The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Seton Hill mourns coach killed in crash

Lacrosse coach was pregnant; unborn child died as well.

- By Kevin Begos and Ron Todt Associated Press

GREENSBURG, Pa. —A small Catholic college outside Pittsburgh mourned the loss of a women’s lacrosse coach who died along with her unborn child when the team’s bus crashed on the way to a game, rememberin­g her Sunday as warm, outgoing and a natural leader.

Students and staff packed into Seton Hill University’s century-old Saint Joseph’s Chapel for a memorial service for lacrosse coach Kristina Quigley and other victims of the crash. The program for the service reads: “In Loving Memory of Kristina Quigley and Son.”

Earlier Sunday, team members and fans at a Seton Hill baseball game observed a minute of silence for the two crash victims. With the players in the background on a cold day, students and other mourners visited a tribute set up in front of a lacrosse net next to the baseball field that featured bouquets of flowers, stuffed animals, a lacrosse stick, a whistle and a candle sat in front of a team photo and signs reading “In memoriam - Kristina Quigley - Forever a Griffin.”

Players and coaches from Seton Hill were among 23 people aboard when the bus crashed into a tree Saturday morning on the Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike outside Harrisburg. The team was headed to an afternoon game at Millersvil­le University, about 50 miles from the crash site in central Pennsylvan­ia. Police are investigat­ing the cause.

Quigley, 30, of Greensburg, died of her injuries at a hospital, Cumberland County authoritie­s said. Quigley was about six months pregnant, and her unborn son didn’t survive. The bus driver, Anthony Guaetta, 61, of Johnstown, died at the scene.

Saturday’s game and a Sunday home game were canceled after the crash.

Seton Hill is a liberal arts school of about 2,500 students that sits atop a hill in western Pennsylvan­ia’s Laurel Highlands. The school is also offering grief coun- seling to students.

Duquesne University women’s lacrosse coach Mike Scerbo remembered Quigley as a warm, outgoing person who immediatel­y impressed him when he hired her to be an assistant during the 2008 season. Quigley, a Duquesne alumna, spent just one season under Scerbo before moving to South Carolina to start Erskine College’s NCAA Division II program.

“In that time, I really saw how much passion she had to be a coach, and how much she enjoyed working with the kids,” Scerbo said. “She was a teacher, and she wanted to help kids grow and learn, not just about the sport, but about life.”

Two victims flown to Penn State Hershey Medical Center remained there Sunday, and no informatio­n was released about them. A woman injured in the crash was discharged Sunday afternoon from another hospital. All others aboard the bus were taken to hospitals as a precaution, but almost all were treated and released.

Police couldn’t immediatel­y say what had caused the crash. The front side of the bus was shorn away, and the vehicle came to rest upright about 70 yards from the highway at the bottom of a grassy slope.

 ??  ?? Seton Hill women’s college lacrosse coach Kristina Quigley was six months pregnant.
Seton Hill women’s college lacrosse coach Kristina Quigley was six months pregnant.

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