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University of Tampa

Tampa, FL 33624
Florida Southeast
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Kelly Gallagher

Kelly Gallagher is in her 11th season as the head women's lacrosse coach at the University of Tampa. She was chosen as the program's first coach, being named to the position on Oct. 9, 2012.


Gallagher brings a total of 20 years of lacrosse experience, including coaching stints with Limestone College (2011-12) and NCAA Division I Detroit-Mercy (2008-11).


In her 10th season at Tampa, Gallagher led the Spartans to their highest ranking in the IWLCA Polls at No.2 and finished out the regular season undefeated in the Sunshine State Conference. As the back-to-back conference champions, the Spartans went on to win the SSC Tournament, it’s first since 2019, and won their first-ever NCAA Tournament game before falling in the Quarterfinals. Several Tampa players earned All-South Region and All-SSC selections while Dani Waters, Sarah Hinkle, and Erin Sistek received IWLCA All-American honors. After winning her third SSC Coach of the Year award, Gallagher remains as the lone Tampa coach to earn this title for the program.


2021 saw another shortened season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Gallagher led her team to a winning record of 7-3, finishing in a three-way tie for first in the SSC. Cece Colombo earned IWLCA All-American honors.


In her sixth season as head coach at the University of Tampa, Kelly Gallagher led her team to a season of several firsts. Her team won a program-best 14 games as it finished 14-4 on the 2019 season. She also led her team to the top 5 national rankings for the first time ever, climbing as high as No. 3 (5/3/19). With a 5-1 Sunshine State Conference record, she led her Spartans to capture their first-ever SSC tournament championship, taking down No. 3 Rollins and No. 5 Florida Southern along the way. She was honored as the 2019 SSC Coach of the Year, her second consecutive season receiving this honor. Additionally, for the first time in program history, two of her Spartans, Claire Swanson '20 and Carly Vaccaro ’20 received IWLCA All-America honors, while Swanson was also named conference player of the year. The Spartans 2019 campaign came to an end when they were defeated in the NCAA tournament, the program's first appearance, by the No. 10 Queens Royals. The Spartans finished the season ranked No. 7 in the IWLCA Coaches Poll.


Under her advisory, in 2018, the Spartans finished the season ranked No. 19 with an overall record of 12-6. In the historical season, UT opened competition defeating the No. 11 ranked Rollins College Tars by a final score of 10-6. This marked the first time in program history that the Spartans beat a ranked opponent. The firsts continued as the season progressed and Tampa battled into the national rankings, climbing as high as No. 15 (3/19/18). When conference accolades were announced, Gallagher was named the 2018 Sunshine State Conference Coach of the Year, while one of her players, Bridget Sutter, snagged Sunshine State Conference Freshman of the Year. The Spartans ended their historic season advancing to the Sunshine State Conference Women's Lacrosse Tournament for the third time in program history after finishing third in regular-season play.


Her Spartans ranked among NCAA leaders in draw controls in each of her first two seasons, leading the nation in the category in the first year of existence.


She guided Tampa to a successful inaugural season in 2014, matching up against five nationally-ranked opponents. After guiding the program to its first victory in an 11-9 win over Newberry on March 4, Gallagher led her Spartans to four consecutive victories to conclude the month of March as the Spartans also won five of their final eight games of the 2014 campaign.


SSC Regular Season Championships (4): 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023


SSC Tournament Championships (2): 2019, 2023


All-Americans (14): 2019 - Claire Swanson (IWLCA First-Team), Carly Vaccaro (IWLCA Third-Team), 2020 - Claire Swanson (Inside Lacrosse First-Team), Bridget Sutter (Inside Lacrosse Second-Team), Carly Vaccaro (Inside Lacrosse Third-Team), 2021 - Cece Colombo (IWLCA Third-Team), 2022 - Cece Colombo (USA Lacrosse Second-Team), Madison Birch (USA Lacrosse Third-Team), Danielle Waters (IWLCA Second-Team), 2023 - Danielle Waters (IWLCA First-Team, USA Lacrosse First-Team), Sarah Hinkle (IWLCA Second-Team, USA Lacrosse First-Team), Alex Walling (USA Lacrosse Second-Team), Alyssa Romano (USA Lacrosse Second-Team), Erin Sistek (IWLCA Third-Team)


