Marr Named Albany Coach by neil on August 23, 2000ALBANY, N.Y. -- Scott Marr, who previously was an assistant coach at the
University of Maryland, has been named head men's lacrosse coach at the
University at Albany, as Director of Athletics and Recreation Dr. Lee
McElroy announced today. Marr, the tenth head coach in the UAlbany
program's history, takes over a position that was recently upgraded to
full-time status.
Marr served on Dick Edell's Maryland staff for six years as both
assistant coach and offensive coordinator. Maryland made five NCAA
Tournament appearances during that period, and was the Division I
national runner-up in 1995, 1997 and 1998. The Terps shattered the
school's single-season scoring record with 236 goals, when the program
captured the '98 Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season and tournament
titles. Maryland's attack has averaged 12.5 goals under Marr's
direction from 1995-2000, while All-Americans Matt Hahn and Andrew
Whipple became two of the most storied scorers in school history.
Marr, 32, began his coaching career as the University of Delaware's
offensive coordinator, where he worked with the school's all-time scorer
Anthony DiMarzo. From 1992-94, the Blue Hens captured three consecutive
North Atlantic Conference championships, and earned a top-20 national
ranking in each season. Marr was also an assistant on the United States
team that won the 1999 World Cup.
A collegiate player at Johns Hopkins University, Marr was an attackman
on the 1987 national championship squad and the '89 national runner-up
team. The Blue Jays garnered four straight NCAA berths during his
career. He received an undergraduate degree in social and behavioral
sciences in 1991.
A native of Yorktown, N.Y., Marr was a high school All-American who
twice led his teams to the state's semifinal round. He and his wife,
Traci, a special education teacher, have two children, Kyle and Jordyn.
In its inaugural NCAA Division I campaign, Albany posted its tenth
consecutive winning season with a 6-5 record, including victories over
Providence and Boston College.
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