List of college men's lacrosse coaches with 250 wins

This is a list of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) men's lacrosse head coaches by number of career wins. Head coaches with a combined career record of at least 250 wins at the Division I, Division II, Division III, or historically equivalent level are included here.

Coaches

  • * = Active coaches.
  • Statistics current through the 2020 season.[1][2]
Rank Name Years Wins Losses Ties Pct. Teams National Titles
1* Jim Berkman 34 559 65 0 .896 Potsdam State (1984), Salisbury (1988present) 12
2* Hank Janczyk 38 473 148 0 .762 Salisbury (1983–1985), Colgate (1986–1987), Gettysburg (1988present) 0
3* John Danowski 38 418 200 0 .676 C.W. Post (19831985), Hofstra (19862006), Duke (2007present) 3
4* Bill Tierney 36 411 136 0 .751 R.I.T. (1982–1984), Princeton (1988–2009), Denver (2010present) 7
5* Keith Bugbee 37 401 202 0 .665 Springfield (1984–present) 1
6 Dom Starsia 34 375 148 0 .716 Brown (1983–1992), Virginia (1993–2016) 5
7* Steve Beville 32 366 159 0 .697 Colorado College (1989-1998), Vermont (1999-2006), SUNY Cortland (2007-present) 1
8* Mike Pressler 35 365 194 0 .653 VMI (1983), Ohio Wesleyan (19861990), Duke (19912006), Bryant (2007present) 0
9* Bill Pilat 33 355 156 0 .695 Roanoke (1988-present) 0
10 David Urick 32 345 129 0 .728 Hobart (19801989), Georgetown (1990–2012) 10
11 Ray Rostan 37 342 197 0 .635 R.I.T. (1979–1981), Ithaca (1982–1983), Hampden-Sydney (1985–2016) 0
12* Rory Whipple 37 339 212 0 .615 Clarkson University (1980-1986), Hartwick College (1987-1998), Bryant (2000-2006), Florida Southern College (2009-2010), University of Tampa (2012-present) 0
13 Bob Shillinglaw 42 334 320 0 .511 Massachusetts Maritime (1976–1978), Delaware (1979–2017) 0
14 Jack Emmer 35 326 184 0 .639 Cortland State (1970–1972), Washington & Lee (1973–1983), Army (1984–2005) 0
15* Dan Sheehan 23 318 54 0 .855 LeMoyne (1998-present) 5
16* Kevin Corrigan (lacrosse) 32 315 164 0 .658 Randolph-Macon (1985-1986), Notre Dame (1988–present) 0
17* J.B. Clarke 23 305 92 0 .768 Greensboro College (1997), Washington College (1999–2010), Limestone College (2011-present) 3
18 Dick Garber 36 300 141 3 .679 UMass (1955–1990) 0
19 Glenn Thiel 40 299 216 0 .581 Virginia (1970–1977), Penn State (1978–2010) 1
20* Steve Koudelka 24 289 130 0 .690 Lynchburg (1997-present) 0
21 Walter Alessi 43 288 287 0 .501 MIT (1975-2017) 0
T22 Roy Simmons Jr. 27 287 96 0 .749 Syracuse (1971–1998) 5
T22* Steve Colfer 20 287 73 0 .797 Cabrini University (2001–present) 1
24 Jim Adams 34 284 123 1 .697 Army (1958–1969), Penn (1970–1977), Virginia (1978–1992) 4
25 Dick Edell 29 282 123 0 .696 Baltimore (19731976), Army (19771983), Maryland (19842001)[3] 0
26* John Raba 24 281 118 0 .704 Wesleyan University (1997-present) 1
27 Dave Cottle 27 280 115 0 .709 Loyola (1983–2001), Maryland (2002–2010) 0
28 Terry Corcoran 33 279 205 0 .576 Washington College (1983-1994), Penn (1995-1996), Skidmore (1997-2005), Elizabethtown (2006-2013), Wabash (2014-2016) 0
29* Mike Daly 22 270 109 0 .712 Tufts (1999-2016), Brown (2017-present) 3
30* Rob Randall 25 267 149 0 .642 Sacred Heart (1993-1996), SUNY Geneseo (2000), Nazareth College (New York) (2001-present) 0
31 Tony Seaman 29 263 166 0 .613 C.W. Post (1982), Penn (19831990), Johns Hopkins (19911998), Towson (19992011) 0
32 Carl Runk 30 262 161 0 .619 Towson (1968–1998) 1
33 Howdy Myers 31 261 159 4 .620 Johns Hopkins (1947–1949), Hofstra (1950–1975), Hampden-Sydney (1976–1978) 3
34* John Desko 22 258 86 0 .750 Syracuse (1999–present) 5
35 Richie Moran 28 257 121 0 .680 Cornell (19691997) 3
36 Roy Simmons Sr. 36 253 130 1 .660 Syracuse (1931–1942, 1946–1970) 0
37 Renzie Lamb 34 252 184 0 .578 Williams (19892003) 0
38 Jack Faber 33 251 56 2 .816 Maryland (19281943, 19461963) 8

See also

References

  1. "NCAA Lacrosse: Men's Coaching Records" (PDF). National Collegiate Athletic Association. 2011. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  2. "NCAA Career Statistics Database". NCAA. Retrieved August 11, 2012.
  3. Player Bio: Dick Edell Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine, University of Maryland, retrieved July 10, 2010.
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