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Limestone is an established powerhouse in men's lacrosse and has won five national championship titles (2000, 2002, 2014, 2015, and 2017). The Saints have also compiled nineteen Conference Championship titles in (1994, 1999–2007, and 2009–2017).
Travis Gillespie is a two-time Division 2 NCAA champion with the Limestone College Saints where, in 2000, 2001, and 2002, he won three All-Conference, three All-American, and one Academic All-American awards. Gillespie was a member of Team Canada's U19 team where he won a silver medal while playing bigstick.
Jerricho Cotchery is the current head coach. The Limestone Saints football team represents Limestone College in college football. The team competes at the NCAA Division II level as a member of the South Atlantic Conference (SAC). The program has had four head coaches since it began to play during the 2014 NCAA Division II football season.
Lacrosse Soccer Soft-ball Swimming Tennis Track & Field Volleyball Wrestling M W M W M W M W M W M W M W M W M W Allen Yellow Jackets: Allen University: Columbia: SIAC [a] Anderson Trojans: Anderson University: Anderson: South Atlantic: Benedict Tigers: Benedict College: Columbia: SIAC: Claflin Panthers: Claflin University: Orangeburg: CIAA [b ...
He became the second head coach for football for the Limestone Saints, compiling a 9–12 record in two seasons with the team. [12] Furrey joined the Chicago Bears as their wide receivers coach on January 12, 2018, reuniting with New York Dragons teammate and new Bears head coach Matt Nagy. [12]
Nick Carlson (born May 19, 1980) is a former lacrosse player for the Colorado Mammoth in the National Lacrosse League. Carlson was born in the small town of Lantzville, British Columbia, and grew up playing box lacrosse in the Nanaimo Minor Lacrosse Association. [1] [2] He was not introduced to outdoor lacrosse until his junior year of high ...
He was named the CAC Coach of the Year in 1991, 1996, 2002, 2003, and each year from 2005 to 2008. [3] During the 2008 NCAA tournament, he surpassed Army coach Jack Emmer's former record of 326 wins to become the all-time winningest NCAA lacrosse coach. [5] By the end of the 2009 season, he had expanded it to 337 wins.
He was named the National Lacrosse League MVP Award winner of the pandemic shortened 2020 NLL season. [7] [8] For college, Jackson started out playing for Onondaga Community College. With them, he won two NJCAA national titles and was the 2010 NJCAA player of the year. He followed that with two years at Limestone College. [9]