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University of Richmond

Richmond, VA 23173
Virginia Northeast
Private Small Developing team

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Anne Harrington

Anne Harrington was named Head Coach in May of 2022 after spending six years on the Spiders’ staff, including 2022 year as interim head coach. During her time at Richmond, the Spiders have recorded a 95-24 (.798 winning percent) mark that includes a 44-7 (.863) record in Atlantic 10 Conference play. She has been part of the program that has won three regular season A-10 titles and made three NCAA Tournament appearances in 2018, 2019 and 2023. Harrington led the Spiders to their first ever NCAA Tournament win in 2023 against Marquette. She ended her 2023 season ranked as the No. 6 Division I Women’s Lacrosse head coach in the country based off of active win percentage.


Harrington led the Spiders to 17 victories in 2023, the most for the Spiders since 2019. Richmond finished the regular season ranked No. 14 in the Inside Lacrosse/IWLCA Division I poll. She led the Spiders to the No. 2 seed in the Atlantic 10 Conference Tournament where the Spiders claimed the title for the third time in program history with Harrington on staff. Following her success in the conference postseason, Harrington marched her squad to Chapel Hill, NC. where Richmond defeated Marquette in the programs first ever NCAA Tournament victory.


With much success flowing through the end of the season for Harrington, multiple of her Spiders ended the season with major awards. With the help of Harrington, Lindsey Frank went on to claim the Atlantic 10 Most Outstanding Player award, All-Tournament Honors, First-Team All-Conference honors, USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American Honors, IWLCA All-American Honors and IWLCA All-Region Honors. Another standout student-athlete in the 2023 season under Harrington was Arden Tierney. Tierney went on to claim Atlantic 10 Offensive Player of the Year Honors, First Team All-Conference Honors, All-Academic Honors, All-Tournament Honors, USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American Honors, IWLCA All-Region Honors, IWLCA All-American Honors and CSC Academic All-District Honors. Sophia DiCenso, the 2022 Midfielder of the Year, also flourished from Harrington’s lead as she claimed First-Team All-Conference Honors, All-Tournament Honors and All-Region Second-Team Honors.


Harrington's Spiders shattered the record books in the 2023 season as they finished the year as No. 1 in the nation for draw controls per games (18.71), the No. 2 scoring offense in the nation (16.52), No. 3 in the nation for points per game (24.00) and No. 3 in draw control percentage (.617). With 17 wins on the year, the 2023 group of Spiders matched the numbers for most wins in program history, achieved the most points in program history (504), scored the most goals in program history (347), achieved the most assists in program history (157), claimed the most draw controls in program history (392) and had the most draw controls in a single game (30). Along with these accomplishments, this group took home 5 Atlantic 10 Conference weekly awards.


The Spiders ended their year with positive numbers at home, on the road and at neutral sites. With a 6-2 record at Robins Stadium, this Richmond group highlighted their competition at home with the win over the No. 7/10 ranked Cavaliers of UVA in double overtime. On the road, Harrington led the Spiders to an 8-2 record, including significant conference wins against Davidson and Saint Joseph’s. With a perfect 3-0 finale on neutral fields, the Spiders won the Atlantic 10 conference title on VCU’s campus and won their first NCAA competition in program history.


In 2019, the Spiders set a new program record with 17 wins while winning their second-straight Atlantic 10 Championship title with a 19-18 comeback in in overtime over UMass. The team competed in its second-straight NCAA Tournament and fifth all-time to finish the year at 17-4 overall. Five student-athletes earned first or second team All-Conference honors, led by two-time Atlantic 10 Defensive Player of the Year Julie Ball, who became the first student-athlete in A-10 history to earn the honor more than once. The Spiders boasted one All-Rookie Team and three All-Academic Team honorees, while Ball also earned IWLCA Second Team All-Region honors for the second-straight season.


