The Phoenix

On His Shoulder

Cassidy's penchant for stepping up in the big movement lifted Rams to state playoff berth

- ByAustinHe­rtzog ahertzog@21st-centurymed­ia.com @AustinHert­zog on Twitter

There was substantia­l weight on SpringFord senior midfielder Danny Cassidy’s shoulders this spring. After huge roster turnover, including a handful of Division I players, outsiders believed the Rams’ run as the gold standard in the Pioneer Athletic Conference and as a District 1 contender was going to take a hit.

Cassidy welcomes the weight, though. He’s been placing it on himself as a player and teammate for years.

And as he found out off the field this spring, a wait can be well worth it.

With likely themost dominant two-way player in PAC boys lacrosse history leading the way in confident voice and relentless play, Spring-Ford’s supposed fall changed course in the formof a third straight undefeated PAC regular season, a seventh consecutiv­e PAC championsh­ip and the program’s long-awaited first berth to the PIAA Championsh­ips.

“I knew we lost some guys who started three or four years so I knew there were going to be a lot of guys coming in and theymight be nervous, a little bit unsure of themselves so I knew I had to take greater responsibi­lity and step up to give themthe confidence to maybe score the first goal to help the group relax and get it going,” Cassidy said.

His team-high 61 goals and 19 assists were the engine to the Rams’ attack while his physical defense routinely shut down opponents’ top counterpar­ts, earning Cassidy All-Area Player of the Year honors and a second-straight spot on theMercury­AllArea first team. The Notre Dame commit follows a long line of Spring-Ford players to earn the spot, including LiamHare (2016), ZachHare (2015), MattMesser­le (2014) and Paul Major (2012-13). It’s Cassidy’s second All-Area first team nod as a senior following his selection as a defensive back in football last fall.

“He’s an awesome kid. He is one of the best,” Spring-Ford coach Kevin Donnelly said. “He has always been a student of the game, a great student inthe classrooma­nd an all-around awesome kid. Even since he was a freshman he conducted himself in a different way that you knew he was going to be special.

“When we gave him theMost Outstandin­g Senior for our banquet, in the writeup I said he’s ‘the best all-around lacrosse player’ we’ve ever had. And I think that’s true. He’s as capable offensivel­y as he is defensivel­y.”

The Rams’ 19-4 season included signature wins over eventual PIAA 3A champion Avon Grove (9-8 in 2OT on April 1), Owen J. Roberts in the PAC championsh­ip (9-5 on May 11) – where his teammates put his weight on their shoulders by hoisting Cassidy with the PAC championsh­ip plaque in the postgame celebratio­n – and Haverford (10-7 on May 25) in a PIAA play-in game.

Cassidy must be overly thrilled with such a season and making states for the first time, right? To think that would be to not understand how driven Cassidy is.

“I’m happy and it’s great (to have qualified for states), but at the same time I wish we went farther and I wish we did it last year, too,” he said. “As good as the team was this year, we were just as good last year. And the fact we didn’tmake states, it makes me think, ‘What were we missing?’ You look back and you get disappoint­ed.”

The mentality that allowed Cassidy to help Spring-Ford achieve such success in his four years (19-3 in 2014, 21-3 in 2015, 21-3 in 2016) is the same one that allows him to quickly and without difficulty cite all 10 losses of his Rams career while looking back on his high school career.

That isn’t to say Cassidy can’t be pleased though. He certainlyw­aswith the progressio­n of his less-experience­d teammates as the season wore on.

“Coming into the season I was actually quite confident in our team because they all worked really, really hard. They might not be going to Richmond or St. Joe’s or Monmouth or Michigan but they are very talented players and they worked very hard to become that,” Cassidy said. “We’re a very individual­ly-motivated and team-focused group. We knew we lost a lot of guys so a lot of the younger guys stepped up and started playing really well. That worked out very well for us by going as far as we’ve ever gone.”

Attending Notre Dame and playing lacrosse for the Fighting Irish, where Cassidy will head in the fall, doesn’t just please him. It’s a dreamcome true – albeit a latebreaki­ng one that only came together on May 12, the Friday before the PAC postseason began.

Early in his high school career Cassidy didn’t receive significan­t college interest to the point where he was unsure if college lacrosse was in his future.

“Going into my junior year I had gotten no interest. I was like, “I guess I’m not going to be playing college lacrosse,” he said. “Ever since I started playing, a lot of people didn’t think I would be that good. I wasn’t some Division I recruit from a young age. I committed my senior year, which in lacrosse is really, really late.

“For me, I thought, ‘People don’t think I’m good. I’m going to have to prove to them I am. I’m going to have to show people that I work hard and I’m going to outwork you. I might not have been as talented two years ago, but this year I am.’ I’ve been coming from that place the past four years to try to show people I am as good as any other guy out there.”

Colleges gainedmore interest after Cassidy, who plays his club lacrosse with Big 4 lacrosse, made the Philadelph­ia team for the Under Armour Underclass­men Tournament in June 2016 and eventually committed to Boston University in February 2017.

He was compelled still to apply to his ‘dream school,’ Notre Dame, having grown up in a family full of South Bend supporters and alumni, andwas placed on thewait list.

He spent quite a few months coming to terms that his dreamwasn’t meant to be.

“It was hard realizing you might not be good enough to play somewhere. But at the same time, it was, ‘Let’s move on.’ Because I wanted to play lacrosse in college and once I committed (to Boston University) my drive was to show everybody that I amaDivisio­n I lacrosse player and I amas good if not better than most of these kids.

“That’s what I wanted to show through the last couple years, that despite the fact I’m not going to Notre Dame or wherever, I am good enough to go there and you’re going to wish I did.”

Then the unexpected happened: Cassidy’s wait on thewaiting list was over. As the spring regular season turned to the postseason, he gained admittance to Notre Dame.

“It was very exciting, I couldn’t even believe,” Cassidy said. “It was so hard for it to happen and for it to work out that perfectly and come true is honestly crazy.”

The luck of the Irishmay be a real thing. But among the many reasons Cassidy is joining the Fighting Irish and put together the Spring-Ford career he did, luck isn’t one of them.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States