As a
Jesuit university, Fairfield shares a unique historical connection to the discovery of modern-day
lacrosse.
Jesuit missionaries first witnessed the game of "baggataway" being played amongst
Native Americans during the 17th century. According to histories of the game, it was
Saint John de Brebeuf S.J., a French Jesuit missionary in Canada, who named the present-day version of the Indian game
lacrosse because the stick used reminded him of a bishop's
crosier, pronounced
la crosse in French. Saint John de Brebeuf, S.J. is memorialized at Fairfield University with the #1 de Brebeuf Townhouse Unit named in his honor.
Dawn of the Stags The Fairfield Stags men's lacrosse program first began in 1973 as a club team. Future Fairfield University Athletic Hall of Famer Will Mraz was a founding member and the offensive leader of the inaugural club team. The first coach of the Fairfield University Lacrosse Club was Ken Gilstein, Cornell '70, who coached the team during the 1972, 1973, 1976 and 1977 seasons. It was led by standout players Bob Rupp, and John Hughes in the 70s and John Callegari, future Fairfield University Athletic Hall of Famer Hugh "Skeets" Coyle, Joe Sargent, Mike Hone, Kevin Kuryla and Rich MacDonough in the 80s, the club team established itself as amongst the best in New England. In 1987, the team had an undefeated 11-0 season and won the New England Club Championship.
Red Stags rising Fairfield elevated the lacrosse program to NCAA Division I in 1993 with Tom McClelland at the helm. The Stags first victory as a varsity program came in its very first game with an 11-6 defeat of a visiting St. Joseph's team. In 1996,
Ted Spencer took the helm and Fairfield became a founding member of an eight-team
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) lacrosse league. With
Ted Spencer as coach, the team went undefeated in the first year of MAAC lacrosse league play followed by three consecutive league titles (1996, 1997 and 1998) and two ECAC tournament championships (1998 and 1999). In 2000, Fairfield became an independent program. In 2001, the university program joined the
Great Western Lacrosse League (GWLL) paving the way for a new era in Stags lacrosse.
Ted Spencer guided the Stags to great success on the national stage including two
NCAA Tournament appearances (2002 and 2005), two Great Western Lacrosse League Championships (2002 and 2005), and developed 2
All-Americans (
C. J. Kemp and
Greg Downing) along with 21 All-New England selections and 8 Academic All-New England selections.
NCAA Tournament time '07 In 2002, the Stags finished in first place in the GWLL and received the league's automatic bid to the
2002 NCAA tournament. Making the program's first postseason visit, the Stags fell to UMass in the first round. At the conclusion of the season, the Stags were selected as the winner of the Joseph (Frenchy) Julien Memorial Award for Sportsmanship. The 2005 season will go down as one of the greatest in Fairfield history with the Stags' finishing as the 15th ranked team in the nation. Not one for dramatics, the Stags won the Great Western Lacrosse League and earned a trip to the
2005 NCAA Tournament with a dramatic victory over then 12th ranked Denver in the last game of the season. In the 1st round of the
2005 NCAA Tournament, the Stags fell to eventual
2005 National Finalist, Duke. The Stags first official season as a member of the
ECAC Lacrosse League in 2006 proved a successful one with Stags posting a winning league record. Major victories included wins over Harvard and then 16th ranked Loyola. The victory over Loyola marked the program's first win over the Greyhounds and included the now infamous hidden ball goal.
Copelan era Andrew Copelan became the third head coach in the history of the program on August 25, 2008. On April 21, 2013, men's lacrosse set the school record for the defeat of the highest ranked opponent when the Stags upset the then no. 1 nationally ranked
Denver Pioneers 9-8. The previous record was set on March 13, 2010, when the Stags upset the then no. 3 nationally ranked (and eventual
2010 NCAA tournament runner-up)
Notre Dame Fighting Irish 10–8 while competing in the inaugural 'Beating Cancer With A Stick Classic' at
The Kinkaid School in
Houston, Texas. During the 2015 season, the Stags achieved a number of firsts in dedicating the program's new state-of-the-art lacrosse only
Rafferty Stadium and winning the Regular Season Title during its inaugural season in the
Colonial Athletic Association. ==All-time head coaches==