Mercer University Adds Division I Men's, Women's Teams
from press release
MACON, Ga. -- Mercer University will add men's
NCAA D-I lacrosse to its intercollegiate athletic program during
the 2010-2011 academic year and will add a Division I women's team
in 2011-2012, athletics director Bobby Pope announced today. Mercer
is the first NCAA Division I institution in the state to announce
the addition of lacrosse to its athletic program.
The sport, which originated among Native American tribes in the
Northeast and Mid-Atlantic before the United States was colonized,
has long been popular in those regions and is now the
fastest-growing high school sport in Georgia and one of the fastest
growing in the country. According to the latest participation
survey by U.S. Lacrosse, the sport's governing body, lacrosse is
the fastest-growing high school sport for girls over the last 10
years and the second-fastest growing sport among boys. At the
collegiate level, men's lacrosse has been the fastest-growing sport
over the past decade, while women's has been the
second-fastest-growing sport.
"Lacrosse is becoming a very popular sport in the Southeast," Pope
said. "We will be the first NCAA Division I program in Georgia, so
this will be a great opportunity for Mercer to set the bar high for
the sport in our state."
The University added men's lacrosse as a club sport in 2007-2008
and plans to add women's club lacrosse for 2010-2011. The teams
will then make the transition to Division I status in 2010-2011 and
2011-2012, respectively. Mercer will be one of the few
universities in the Southeast to compete in NCAA Division I
lacrosse, joining Duke, North Carolina, Presbyterian and
Jacksonville. Currently, there are 64 NCAA Division I men's
lacrosse programs and 89 Division I women's programs in the
nation.
Pope said that the university plans to hire its first full-time
lacrosse coach later this year to begin recruiting student-athletes
for the teams.
Mercer is the only private NCAA Division I institution in Georgia
and currently fields 14 intercollegiate teams, including baseball,
men's and women's basketball, men's and women's cross-country,
men's and women's golf, rifle, men's and women's soccer and men's
and women's tennis.


















