ONE MORE SHOT
Harrison got another standing ovation heading into the locker room at halftime, during which a tribute played on the Homewood Field video board. Nat St. Laurent needed several takes to film his portion. “It was hard,” he said.
The Redwoods coach refrained from posting tributes on social media while the season was still ongoing. He wanted to take more time to reflect on his past seven years coaching Harrison. They won a championship together when St. Laurent was an assistant with the Ohio Machine in 2017.
In late July, St. Laurent texted Harrison a photo of his son, Jamarcus, sitting in the grass outside their home in Ohio and wearing a green K18 Redwoods jersey.
“Somewhere right now there’s a young kid dreaming of being the next Kyle Harrison,” St. Laurent wrote.
For a player who has been in the public eye for so long, Harrison has never sought out individual attention. He seems to have an uneasy relationship with it. Whenever the media department at Hopkins received an interview request for a player, they’d stick a little yellow sticker on his locker. Harrison said he’d get one every couple weeks his freshman year. By the following spring, there was one after practice almost every day.
“I just love being part of a team,” Harrison said of the mindset that he cultivated at Friends, where lacrosse teams couldn’t rely on talent alone. “I almost crave it.”
That mentality has made every goal Harrison scored or every time he’s addressed the Redwoods the past three years carry that much more meaning.
“When Kyle speaks in these moments, the guys know that it’s coming from experience,” said St. Laurent, who called Harrison the best leader he’s ever coached. “They know the hourglass is turned over and time is running out. They know how much he loves the game and being in the locker room. It’s just so genuine and sincere, it hits them differently.”
Harrison originally planned to retire in 2020, but after the season was converted to a three-week fully quarantined PLL Championship Series without fans, he decided to give it one more year. His gut told him not to not make any announcements about his plans until this season was over. Several conversations with St. Laurent, former Hopkins head coach Dave Pietramala and Tierney convinced him otherwise. The fans deserve one more shot to see you play live, they told him.
“He doesn’t want it to be about him,” St. Laurent said. “He’d probably rather walk off the field quietly with nobody looking to a hug from his mom and dad and be with his family.”
‘THIS IS SPECIAL’
In the first quarter at Homewood, the capacity crowd buzzed every time Harrison touched the ball. When he released a shot on the run, they seemed ready to explode. Blaze Riorden denied the attempt and a storybook moment. The Redwoods led 9-7 entering the fourth quarter, but were held scoreless the final 17 minutes. Chaos rookie Mac O’Keefe scored a 2-pointer and broke a 9-9 tie with 2:41 remaining for the game winner.
When St. Laurent saw former Hopkins assistant Bill Dwan at a recruiting tournament this summer, he told Dwan he didn’t sleep that night knowing the last time Harrison played at Homewood ended in his only loss there.
Harrison lingered on the field longer than any of his teammates afterward. He hugged his wife, Meredith, then descended into the Cordish Lacrosse Center, where a life-sized picture of Harrison mid-jumper adorns the wall outside the Blue Jays’ locker room. He soon returned to the turf with their children, Brooke, 6, and Smith, 4, in tow. Harrison ran in a circle on the field he had trod so many times, this time holding his daughter’s hand with his left and carrying his son in the other. Cameras stayed on them the entire time.
“I wouldn’t think to do it,” Harrison said of the way the PLL documented the experience. “But if it didn’t happen, it’s probably something I would regret later in life.”
Brooke, who Harrison noted is just starting to realize “this is what daddy does and has been doing for quite some time” — meaning pro lacrosse — sat in his lap as he addressed reporters in the virtual postgame press conference.
“This lacrosse community has supported me for 34-ish years now,” Harrison said. “I’ve been playing from Lutherville to Friends to Hopkins and professionally. Obviously, I would have loved to win. That’s priority number one, but this is special.”
Harrison emerged on the sideline a couple minutes later and talked with Tampa Bay Buccaneers nose tackle Steve McLendon, who attended the game with his family.
“Can I take a picture?” asked a young fan on the other side of the fence, almost out of breath from sprinting along the concourse.
“Of course,” Harrison said as the sun dipped lower behind the stands.
There was one request Harrison wasn’t willing to indulge just yet.
“I’m gonna keep my gloves for now,” he told another fan, with a smile, before he walked off Homewood Field as a player for the last time. His family was there to greet him again.
“He wants to concentrate on the task at hand and make sure that his teammates know that’s his main focus,” Heningburg said earlier this summer. “But at the end of the day, his legacy will live on forever.”
This article appears in the September/October edition of USA Lacrosse Magazine. Join our momentum.