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Scott Tucker

 
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Scott Tucker enters his 18th season at the helm of the Limestone women’s lacrosse team in 2019 with a record of 261-55 (.826)

During his tenure at Limestone, Tucker has reached unprecedented levels of consistency with championship winning teams on an annual basis. His teams have won 14 regular season conference titles dating all the way back to 2004, and have captured 11 of the 13 conference tournament titles since the inception of the Conference Carolinas tournament back in 2006. Tucker’s teams have also made 10 NCAA tournament appearances (2004, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2018) with two showings in the NCAA Division II National Championship (2011, 2013).

Limestone found its way back into the NCAA Division II Tournament in 2018 and posted an overall record of 17-3. The Saints went 9-0 in Conference Carolinas play and earned a regular season and tournament title. Tucker was named Conference Carolinas Women's Lacrosse Coach of the Year for the eighth straight year.

In 2017, the Saints went 17-3 overall and topped off the season with a Conference Carolinas Tournament title. Tucker was named Conference Carolinas Coach of the Year for his seventh straight season while four Saints were named to the IWLCA All-Region team.

The Saints went 15-4 overall and a perfect 8-0 in conference play during the 2016 season. Tucker was named the Conference Carolinas Coach of the Year for the sixth straight season while two Saints were selected as IWLCA All-Americans to give the Blue & Gold an astonishing 56 All-Americans since 1997.

In 2015, the Saints went 15-3 overall and ranked second nationally in scoring margin (9.50). Tucker was named the Conference Carolinas Coach of the Year for the fifth season in a row while two Saints were selected as IWLCA All-Americans. One of those All-Americans, Sam McCarrick, did so by becoming Limestone’s all-time leading goal scorer (193).

2014 saw Tucker’s Saints expand on their success from 2013 with an undefeated 18-0 mark through the regular season and conference tournament. The Saints knocked off six Top-10 nationally ranked teams throughout the 2014 campaign before being ousted in the NCAA Tournament. The team held opponents scoreless in three games and won 12-of-19 contests by more than 10 goals.

As groundbreaking as that 2014 team was, the 2013 squad may have been even better. They finished with a 20-2 mark and the program’s second appearance in the NCAA Division II National Championship game, a 10-7 loss to No. 1 LIU Post which the Saints led midway through the second half.