In just her second season with the Spiders, the 2018 squad tied a program-best record of 16-4 overall, finished in a tie for first in the Atlantic 10 Regular Season, and took the 2018 A-10 Tournament Title with a 12-11 overtime win over UMass. The squad advanced to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2007, while eight student-athletes earned All-Conference honors, including A-10 Offensive Player of the Year Kim Egizi and A-10 Defensive Player of the Year Julie Ball. Egizi and Ball also earned IWLCA Second Team All-Region honors for their efforts.


Harrington helped lead the 2017 squad to a 14-6 overall record and a runner-up finish at the Atlantic 10 Championship. Nine student-athletes earned All-Conference honors on the year, including A-10 Rookie of the Year Sam Geiersbach, and First Team honorees Kim Egizi and goalie Megan Gianforte.


With the guidance of Harrington, Gianforte became the first rookie to be named the conference's top goalie since 2006, compiling a .499 save percentage and a 9.48 goals against average. Defender Leslie Espenschied was honored as a member of the A-10 Second Team.


A former student-athlete at William & Mary, Harrington played four seasons of lacrosse in the midfield for the Tribe before entering the coaching world.


A native of Alexandria, Virginia, Harrington joined the Spiders after spending the last two years serving as the Annual Giving Assistant at the University of Virginia for the Virginia Athletics Foundation.


Harrington began her coaching career in England, where she worked for two years as a high school teacher and head of lacrosse for the English Lacrosse Association in England.


Following her time abroad, she was the First Assistant Coach at Dickinson College in Pennsylvania for two seasons before taking the role of First Assistant Coach at the University of Connecticut for one season.


She graduated from William & Mary in 2007 with a degree in Kinesiology before receiving her master's degree in Education from UVA in 2014.

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Kady Glynn

Kady Glynn joined the Richmond women's lacrosse program in September of 2021. At Richmond she will work with the goalies and defensive unit. Glynn joins the Spider program after competing in the inaugural Athletes Unlimited professional lacrosse league this summer and two years on the staff at Monmouth University.


Glynn played a large part in the deep 2023 postseason run for the program, claiming her first Atlantic 10 championship title, and leading the team to its first ever NCAA Tournament first-round victory. Working with head coach Anne Harrington to lead the defense, Glynn found success on all levels. Through Glynn's Leadership, senior goalkeeper Emilie Bloyer earned spots on the Atlantic 10 All-Tournament team and CSC Academic All-District list.


Glynn, as one of six goalies competing as part of the Athlete Unlimited league, finished fourth overall with 1,601 total points over 15 games, including serving as a captain for the final six contests. Over 62 periods of action, Glynn made 58 saves, including her final one that forced overtime on the last day of the season (Aug. 22) and collected the eventual win as captain.


As a member of the Monmouth University lacrosse staff, the Florham Park, N.J., worked with Hawk goalies and the defensive unit, assisted in recruiting, planning practices and team travel. Glynn also serves as the 2024 Head Coach for the All Lax Select club program and goalie specialist and as an assistant director with the Gladiator Goalie School.


Glynn played collegiately at Loyola University Maryland, collecting 2019 Patriot League Goalkeeper of the Year and First Team accolades as a senior. She also earned 2019 All-Mid-Atlantic Region Second Team, and Patriot League All-Tournament Team honors and was named to 2019 IWLCA All-Star North Team. Over her four-year playing career, Glynn tallied a 10.57 goals against average with a .474 save percentage, making 482 saves on 1,364 shots faced over 3032 minutes in goal. She also holds a 38-17 career record starting 58 of her 64 games played for the Greyhounds.

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Lindsey Ronbeck

Lindsey Ronbeck joined the women's lacrosse staff in September 2021.


Ronbeck played a large part in the deep 2023 postseason run for the program, claiming her first Atlantic 10 championship title, and leading the team to its first ever NCAA Tournament first-round victory. Ronbeck's offense ended its season as the No. 2 scoring offense in the nation (16.52). Her 2023 group shattered program records such as most points in program history (504), most goals in program history (347) and most assists in program history (157).


