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October 25, 2001
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STAFF Q&A/Penns new lacrosse coach has had a love affair with the game since early childhood. If you dont
pay attention, youre BY LIBBY ROSOF
After 13 years in Annapolis, Md., a small, quiet town, Penns new head coach of mens lacrosse cant wait to explore the city with his wife CeCe and children, John, 10, and Maggie, 8. Hes not just thinking shows and zoo and Art Museum, either. I havent been to South Street yet, said Matt Hogan, 41. I want to see South Street. But first he has to get a house. It needs to be only a short commute away from Penn, and it needs to have a yardroom enough for his kids to play lacrosse. One of the upsides of moving to this area was the way local youth lacrosse is taking off, he said. In Annapolis, Hogan was assistant coach and defensive face-off coordinator for the United States Naval Academy lacrosse team, which finished first nationally in defense in 2000 for lowest goals-against average and was fourth nationally in the same category in 2001. Prior to that he served as head coach at Clarkson University from 1986 to 1988, bringing the team there its first-ever national ranking and its first postseason championship. Q. Why did you become interested in lacrosse? We moved from Lancaster to Connecticut when I was in third grade. And [the schools there] just started lacrosse in the high school. My oldest brother was a senior, so he didnt play. But all the boys, the other six of us, all played lacrosse. We just loved it. We all played soccer or football, we all swam or wrestled, we all did three sports in high school. But we all of us played lacrosse. Its just, I dont know, it s like a disease. You get caught up in it. You talk to people about the lacrosse fraternity or the lacrosse community, its a pretty small one, a pretty special one. Not a lot of people know about it. And its extremely, highly sensitive when youre playing. Q. What do you mean? Q. You mean literally whacked, I assume? Q. What are the prospects of the team youre coaching here? Q. What sorts of things more? I understand that academics are very important here, but I also believe that you can be committed to lacrosse and you can be committed to your academics and you can be successful at both. I dont believe one has to be sacrificed for the other to be good. I tell them all the time, I expect you in the classroom not to be drawing xs and os on your paper, and when youre on the lacrosse field, I dont want you doing calculus problems in your head. Q. Whats on your agenda for them this year? Q. Is there anything you would do differently from your past coaching
experiences? This is a different kind of recruiting than Ive been doing, especially at the Naval Academy. Im recruiting some really smart kids. I like that. Would I do things differently than Ive done in the past? No, not so much. A lot of the philosophies I think you bring with you are the same. Q. What are your impressions of Philadelphia? Q. I can tell you dont come from New York.
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