SSC Player of the Year (1): 2019 - Claire Swanson


SSC Freshman of the Year (1): 2018 - Bridget Sutter


IWLCA Team Academic Award (8): 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022


IWLCA Academic Honor Squad (34): 2014 - Tess Hooker, 2015 - Kaitlin Delaney, 2016 - Jamie Austin, 2017 - Jaime Austin, Amanda Rom, Shannon Sweeney, 2018 - Sarah Bell, Abby Coccagna, Allison Popelar, Shannon Sweeney, 2019 - Sarah Bell, Abby Coccagna, Allie Popelar, Taylor Sisk, Claire Swanson, Mallary Weinsz, 2021 - Hannah Bush, Gianna Colombo, Abigail Hope, Lauren McNeill, Lizzie Pierpont, Genie Santarpio, Alexa Scudillo, Erin Sistek, Bridget Sutter, Samantha Van Buren, 2022 - Hannah Bush, Riley Coleman, Cece Colombo, Emma McLoughlin, Lizzie Pierpont, Abby Selhorn, Erin Sistek, Alex Walling


IWLCA Scholar-Athlete of the Year (Division II) (1): 2019- Allie Popelar


Sunshine State Conference Coach of the Year (3): 2018, 2019, 2023


As the top assistant at Limestone, Gallagher helped the Saints to a 17-2 record in 2012. While advancing to the NCAA tournament, Limestone had three IWCLA All-Americans. The Saints posted the top win-loss percentage in NCAA Division II, and also had five players in the national top-five among statistical rankings.


Hired as the first assistant coach in Detroit women’s lacrosse history, which began play in 2009 as the first such program in the State of Michigan, Gallagher was directly responsible for recruiting nationwide as well as handling the scheduling of practices and games. She also handled training of the team’s goalkeepers and scouting of both UDM’s players and their opponents.


Among Detroit-Mercy’s accomplishments during her tenure was a runner-up finish in the National Lacrosse Conference in 2009 and a semifinalist appearance the following season. The Titans also had nine players named to the NLC All-Conference Team, six All-Tournament selections and the 2009 NLC Attack Player of the Year.


Prior to her time at UDM, Gallagher was an assistant coach at Muhlenberg College from 2006-08. Joining the coaching staff in September of 2006, she helped the team to a 9-7 overall record in 2007 before the Mules posted a solid 11-5 record the following season. While with the Division III institution she was responsible for the development of the goalkeepers, recruitment efforts, the planning of practice and development of offensive sets.


Muhlenberg posted a record of 20-12 over those two years and qualified for the Centennial Conference Tournament in 2008 for the first time in program history. That season, the Mules also posted a team-record 11 wins and had a non-conference wins streak of 22 games through that campaign. They also placed five players on the All-Centennial Conference Team and had a North-South All-Star selection.


In addition to her college coaching experience, Gallagher also gained valuable international experience as she served as an assistant coach with the Haundenosaunee Under-19 World Team at the 2011World Cup in Hanover, Germany. In that role, she helped to develop and prepare the goalkeepers, plan team camps and practices and develop offensive and defensive strategies.


As a player, Gallagher competed for Washington College in Chestertown, Md. from 2003-06. While there, she helped lead the Shorewomen to a runner-up finish in the 2003 ECAC Regional Lacrosse Championship. She started at attack for two seasons and was voted team captain as a senior by her teammates.


A 2006 graduate of Washington College, Gallagher holds a Bachelor’s Degree in history and a minor in political science.

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Caili Guilday

Caili Guilday is in her third season at UT after being hired as the top assistant in the fall of 2018. Caili serves as the defensive coordinator and goalie coach for the Spartans.


Guilday helped led the 2023 Spartans to their highest ranking in the IWLCA Polls at No.2 and finished out the regular season undefeated in the Sunshine State Conference. As the back-to-back conference champions, the Spartans went on to win the SSC Tournament, it’s first since 2019, and won their first-ever NCAA Tournament game before falling in the Quarterfinals. Guilday mentored several Tampa players who earned All-South Region and All-SSC selections including Dani Waters, Sarah Hinkle, and Erin Sistek who received IWLCA All-American honors.


