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Andy Towers
Biographical details
Alma materBrown University
Playing career
1983-1987
Bridgeport Barrage
Coaching career (
Hartford
2005-2012Dartmouth
2019-PresentChaos LC (PLL)
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
As player:
  • 1986 & 1987 Highschool All-American
  • 1993 Ivy League Player of the Year
  • 3 Time All-Ivy
  • 3 Time NCAA All-American
  • 2001 MLL All-Star

As coach:

  • 2019 PLL Coach of the Year
  • 2021 PLL Champion

Andrew N. Towers is an American

Chaos Lacrosse Club in the Premier Lacrosse League(PLL).[1] Andy Towers is the first and only coach in the history of the Chaos Lacrosse Club and led them to a PLL Championship in 2021. In addition to his professional coaching career Towers brings over 19 years of NCAA Division One lacrosse coaching experience with stops at, Yale, Fairfield, Hartford, Dartmouth, Brown.[2]

Playing Career

Andy Towers attended New Canaan High School in Connecticut from 1983-87 in which he played varsity Basketball and Lacrosse. While at New Canaan High School, Towers became one of the most honored players in New Canaan High School lacrosse history, earning accolades as an All-American as a junior and senior in 1986 & 1987. Towers also earned many local awards including the Connecticut Player of the Year Award in 1987 and won the Connecticut State Championship in 85, 86, & 87.[3] Towers was then selected to the 1987 19U United States National Team, and helped them win gold at the 1988 world championship.

After High School from 1987-1988 Towers took a post graduate year at The Lawrenceville School to prepare him for the college level.[4]

From 1989-93 Towers attended Brown University where he played Division 1 Men's Lacrosse for the bears. Towers is considered one of the greatest players in Brown history. During his time at brown he accumulated 150 goals with 50 of them coming in his freshman season.[5] In 1993 Towers won the Ivy League Player of the Year being only the seventh Brown Player to do so. At the end of his career towers accumulated 203 points, and was named First Team All-Ivy in 1993. Towers was also a three time All-American at 2 different positions (2X 1st-Team AA at midfield, 1X Honorable Mention at attack).[6] At the end of his junior year in 1993 Towers was dismissed from Brown.[4] Towers left Brown with both the single-season and career goal crown. The this mark would hold until the spring 2016, when it was broken by Tewaaraton Award winner, Dylan Malloy.

After an excellent college career Andy Towers explored his options in professional lacrosse. From 1994 to 1995 Towers played forward in the

Boston Blazers and New York Saints. Then again in 2000 he played for the New York Saints and Philadelphia Wings. In Towers' 13 game professional indoor lacrosse career, he recorded 5 goals, 7 assists, and had a 42.5 faceoff percentage, winning 34 of 80 faceoffs.[7]

In 2001 and 2002 Towers played in the newly created MLL, for the

Bridgeport Barrage. In Towers' professional outdoor lacrosse career he recorded 10 goals, 4 assists, and a 53.5 faceoff percentage winning 250 for 467 in 23 games. During the 2001 season Towers was selected as an MLL All-Star with a league leading 58 face off percentage.[2] At the end of his playing career he is credited with developing many of the faceoff techniques used by many of the top faceoff athletes in the game today.[8]

College Coaching Career

In 1994 Coach Towers returned to Brown with a degree in organizational behavior and management. Towers began his coaching career at his alma mater, Brown as a graduate assistant in 1994 in which the Bears won the Ivy League Championship and went to the final four. In 1995, Towers spent the year as the head coach at the Hackley School, in which the team won its first-ever league championship. Then in 1996 Towers returned to the Brown coaching staff for a year.[2]

Towers then moved on to Yale as an assistant from 1999 to 2000, and had a record of 21-18.

After Yale, Towers got his first head coaching job as an associate head coach at Fairfield in 2002. While at Fairfield he led the stags to a 12-12 record and their first Great Western Lacrosse League Championship and their first NCAA Tournament appearance.

The next stop for Towers was at Hartford as the head coach, in which the team had an 0-14 record in 2004 but had the teams highest GPA in program history.

In 2005 Towers took an assistant coaching job at Dartmouth and in the 5 seasons as an assistant coach has a 32-39 record. In 2010 Towers would take the head coach position. While in command for the Big Green he lead them to a 20-47 record in 5 seasons. During those 5 seasons Coach Towers had a few big upsets, in 2010 Dartmouth upset 16th ranked Cornell, in 2011 Towers upset 17th ranked Harvard, in 2012 the Big Green beat 19th ranked Colgate, and again in 2012 upset 9th ranked Princeton. While in his 5 years at Dartmouth, Towers had 11 players win All-Ivy honors and 1 first team All-Ivy.[9]

Professional Coaching Career

After the 2014 season Towers was fired by Dartmouth and he was mostly out of the lacrosse world and was living in his home in New Canaan selling diamonds for Elemetal Diamonds.

Whipsnakes LC. During the 2021 season Towers led the Chaos to a 4-5 record and won their first PLL Championship 14-9 over the Whipsnakes LC.[11]

Coaching Philosophy

Coach Towers is widely known for his big personality, stature, ambition, and passion for the game and is often referred to as a "Blue-Collar Coach". Coach Towers is not know as a "x's & O's" coach, but rather a coach that tries to develop a bond between his players and create excellent chemistry on and off the field. Coach Towers' teaches handwork and toughness and believes that a team reflects the attitude of its coach. Towers historically has not had the most talented of rosters, but rather focuses on building a strong team culture.[12]

Outside of Coaching

During the PLL off season Coach Towers spends time in his hometown of New Canaan, Connecticut with his wife of 22 years Carlene, and their 2 kids, Daughter Tyler and son James[13]. Towers also runs his own company, Lacrosse Draws which was created in 2002 as "an organization committed to helping young players succeed in their mission to become the best players and people that they can be by attacking life with focus, effort, and toughness."[8] Lacrosse Draws hosts a series of camps, clinics, and college recruiting help for young lacrosse players.

References

  1. ^ "Chaos Roster". Premier Lacrosse League. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  2. ^ a b c "The Lacrosse Institute | Coach Andrew Towers – Bio". Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  3. ^ "Boys All-Americans". New Canaan Lacrosse. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  4. ^ a b Racioppi, Fran. "#022: Premier Lacrosse League - Chaos Head Coach Andy Towers". Talent War Group. Retrieved 2022-03-14.
  5. ^ "Andy Towers Was a Beast in College, Brown '93". Lacrosse All Stars. 2020-06-16. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  6. ^ "2021-22 Men's Lacrosse Records Book (PDF) - Ivy League" (PDF). ivyleague.com. Retrieved 2022-02-18.
  7. ^ "Andy Towers lacrosse Statistics on StatsCrew.com". www.statscrew.com. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
  8. ^ a b "Lacrosse Draws". www.lacrossedraws.com. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  9. ^ "Andrew Towers - Men's Lacrosse Coach". Dartmouth College Athletics. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  10. ^ Dinan, Terry. "New Canaan Old Timers Spotlight: Andy Towers". NewCanaanite.com. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  11. ^ "Seizing the Throne: Chaos win 2021 PLL Championship". Premier Lacrosse League. 2021-09-20. Retrieved 2022-02-21.
  12. ^ Racioppi, Fran. "#022: Premier Lacrosse League - Chaos Head Coach Andy Towers". Talent War Group. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  13. ^ Smith, Darcy P. (2019-05-23). "Andy Towers Goes Pro Again - this Time at the Helm". darcypsmithcreative. Retrieved 2022-03-08.