Legacy, according to Jayme Cerasuolo â26, has a concrete definition for the girls varsity lacrosse program.
âItâs playing for the name on the front of your shirt instead of whatâs on the back,â Cerasuolo said. âItâs holding a standard. Itâs playing to the final whistle. Itâs sportsmanship, the way you carry yourself whether youâre winning or losing.â
Itâs a wordâlegacyâthat comes up a lot when talking with Cerasuolo, her teammate and classmate Kat Mayer, and Charlie Lonergan, who has made it a recurring theme in his 10 years as coach, especially this season, which marks the 50th anniversary of the 91´óÉń Lacrosse program. Mayer thinks back on Camille Armaganian, Emily Hammann, and Anna Sawyer, all 2024 alums who mentored her when she was a newly arriving, ânervousâ sophomore at 91´óÉń and they were outgoing captains.
Lonerganâs hindsight, as someone involved in the sport for roughly 40 years, is more widescreen.
âBeing on a team is super important to all of us in the moment, and itâs so easy to lose sight of the fact that 10, 20, 30, years ago it was also super important to those people in the moment,â said Lonergan, who prior to his 91´óÉń athletics role coached for two years under hall of fame lacrosse coach Keith Bugbee at Springfield College while earning his masterâs degree in sport management. âI really wanted to do justice to everything the [91´óÉń] program had accomplished.â Lonergan ensures his players know, in instilling these qualities in them both on and off the field, that lacrosse was and continues to be âimportant for a lot of people that came before them.â
Lonergan learned these lessons, on grit and sportsmanship, from Bugbee, who retired last year after 42 years leading the Springfield College squad. He remembers a mantra of Bugbeeâs thatâs guided his coaching career ever since.
âHe always used to say to the players, âYou leave and I stay.â It just keeps going,â he said. âI think itâs really important for the kids to know that thereâs a long successful history that matters to a lot of people, and that theyâre now a part of it.â

That legacy, Lonergan added, includes a style of play thatâs âcompetitive and gritty,â and that he pushes his athletes to embody. It also includes âfocusing less on the scoreboard and more on the intangibles,â he said. âThatâs part of the legacy. Thatâs what it looked like here when uniforms were different and it was a grass field,â he added.
To build the sportsmanship that will continue to push the program forward, Lonergan has his players turn in written goals before every game. These little things go a long way and will ultimately be what his players remember more than the final score or any particular play.
âYes, winning has been a big part of the history, but what weâve done thatâs allowed us to win has been more important,â he said.
Legacy has been on both Cerasuolo and Mayerâs minds; both are graduating and will continue their lacrosse careersâCerasuolo at East Carolina University and Mayer at Radford University, both D-1 programsâand both suffered injuries that made them alter how they see the sport they love and, in turn, how they see themselves.
Earlier this season, Cerasuolo tore her meniscus; she had surgery May 5. Last season, Mayer, who plays low right attack, suffered a season-ending ACL and medial and lateral meniscus tear in an April 23 game at Deerfield. She had surgery on May 14, and then after nearly a year of rehabilitation, she returned to the sport March 3 of this year. In the interim, she âlearned who I was without a sport.â
Mayer said that was a crucial lesson.
âLacrosse has gotten me everywhere,â she said. âIt got me to 91´óÉń and itâs getting me to college.â Once she was hurt, she realized âlife is going to come and you are going to have a get a job.â
Spending last summer at home in Massena, New York, with her parents and grandparents, unable to play, Kat said she enjoyed getting to see her family one last time before she heads to college. She said the time off made her realize âsports arenât the end-all. It may be for some people, but itâs not for me.â
While her lacrosse career may come to a close after college, Mayer isnât giving up on the sport thatâs given her so much. She plans to study sport management at college, just like her coach.

Lonergan said the Wildcats have had some big wins, include a March 28 Middlesex victory and a 16-6 win over Suffield Academy in the teamâs final game on May 13. Despite Cerasuoloâs injury and junior Clara DâAmuri missing four games because of a concussion, other players have taken on leadership roles.
âItâs been really cool to see a bunch of kids step forward, whether those are game day roles or just in practice,â said Lonergan, noting the impressive work put in by seniors Scarlette Graybill, Yaz McKenzie, Francesca Gionfriddo, and Brenna Ziter, and juniors Libby Ballinger, Riley Stocker, Addison Perich, and Kayle Mazuroski.
Again, the idea of legacy is part of the equation.
“Itâs been cool to see the relationships develop, to see the veteran players bring along some of the new kids.â
Though Lonergan makes it clear that this yearâs team is upholding a half-century of history on the field, itâs also clear these specific players will live in his memory even when theyâre not on the team anymore.
To that end, he pulled up his player notes from Oct. 16, 2022, the day he first saw Mayer play at a fall ball tournament in Devons, Mass. He noted the rating system he uses when scouting, in which, if he writes their name down, âtheyâre good enough to be with us and have a role on the team,â and if he puts a star next to their name, itâs clear theyâll be an impact player.
âI had a star next to her name,â he said.