MVP International lacrosse coach will explore Irish roots at the tournament
By David Driver, MVP Communications
WASHINGTON – The Irish roots go way back for TJ Finnerty, a girls lacrosse coach for MVP International.
“I came from a large extended Irish Catholic family in upstate New York,” he says. “My grandfather was born in the U.S. but my great grandfather was from Ireland and so was my great grandmother.”
Now, thanks to a major lacrosse event in Ireland, Finnerty will get a chance to visit his European roots for the first time.
He will be one of the coaches for an MVP International USA girls’ lacrosse team that will play in a multi-country tournament in Limerick, Ireland this month. The MVP team flies from Virginia to Dublin on August 11.
“I am really looking forward to it; I am spending time this week talking to family members,” says Finnerty, the new head coach at Flint Hill School in Oakton, Virginia. “Everyone has been back to Ireland to visit. My sister has been back, and cousins, aunts, and uncles have been back. I never have.”
Lacrosse will take him to Ireland – just as it led to his high school preference.
“The only reason I didn’t go to Catholic high school was that the Catholic high school in our town of Geneva, New York didn’t have lacrosse,” he added. “But the public school did. I chose to go to Geneva High to play lacrosse.”
At St. Patrick’s Cemetery in Geneva, many of the tombstones from the Finnerty family list County Cork, Ireland as a birthplace or home region. County Cork is very close to Limerick, also the site of the World Lacrosse Men’s 21U Championship that began August 10 and runs through August 20.
“One of my cousins dug up a picture from right around 1900 when the family had just come over from Ireland to the United States,” Finnerty says. “This picture has the great grandfather and the great grandmother and then the nine children. Some of my cousins have put together our family reunions and we do it every 10 or so years. It is just incredible how the family grew.”
Finnerty also has a family connection to Kevin Corrigan, the long-time and successful men’s lacrosse coach at Notre Dame. Corrigan is a graduate of the University of Virginia and was the former coach at Randolph-Macon in Ashland, Virginia.
“His brother was one of my assistant coaches in college at Washington & Lee and his cousin was a teammate for three years,” Finnerty said.
While in Ireland, Finnerty hopes to have Corrigan talk to the MVP International team.
“There are all of these quirky things in the sport that you are constantly bumping into people that you have heard of or did something with years ago,” he adds. “It is like the gift that keeps on giving. Lacrosse is such a small and unique sport but it has been growing now by leaps and bounds for a couple of decades.”
Recently, Finnerty was coaching an Under Armour national team at a regional tournament in Baltimore. One of his daughters played lacrosse in college at Lynchburg.
He was an assistant coach for W.T. Woodson High in Fairfax, Virginia when the Cavaliers reached the state championship match in 2016.
After several years as the coach at Bishop O’Connell in Arlington, Finnerty will be the new coach at Flint Hill in Oakton, Virginia this coming season.
The MVP roster: middies Natalie Anderson and Madelyn Arca; attack Summer Eastman, Erin Soule, Ann Suddarth, Claire Varley, Mia Young, Julia Lundy, Emma Lundy, and Ashlynn Maher; defenders Caleigh Jones and Ellen Suddarth; and goalies Bristol Sine and Hannah Smith.
They represent these Northern Virginia high schools: Lake Braddock (five players), Robinson (four), Bishop O’Connell (three), and one each from West Springfield and W.T. Woodson.
Finnerty will share coaching duties in Ireland with Tim Prosser, the head coach at Robinson High.
MVP International staff who have been assisting on the trip include Matt Wojceichowski, an Event Coordinator; and Justin Counts, who returned last month as an assistant coach for the MVP International baseball trip to central Europe.
Away from the field, the MVP team in Ireland plans to visit the Cliffs of Moher, a walking tour of Dublin, and a fancy meal at a castle. But the major event will be the event in Limerick. MVP is working with Ireland native Anthony Neville, who lives in the Cork area of Ireland
“The people I continue to run into it … I am very confident I am going to run into in Ireland that I either played with or played against; I may have been coaching when they are playing. It is a small community as far as sport goes,” Finnerty says.
Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and worked for papers in Burke and Springfield; he was in Ireland in March and interviewed American basketball players and met with Neville. His book “Hoop Dreams In Europe: Americans Building Basketball Careers In Europe,” was published in March and is available on Amazon.