In a shortened 2019 season, the Spartans went 6-1 and Guilday coached the Inside Lacrosse Player of the Year, midfielder Claire Swanson, along with two-time SSC Defensive Player of the Week Bridget Sutter in goal.


In her first season as an assistant coach at the University of Tampa, Caili Guilday helped lead the Spartans to several firsts. The squad won a program-best 14 games as it finished 14-4 on the 2019 season. The squad also received a top 5 national ranking for the first time ever, climbing as high as No. 3 (5/3/19). With a 5-1 Sunshine State Conference record, she helped lead the Spartans to capture their first-ever SSC tournament championship, taking down No. 3 Rollins and No. 5 Florida Southern along the way. Additionally, for the first time in program history, two of her Spartans, Claire Swanson '20 and Carly Vaccaro '20 received IWLCA All-America honors, while Swanson was also named conference player of the year. The Spartans 2019 campaign came to an end when they were defeated in the NCAA tournament, the program's first appearance, by the No. 10 Queens Royals. The Spartans finished the season ranked No. 7 in the IWLCA Coaches Poll.


Guilday, a former women's lacrosse player at the University of Tampa graduated in December of 2016. Since graduating from UT, she has coached lacrosse at the various levels from youth to college. Most recently, she acted as the Interim Head Coach at Millersville University where she had previously assisted. Her primary responsibilities at Millersville included being the Defensive Coordinator and Goalie Coach for the Marauders. However, she additionally acted as a team trainer, operations personnel, and recruiting coordinator.


In addition to her role at Millersville University, Guilday also was influential in helping grow the sport of women's lacrosse through NXT Lacrosse Club. At NXT Lacrosse she served as the camp director and in 2017 was named NXT Coach of the Year.


As a student-athlete, Guilday was the starting goalkeeper and two-time team captain for an upstart Division I Stetson University program. She then transferred to Tampa where she played the 2015-16 season, earning All-Sunshine State Conference while setting Tampa's single-season record for saves and ground balls. At Stetson, Guilday was named All-Atlantic Sun in 2014 while leading Division I in saves, saves per game and ground balls per game. She was named the league's defensive player of the week three times in her career. Guilday also received the league's all-academic honors. In 2015-16, as a member of Tampa, she served as chair of the Team IMPACT Leadership Team.


Originally from Wallingford, Pennsylvania Guilday is excited to be back in Tampa and contribute to a program that she experienced firsthand.

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Sam Scarpello

Samantha Scarpello joined the University of Tampa women’s lacrosse staff as an assistant coach prior to the 2024 season.


She comes to Tampa after serving as the assistant varsity coach/defensive coordinator at Lenape High School. Prior to Lenape, Scarpello was a head coach for South Jersey Select Lacrosse where she instructed clinics for girls K-12 to help improve their skills and awareness.


A standout scholar-athlete for Rutgers University women’s lacrosse team, Scarpello was a two-time Academic All-Big Ten selection and was named as the 2018 Big Ten Sportsmanship Award winner. She also served as the team's SAAC representative (2016-2020) and was named captain her senior season.


Scarpello obtained her bachelor's degree in communication, with a minor in labor studies and education, from Rutgers in 2020. She is currently working on obtaining a master's degree in education, with a concentration in elementary education, from Wilmington University.

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J.B. Clarke

J.B. Clarke was hired July 20, 2021, as the second head coach in UT program history. He previously spent 11 years at the helm of the Limestone men’s lacrosse program following 12 years at Washington College and one season at Greensboro College.


In 2023, the Spartans concluded the regular season second in the conference with an overall record of 13-4 and made a repeated appearance at the NCAA Tournament. Clarke coached several Spartans who brought home All-Conference and All-South Region accolades including Tampa standout, Trejan Cannon. In the postseason, Cannon was selected to participate and play with the South Roster in the USILA Senior All-Star Game, making him the fifth player in program history to be chosen to play in an All-Star Game.


In his first year, Clarke led the Spartans to new heights as the team earned the nation’s top-ranking while concluding the season undefeated (21-0) and as NCAA Champions for the first time in program history. He coached eight Spartans to All-American status including Matthew Beddow, who received the SSC Male Athlete of the Year, the National Player of the Year, and the National Defensive Player of the Year awards for 2022. Due to this successful campaign, Clarke and assistant coach, Ryan Sullivan, were recognized by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association as its Coaches of the Year for NCAA Division II.


