Lee competes in twenty intercollegiate varsity sports. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cheerleading, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis, and track and field (indoor and outdoor); while women's sports include basketball, cheerleading, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, track and field (indoor and outdoor), and ...
lacrosse tournament; Dates: May 17–31, 1975: Teams: 8: Finals site: Homewood Field Baltimore, Maryland: Champions: Maryland (2nd title) Runner-up: Navy (1st title game) Semifinalists: Cornell (3rd Final Four) Washington and Lee (3rd Final Four) Winning coach: Bud Beardmore (2nd title) Attendance [1] 10,875 finals: Top scorer: Bert Caswell and ...
Johns Hopkins defeated Virginia 12-9 and Maryland beat Washington and Lee 18–5 to reach the national championship game. The win represented Maryland's eighth overall men's lacrosse National Title, but first under the newly instituted NCAA lacrosse tournament format. Bud Beardmore was named USILA Coach of the Year.
The 1980 NCAA Division I lacrosse tournament was the 10th annual tournament hosted by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to determine the team champion of men's college lacrosse among its Division I programs to end the 1980 NCAA Division I lacrosse season.
In 1995, he was named to the NCAA's Silver Anniversary Lacrosse Team, recognizing his place among the best players of the first quarter century of NCAA lacrosse. McEneaney was a 9-11 victim and his jersey number (#10) was retired by Cornell University on April 27, 2002 in memoriam.