With the help of Ronbeck, Lindsey Frank went on to claim the Atlantic 10 Most Outstanding Player award, All-Tournament Honors, First-Team All-Conference honors, USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American Honors, IWLCA All-American Honors and IWLCA All-Region Honors. Another standout student-athlete in the 2023 season under Roonbeck was Arden Tierney. Tierney went on to claim Atlantic 10 Offensive Player of the Year Honors, First Team All-Conference Honors, All-Academic Honors, All-Tournament Honors, USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American Honors, IWLCA All-Region Honors, IWLCA All-American Honors and CSC Academic All-District Honors.


Ronbeck came to Richmond after competing as an attacker in the inaugural Athletes Unlimited professional lacrosse league this summer. She was also drafted 10th overall by the New York Fight of the Women’s Professional Lacrosse League in 2019. Ronbeck has also served as an assistant coach at American University, in Washington, D.C., for the past two seasons where she coached the program’s first InsideLacrosse All-American honoree.


Ronbeck, the three-time Tewaaraton Watch List honoree (2017, ’18, ‘19), is one of the most prolific women’s lacrosse athletes to have played for the University of Florida. In her four seasons as a member of the Gator offense, Ronbeck tallied 313 points (2nd) on 243 goals (2nd) and 70 assists (5th). As a senior in 2019, she led the squad with 107 total points on 89 goals and 18 assists, all single season program records. She was named first team All-Conference four times, in 2016, ’17 and ‘18 in the Big East and in 2019 in the American Athletic Conference. Ronbeck also has her name in the NCAA record books, ranking in the all-time top-25 in career goals, single-season goals and single-season goals per game.


The Manhasset, N.Y. native earned All-Tournament MVP honors three-straight seasons, in 2017 and 2018 in the Big East and in 2019 in the AAC, and was named the 2016 Big East Freshman of the Year. Ronbeck earned IWLCA First Team accolades in 2019 after collecting second team honors in 2018, as well as IWLCA All-America and IWLCA South Region honors three-straight seasons (2017-19).


Ronbeck also served as a head coach for Long Island Liberty Lacrosse in her hometown from 2015-18 before graduating from Florida in 2019 with her B.A. in English Literature.

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Dan Chemotti

Dan Chemotti is in his ninth season as the men’s lacrosse head coach at the University of Richmond in 2022. Chemotti is the program’s first-ever head coach and has guided the Spiders to unprecedented success for such a young program.


The two-time Southern Conference Coach of the Year, Chemotti as guided the Spiders have three NCAA Tournament appearances (2019, 2018, 2014), in the first eight years of program existence, including back-to-back seasons as Southern conference Tournament champions (2019, 2018). Richmond has won four regular season league titles in its first eight years (no title awarded in 2020) and has been in the conference tournament championship game all six seasons (2020 season impacted by COVID-19). The Spiders are the only program in the country that has appeared in six-straight conference tournament games from 2014-2019.


Chemotti led Richmond to a share of the Southern Conference regular season title and the number one seed in the SoCon Tournament in 2021. The Spiders swept the postseason SoCon awards with Ryan Lanchbury (Offensive Player of the Year), Sean Menges (Defensve Player of the Year), Dalton Young (Freshman of the Year) and his own SoCon Coach of the Year award. The Spiders placed a SoCon record 11 players on the two All-Conference teams, including six named First Team All-Conference and five earning Second Team All-Conference accolades.


Chemotti has led Richmond to at 72-47 (.605) record as head coach, including five years off 10 or more wins. The Spiders have won 80.4 percent (37-9) of their conference games in program history and is an astounding 35-6 (85.4%) record in the seven years in the SoCon.


In the shortened 2020 season, the Spiders finished the year ranked No. 18 in the country with a 4-3 record. The Spiders' three losses all game to nationally ranked opponents in No. 4 Maryland, No. 6 Notre Dame and No. 13 Duke.


In 2019, the Spiders booked their third NCAA Tournament appearance in program history and second-straight by winning the SoCon Championship with a 15-7 victory over No. 11 High Point on the road. The Spiders dominated the Panthers in the championship game and goalkeeper Jack Rusbuldt was named the Most Outstanding Player after allowing 13 goals in the two SoCon games.