Coach Clarke, the 2014 and 2015 USILA Division II Coach of the Year, is the all-time winningest coach in Limestone history, posting his 129th win in the Blue and Gold with an 11-9 decision over Merrimack in the 2017 NCAA Division II National Championship Game. He has posted a 164-20 (.891) record over his first 10 years in Gaffney and has guided the Saints to three NCAA Division II National Championships (2014, 2015, and 2017) and six national championship game appearances.


He currently holds the highest career winning percentage in program history, winning 89.1-percent of his games at Limestone, and guided the Saints to nine straight Conference Carolinas Regular Season Championships and eight Conference Carolinas Tournament Titles before the program’s final year in the league was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic during the 2020 season.


Clarke serves on the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Committee and is the USILA Scholar All-America Committee DII Chair. He is the President of the Intercollegiate Men’s Lacrosse Association (IMLCA), and has served on the USILA Division III All-America Committee, the USILA National Poll Committee, and the U.S. National Team Selection Committee during his career.


Following the program’s third NCAA Division II National Championship in four years, he was honored with the Order of the Silver Crescent by South Carolina Governor Henry McMaster in 2018. That award is the state’s highest civilian award for significant contributions, leadership, volunteerism, and lifelong influence within a region or community. The Order of the Silver Crescent is an once-in-a-lifetime achievement.


After the team went 11-8 and missed the NCAA playoffs for the first time in 18 years in 2018, Clarke led the Saints to a dramatic turnaround during the 2019 campaign. Limestone won 20 straight games, capturing both the conference regular season and tournament championships, and advanced to the NCAA Division II National Championship Game for the fifth time in six years.


The 2019 Saints ranked second in the nation in scoring offense and fourth in scoring defense while leading the country in assists, groundballs, and groundballs per game. He was named Conference Carolinas Coach of the Year while the team featured 10 All-Conference selections and five All-Americans.


Clarke reach a pair of coaching milestones during the 2019 season, posting his 150th win at Limestone with a 21-10 decision at North Greenville on March 27, 2019. He would then pick up his 300th coaching win overall with a 15-10 home victory over No. 7 Belmont Abbey on April 10, 2019.


He guided the Blue and Gold to a fourth straight NCAA Division II Championship Game appearance in 2017, and the fifth title game overall during his tenure with the Saints. Limestone registered 20 or more wins for a third consecutive year, and tied its own NCAA Division II record for most wins in a season (21).


The 2017 Saints featured the nation’s top scoring offense with 16.09 goals per game and recorded 10 or more goals in all 22 games this past season. Limestone avenged its only loss of the season when it defeated Merrimack in the title game to clinch its third national championship in four years.


Limestone placed four players on the USILA All-America Team during the 2017 campaign while Kevin Reisman became the first in program history to win the Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award twice. Clarke has mentored the national player of the year now in each of the past three seasons.


In 2016, the Saints set multiple program records, including winning percentage (.955) and points per game (30.18), while setting new NCAA Division II benchmarks in wins (21), points (664), goals (424), and assists (240). Limestone also featured one of the top defenses in the country, ranking third nationally with 7.36 goals allowed per game.


The Blue and Gold won 21 straight games during the 2016 campaign and reached the NCAA Division II National Championship Game for a third straight year. He recorded his 100th win at Limestone with a 19-5 decision over Pfeiffer on April 9, 2016 to become only the second coach in program history to surpass the century mark.


The Saints featured eight USILA All-Americans that year while Mike Messenger was named the 2016 Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award winner as the Most Outstanding Player in Division II. Additionally, Chris Clancy earned the NCAA Elite 90 Award – the third such honor for a Limestone student-athlete under Clarke’s mentorship.


During the 2015 season, Clarke accomplished something that no other coach in Limestone history had before when the Saints won a second straight NCAA Division II National Championship. Not only were the 2014 and 2015 teams the first to win consecutive titles, Clarke became the only coach in program history to win multiple championships.


The 2015 Saints set an NCAA Division II single season record with 20 wins, finishing the year with a 20-1 overall record after defeating Le Moyne 9-6 in the national title game. Limestone started and ended the year at No. 1 in the USILA Coaches’ Poll, and only slipped to No. 2 briefly following the team’s only loss of the season.


The 2015 team featured a program-record eight USILA All-Americans while faceoff specialist Kevin Reisman was named the Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award winner as the Most Outstanding Player in Division II. He led the country in faceoff wins, faceoff winning percentage, ground balls, and ground balls per game while Mike Messenger led NCAA Division II with 55 goals scored to earn First-Team All-American honors.


In 2014, Clarke accomplished something that only two other men had achieved in the history of Limestone men's lacrosse - win an NCAA Division II National Championship. Returning a squad with no previous All-Americans, and only a pair of Preseason All-Americans, the Saints proved to be a team in the truest sense of the word.


The Saints went 19-1 during the 2014 National Championship season, winning 15 straight games to close out the year and culminating with a 12-6 win over LIU Post in the national title game. It was Limestone’s first championship since the 2002 season and the program’s third title overall.


Patrick Sheridan won all 19 of those games in goal for the Saints that season and was named USILA Goalkeeper of the Year while Limestone boasted a total of six USILA All-Americans in 2014.


On March 9, 2014, Clarke earned his 200th career win with a dramatic 8-7 victory over No. 8 Merrimack.


In 2013, his team finished 16-2 overall and delivered Conference Carolinas Regular Season and Tournament Championships for the fifth straight year. The Saints also made their 14th straight NCAA Division II Tournament appearance, defeating No. 8 Seton Hill 16-13 in the national quarterfinals.


Clarke led Limestone to a 17-2 overall record and 5-0 Conference Carolinas mark in 2012 and advanced to the program’s seventh NCAA National Championship Game after defeating an unbeaten Le Moyne program on their home field. Limestone nearly came home with their third title in program history, but fell to Dowling, 11-10, at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Mass.


During his first season with the Saints in 2011, Clarke guided the squad to a 15-2 overall record and a four-week stretch as the No. 1 ranked team in the country. The 15 wins tied the program mark for most wins in a season, and the team was selected to host a national semifinal game for the first time since 2004. Limestone had three players earn USILA First-Team All-American honors in his first year.


Prior to joining the Saints, Clarke served as the head men’s lacrosse coach and Assistant Director of Athletics at Washington College. He guided the Shoreman to a combined 138-63 (.687) overall record in 12 years, becoming the fastest coach to reach 100 wins in program history. He led the program to seven NCAA Division III Tournament appearances and reached the Centennial Conference Championship in eight consecutive seasons. Clarke mentored 28 USILA All-Americans and 78 All-Centennial Conference honorees while in Chestertown.


Before his time with the Shoreman, Clarke was the offensive coordinator for Dave Cottle and Division I Loyola College in Baltimore, Md. The Greyhounds reached the NCAA Division I National Semifinals in 1998 and finished the season ranked No. 2 in the nation.


Clarke first became a head coach at the college level in 1997 when he served one season at the helm of Greensboro College (N.C.). During that season, he turned around a team that went 3-9 in the previous season and transformed it into a team that would go 9-5 and finish in the Top 20 of the NCAA Division III national rankings.


A longtime offensive architect, Clarke applied his skill set as the offensive coordinator at Duke University from 1992-96. During his time in Durham, the Blue Devils won an ACC Championship in 1995 and appeared in the NCAA Division I Tournament in 1994 and 1995. The team recorded the program’s first NCAA Tournament win in 1994 with a 14-9 decision over Maryland.


He has also served as an assistant at The Ohio State University and at Roanoke College in Salem, Va. While with Roanoke, Clarke helped the Maroons reach the NCAA Division III National Championship Game during the 1992 campaign.


In November 2017, Coach Clarke was inducted into the US Lacrosse Connecticut Chapter Hall of Fame.