Richmond advanced to the NCAA Tournament with the automatic bid and played at No. 4 Duke in the first round. The Spiders gave the Blue Devils all It wanted, out-scoring Duke 4-0 in the fourth quarter before running out of time and falling by a 12-11 margin. Richmond finished the season ranked No. 18 in the country in the final polls.


Sophomores Ryan Lanchbury and Mitch Savoca earned All-America honors last season, becoming the third and fourth All-Americans in program history. Lanchbury set the Richmond single-season scoring record with 72 points and 52 goals. His 52 goals also set the SoCon single-season goal scoring record. He is currently sixth in the nation in goals and 14th in the country in points.


The Spiders placed five members on the First Team All-SoCon squad in 2019. Ryan Lanchbury, Teddy Hatfield, Mitch Savoca, Jason Reynolds and Sean Menges picked up the honors. The Spiders' five First Team All-SoCon selections ties the school record set in 2017, which is also the most in SoCon history, happening for the fourth time in the league's five-year history of men's lacrosse. Additionally, Richmond added to its SoCon-record of 21 First Team All-Conference selections in program history, nine more than the second place team in league history (Air Force, 12 selections).


In 2018, the Spiders won the SoCon regular season championship with an 11-6 overall record and a 6-1 mark in league play. Richmond was a perfect 9-0 at home at Robins Stadium last season, including winning the 2018 SoCon Tournament championship. The Spiders won the tournament title in impressive fashion as Teddy Hatfield scored the game-winning, overtime goal to defeat Jacksonville and send Richmond to its second NCAA Tournament in program history.


The Spiders had their name called in the NCAA Selection Show and made it out of the play-in game for the first time in program history. Richmond went on the road and battled No. 2 Albany in the first round.


The Spiders had six members named to the All-Conference team last year. Joining the First Team, is senior LSM Austin Cates, redshirt-senior attacker Mitch Goldberg, junior attacker Teddy Hatfield and freshman defenseman Jason Reynolds. Freshman midfielder Mitch Savoca is lone Spider representative on the Second Team but in addition, joins fellow newcomer Ryan Lanchbury on the All-Freshman Team.


2017 was a historic season for the Spiders, posting a program record 12 victories and reaching as high as No. 11 in the national polls. For the second straight year, Richmond knocked off a national power, taking down defending national champion UNC, 6-5, in Chapel Hill. In addition, two Spiders earned First Team All-American honors for the first time when Brendan Hynes and Benny Pugh were recognized. Pugh and Hynes also became the first Spiders to ever be drafted into the professional ranks, both being drafted in the Major League Lacrosse draft.


The Spiders saw success again in 2016, their second season in the Southern Conference, posting an 11-5 overall record and a 6-1 mark in conference play. After jumping out to a 4-1 start, the Spiders logged the biggest win in program history, taking down No. 9 Duke on the road, 12-10. The win and another victory over Jacksonville would give the 6-1 Spiders the best start in program history, propelling the team to a No. 18 ranking, the highest in program history.


Shortly after, Mitch Goldberg was named to the prestigious Tewaaraton Award Watch List. The team finished third nationally in scoring defense, allowing just 7.44 goals per game, and first in caused turnovers and clearing percentage for the second year in a row. Junior Brendan Hynes ranked second in the nation in caused turnovers, while junior Ryan Dennis ranked ninth nationally in the same category. Seven Spiders earned postseason honors, led by Hynes and senior Alex Hatem, who were named to the SoCon First Team.


In 2015, the Spiders finished 6-0 in the new league and boasted the nation's second-most stingy defense. The Spiders allowed just 7.44 goals per game, within less than half a goal per game from the nation's leader. Richmond also lead the country in clearing percentage and finished fourth in the country in scoring margin, winning on average by more than four goals per game.


The Spiders boasted the league's Defensive Player of the Year in Brendan Hynes, while goalie Benny Pugh was second nationally in both save percentage (.590) and goal-against average (7.42) for the year. On the offensive side, the second-year program scored 20-or-more goals three times, finished 15th nationally in scoring offense (11.75) and 11th in assists per game (7.25). Richmond earned its first national ranking for the season, appearing at No. 20 in a national poll. UR was among teams receiving votes for the majority of, and in the final poll of, the season. Richmond got above .500 after just two seasons, sitting at 17-16 overall in just two years as a varsity program.


Chemotti did what no other coach in the history of Division I lacrosse was able to accomplish; he took a first-year program to the NCAA Tournament in 2014. He followed that by taking the Spiders to an undefeated league season in the newly-formed Southern Conference in 2015.


After helping lead the Loyola University Maryland men's lacrosse team as offensive coordinator to the 2012 Division I National Championship in 2012, Chemotti was named head coach of the Richmond men's lacrosse team in October of 2012. He spent that school year recruiting and putting in place the tenets of the program which began play in the 2014 season, and it led to the young squad earning an Atlantic Sun Conference championship and berth into the newly-expanded NCAA Tournament.


The Spiders jumped into their inaugural season by hosting No. 7 Virginia on February 8, 2014. Over 4,000 fans packed into Robins Stadium to see the beginning of a magical season. The Spiders did not come away with a win that day, but battled the Cavaliers to a 13-12 loss, which set the tone for things to come.


Despite losing the first five games of the season, the Spiders kept things positive, and finally broke through for a win against Vermont in Durham, North Carolina on March 8. That was the start of a run of four wins in eight games, including a pair of Atlantic Sun Conference games that propelled the young squad into the four-team Atlantic Sun Championship Tournament.


The Spiders beat both the top seed and host Mercer and second-seeded High Point, avenging two regular-season losses and stringing together back-to-back wins for the first time in team history, and the one time that it mattered, as they earned the league's automatic bid to the NCAA. That feat drew a trip to Colorado Springs and a road game at Air Force in the NCAA Tournament.


During his five seasons with the Greyhounds, Chemotti was a part of four NCAA Tournament berths and at least a share of three ECAC conference titles at Loyola. Chemotti also saw 30 players earn all-conference honors and 12 be named All-Americans during his time there.


Chemotti's powerful offense helped lead the Greyhounds to and 18-1 mark and their first-ever national championship in 2012. The Loyola offense ranked eighth in goals per game (12.05), ninth in EMO at .444% and fifth in turnovers per game at 12.84. A versatile and diverse offense, the Greyhounds saw eight players rack up 10 or more goals, three tally more than 20 and three reach the 50-goal barrier in 2012.


The offense of which Chemotti was the architect afforded Loyola players the ability to shoot quickly, whether in transition or settled offense, and garner a high volume of shots. Despite the high number of shots, Loyola's shot percentage did not drop. In fact, the Greyhounds' shot percentage rose from .249 in 2011 to .299 during the team's 18-1 run to the NCAA Championship.


Two members of Chemotti's offense, Sawyer and midfielder Davis Butts, earned All-ECAC First Team honors in 2012, and Lusby was named to the Second Team. Sawyer was a USILA Second Team All-American, and Lusby and Butts earned All-America Honorable Mention.


In 2010, a pair of Loyola attackers, Collin Finnerty and Cooper MacDonnell, were named to the All-ECAC First Team, and MacDonnell picked up ECAC Offensive Player of the Year honors and was named All-America Honorable Mention. In addition to those honors, Finnerty, MacDonnell and Matt Langan split ECAC Offensive Player of the Week honors five times, and freshman attacker Patrick Fanshaw earned ECAC Rookie of the Week laurels once.


During the 2009 season, Chemotti's attack produced three players with 30 or more total points - Shane Koppens (41), Cooper MacDonnell (38) and Collin Finnerty (37) - a mark not accomplished by a Loyola trio since 2003.


The Greyhounds led the ECAC in goals per game (10.43), a category they finished 17th in all of NCAA Division I during 2009. Koppens led the conference in points per game (3.42) and finished his Loyola career 12th in the nation in the category.


In 2008, the Greyhounds captured the ECAC title behind an explosive offense that ranked second in goals per game and points per game (13.43), and first in shooting percentage, in the league.