Career Success


SSC Regular Season Championships (1): 2022


SSC Tournament Championships (1): 2022


National Championships (4): 2014, 2015, 2017, 2022


Major Awards


Division II National Player of the Year (4): 2015 - Kevin Reisman (USILA Raymond J. Enners Outstanding Player of the Year), 2016 - Mike Messenger (USILA Raymond J. Enners Outstanding Player of the Year), 2017 - Kevin Reisman (USILA Raymond J. Enners Outstanding Player of the Year), 2022 - Matthew Beddow (USILA Raymond J. Enners Outstanding Player of the Year)


First Team All-Americans (36): 2000 - J.D. Radebaugh, 2002 - Jon Fellows, 2003 - Stephen Berger, 2004 - Kyle Mitten, Stephen Berger, 2009 - Gordon Cohen, 2011 - Shayne Jackson, Spencer Wims, Jackson Decker, 2012 - Jackson Decker, Shayne Jackson, Jake Ternosky, 2013 - Riley Loewen, Zach Cummings, Jake Ternosky, 2014 - Mike Messenger, Patrick Sheridan, 2015 - Mike Messenger, Kevin Reisman, 2016 - Kyle Rhatigan, Mike Messenger, Kevin Reisman, Tyler Gaulton, 2017 - Kevin Reisman, Colton Watkinson, Charlie Sheehan, 2019 - Larson Sundown, Clark Walter, Tyler Papa, Jordan Stouros, 2022 - Matthew Beddow, Blake Ulmer, Owen Matukas, Sean Nizolek, 2023 - Matthew Beddow, Daniel Fitzpatrick


Academic All-Americans ():


Awards and Honors


National Coach of the Year (3): 2014, 2015, 2022


Conference Coach of the Year (5): 2014 (Conference Carolinas), 2015 (Conference Carolinas), 2016 (Conference Carolinas), 2019 (Conference Carolinas), 2022 (Sunshine State Conference)


Personal


J.B. and his wife Lisa have three children – daughters, Jessica and Samantha, and son, Jack – and one granddaughter, Graycen.


Milestone Wins


100 - at Lynchburg (with Limestone), 8-7, 5/13/2006 (NCAA Second Round)


200 - vs. Merrimack (with Limestone), 8-7, 3/9/2014


300 - vs. Belmont-Abbey (with Limestone), 15-10, 4/10/2019

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Ryan Sullivan

Ryan Sullivan is in his eighth season as a member of the University of Tampa men's lacrosse coaching staff. Sullivan spent his first seven seasons as the recruiting director and defensive coordinator before being promoted to associate head coach in the summer of 2023.


Since taking over the defensive responsibilities in 2020, Tampa is 39-1. In 2022 Sullivan helped the University of Tampa to its first-ever National Championship title.


In 2022 Coach Sullivan coached the LSM of the year in Sean Nizolek, the goaltender of the year in Blake Ulmer, and the defensive player of the year and Division II Most Outstanding Player in Matthew Beddow. Coach Sullivan also coached Owen Matukas to first-team All American honors and Christian Borodiak to 3rd team All American honors. In 2022, Sullivan’s defense ranked 7th in Division II, giving up just 8.7 goals per game.


Recognized as the 2022 USILA National Assistant Coach of the Year, Sullivan led a unit that ranked in the NCAA national top-10 in scoring defense, man-down defense, saves and scoring margin. The Spartans were first in the nation in saves, and second in man-down defense. He also served as the recruiting director for the program's first national championship team.


In 2021 (10-1) coach Sullivan led his defense to 7th?in Division II in scoring defense, giving up 7.82 goals per game.


In the fall of 2019, Sullivan took over defensive coordinator responsibilities. In the Spring of 2020 in a Covid-shortened season (8-0) Sullivan’s defense was ranked 3rd?in scoring defense in Division II.


Sullivan comes to the University of Tampa after serving as defensive coordinator at Ohio Wesleyan for the 2016 season and Mercyhurst University for the 2015 season.?


Under Sullivan's guidance while at Ohio Wesleyan, the battling bishops ranked 7th in division III giving up 6.65 goals per game.


While leading the defense at Mercyhurst, the Lakers ranked second in NCAA Division II in scoring defense, allowing an average of 7.1 goals per game, in 2015.


Sullivan is a 2014 graduate of Mercyhurst, where he played lacrosse for 4 years.?During his career, the Lakers won one national championship, reached the national championship game twice, advanced to the national semifinals 3 times, and were in the national quarterfinals all 4 years.? He was a 2-time all-conference selection, served as team captain, and played on 2 conference championship teams.


Sullivan is a native of Pittsford, N.Y.

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