Under Chemotti's direction in 2008, Koppens was named ECAC Offensive Player of the Year after finishing as the league's top scorer. In Chemotti's three years calling the offense, nine offensive players have been awarded with post season All-ECAC honors (four first-team and five second-team).


In 2007 the Loyola offense ranked 17th nationally in team offense and finished the season with a .640 assist percentage.


A 2002 graduate of Duke University, Chemotti led the Blue Devils to back-to-back ACC Championships during his junior and senior seasons. During his career in Durham, N.C., the Blue Devils reached the NCAA Tournament all four years, advancing to the NCAA Quarterfinals three times. He was selected a team captain his senior year, and was awarded the school's Roy Skinner Award for Dedication and Sacrifice.


Following graduation, Chemotti worked as an assistant coach at Dartmouth College from 2002-2004, working primarily with the offense and the face-off men. In 2004, the Big Green's offense ranked third nationally in assist percentage and 15th nationally in team offense, and in 2003, Dartmouth's face-off percentage was good enough to finish ninth in the country. Chemotti then worked as an assistant at St. John's for two seasons, 2004-2006, before moving to Loyola for the 2006-2007 academic year.


In addition to coaching, Chemotti played lacrosse professionally as a midfielder for the New Jersey Pride and Washington Bayhawks of Major League Lacrosse. He was a member of the Pride from 2003-2008 and the Bayhawks in 2009. Serving as a two-way midfielder for the Pride and Bayhawks, Chemotti has amassed 54 points and 143 ground balls in 69 career games. Chemotti also played one season (2003) in the National Lacrosse League (NLL) for the New Jersey Storm.


Chemotti, a native of Syracuse, N.Y., played high school lacrosse for West Genesee in Syracuse, where he was named an All-American and the Central New York Player of the Year in his senior campaign. He led the Wildcats to a Class A New York State Championship his senior season and to a runner-up finish his junior season.

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Paul Richards

Paul Richards is in his ninth year as an assistant coach and defensive coordinator at the University of Richmond for head coach Dan Chemotti in 2022. Over the past eight seasons, the Spiders defensive unit has climbed its way into a discussion amongst the nation's best each year.


Richards has helped the Spiders have three NCAA Tournament appearances (2019, 2018, 2014), in the first eight years of program existence, including back-to-back seasons as Southern conference Tournament champions (2019, 2018). Richmond has won four regular season league titles in its first eight years (no title awarded in 2020) and has been in the conference tournament championship game all six seasons (2020 season impacted by COVID-19). The Spiders are the only program in the country that has appeared in six-straight conference tournament games from 2014-2019.


Richards has helped Richmond to at 72-47 (.605) record as head coach, including five years off 10 or more wins. The Spiders have won 80.4 percent (37-9) of their conference games in program history and is an astounding 35-6 (85.4%) record in the seven years in the SoCon.


Richards helped the Spiders win the SoCon regular season title in 2021. He guided long-stick midfielder Sean Menges to the SoCon Defensive Player of the Year award and All-America honors. The Spiders led the country in caused turnovers, forcing 10.62 per game in 13 games last year. The Spiders ranked first in the SoCon and eighth in the country in scoring defense, limiting opponents to only 9.62 goals per game. Richmond was third in the country in clearing percentage, leading the league with a 90.2 clearing percentage.


In the shortened 2020 season, the Spiders posted a 4-3 record on the year finishing the season ranked No. 18 in the country. Richmond was 22nd in scoring defense through seven games, holding opponents to 10.57 goals per game.


Richards helped the Spiders win their second-straight SoCon Tournament title in 2019, defeating High Point on the road in the title game. The Spiders' scoring defense ranked 13th in the country, allowing 10.12 goals per game. Their man-down defense was third in the nation at 79.8 percent. Defendere Jason Reynolds earned First Team All-SoCon honors for the second-straight season, starting every game and collecting 34 ground balls. Defender Ray Baran was named to the SoCon All-Tournament Team for his play leading the Spiders to the championship.


Richmond won the Southern Conference regular season and SoCon Tournament titles in 2018 with an 11-6 overall record and a 6-1 mark in league play. During his time at UR, the Spiders are 26-6 all-time in league games. Austin Cates and Jason Reynolds earned All-SoCon honors as leaders of the Spider defense. Cates recorded 46 ground balls leads the Spiders and his 14 caused turnovers rank second. He is universally recognized as one of the best defensive midfielders in the Southern Conference as referenced by his 2018 Preseason All-Conference nod and two prior All-Conference honors.


Reynolds as a freshman anchored the Spider defense that needed to be completely overhauled after losing its entire first unit to graduation at the end of a historic 2017 campaign. He collected 26 ground balls to go with 13 caused turnovers in 14 starts.


In 2017, Richards guided Richmond to the top defensive unit in the country, allowing just 6.25 goals per game, highlighted by a shutdown performance of defending national champion UNC in a 6-5 Spiders victory. Two of the stars of that unit, Brendan Hynes and Benny Pugh, became the first All-Americans in program history, as well as both being drafted in the Major League Lacrosse draft. Pugh was named the SoCon Defensive Player of the Year while leading the NCAA in goals against average and save percentage.


The Spiders continued their defensive success in 2016, finishing third nationally in scoring defense, allowing just 7.44 goals per game. The team also finished first in the nation in caused turnovers and clearing percentage for the second-straight year. Junior Brendan Hynes ranked second in the nation in caused turnovers, while junior Ryan Dennis ranked ninth nationally in the same category.


In 2015 Richmond finished 6-0 in the new league and boasted the nation's second-most stingy defense. The Spiders allowed just 7.44 goals per game, within less than half a goal per game from the nation's leader. Richmond also led the country in clearing percentage and finished fourth in the country in scoring margin, winning on average by more than four goals per game. The Spiders boasted the league's Defensive Player of the Year in Brendan Hynes, while goalie Benny Pugh was second nationally in both save percentage (.590) and goal-against average (7.42) for the year.


Richmond made the jump from 12th in 2014 to sixth in caused turnovers per game in 2015. Richmond also was the second-best in the nation in man-down defense, allowing opponents to score in less than a quarter of their man-advantage opportunities. In the program's 33 games, the opponent has been held to less than 10 goals in nearly half of them (16).


Despite close results in the early going in 2014, it took the sixth game of the season for the team to break through and get a win against Vermont in Durham, North Carolina on March 8. That was the start of a run of four wins in eight games, including a pair of Atlantic Sun Conference games that propelled the young squad into the four-team ASun Championship Tournament. The Spiders beat both the top seed and host Mercer and second-seed High Point, avenging two regular-season losses and stringing together back-to-back wins for the first time in team history, and the one time that it mattered, as they earned the league's automatic bid to the NCAA. The Spiders played at Air Force in the NCAA Tournament.


Richards arrived in Richmond after serving as an assistant coach at Cornell University for the three previous seasons. At Cornell, Richards was in charge of face-offs and substitutions, while also assisting with all facets of the offensive and defensive units. Richards also served as the recruiting coordinator for the Big Red during his time.


During the 2012 and 2013 seasons, Richards helped direct a face-off unit that ranked 14th and 16th in the nation, respectively, with a 55 percent rate. Richards also assisted an offense that ranked in the top-10 nationally the past three years.


Prior to his time at Cornell, Richards spent the 2010 season working as the senior assistant coach and offensive coordinator at Washington College after spending one year as a volunteer assistant coach at Goucher College in 2009.


As a player, Richards was a first-team All-ECAC selection and North-South Senior All-Star at Loyola while serving as a team captain in 2008. He was also named to the preseason Tewaaraton Trophy Watch List as a senior and was tabbed as a 2008 National Strength and Conditioning Association All-American.


Richards finished his college career with 29 goals, 27 assists and 159 groundballs. Following graduation, he was the 37th overall pick in the 2008 Major League Lacrosse Draft and appeared in six games for the Washington Bayhawks.

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