Associate Head Coach Bill Olin enters his fourth season with the Tigers and his third as Associate Head Coach, a position he earned after just one year with the program.
Olin helped lead Clemson to its best season yet in 2025, as the Tigers set a program record with 14 wins and went 6-3 in ACC play to finish tied for fourth. The Tigers advanced to the ACC semifinals and earned their first NCAA Tournament berth, where they won a first-round game against No. 16 Navy to reach the Sweet 16. Clemson recorded four victories over Top-15 opponents, including wins over No. 5 Syracuse and No. 9 Duke, and climbed as high as No. 6 nationally.
Under Olin, the Clemson defense established itself as one of the nation’s elite, finishing the year ranked in the top 10 nationally in scoring defense. Summer Agostino emerged as one of the premier defenders in the country, ranking seventh nationally in caused turnovers per game, while midfielder Natalie Shurtleff earned All-America honors as a standout two-way presence. Agostino joined Shurtleff on the All-America list, giving Clemson two national honorees. Goalie Emily Lamparter also earned Second-Team All-ACC and First-Team All-Region honors. In all, the Tigers produced 11 All-ACC selections over the past two years.
The program’s trajectory was built on early success. In its 2023 inaugural season, Clemson finished 12-6 overall, won four ACC games, and reached No. 14 in the national rankings. Olin, serving as the lead offensive coach, helped guide the Tigers to the sixth-ranked scoring offense in the nation and eighth in assists per game. Clemson scored 10 or more goals in 14 contests, with 10 of its 12 wins coming by double digits, and spent six weeks in the USA Lacrosse poll and eight weeks in the IWLCA Coaches Poll.
In 2024, Clemson continued to establish itself, finishing 11-7 and advancing to the ACC Quarterfinals. Olin coached a program-record four Tigers who earned NCAA South All-Region honors, while five Tigers earned All-ACC recognition, another program best at the time.
Beyond Clemson’s on-field success, Olin has been instrumental in recruiting at the highest level. He helped secure the nation’s No. 1 ranked 2025 recruiting class, per Inside Lacrosse, which included four Top-30 players headlined by No. 1 overall recruit Alexa Spallina and No. 2 overall recruit Emma Penczek. In total, the 2025 class featured seven players ranked in the Inside Lacrosse Top 100. Overall, Clemson has recruited 11 New Balance All-Americans in the first four years of the program’s existence, along with multiple USA Lacrosse All-Americans.
Olin joined the Tigers following six years as the associate head coach at Cornell University, where he helped lead the Big Red to an Ivy League Championship and an NCAA Tournament second-round appearance. His defenses produced six All-Ivy selections, including 2017 Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year and two-time All-American Catie Smith. After transitioning to the offensive side of the ball in 2019, Cornell equaled the school record for goals in a game twice and produced two of the highest-scoring offenses in program history, while earning six All-Ivy offensive selections, headlined by 2022 Ivy League Midfielder of the Year, Genevieve DeWinter.
Olin was head coach at Capital University from 2014–16. His 2015 squad won the OAC regular-season championship in just the second year of the program’s existence. The team finished with a 14-3 record, including 6-0 in conference play, before finishing as league tournament runner-up. Capital had eight members named to the All-OAC teams, including Defensive Player of the Year Tate Stover. Brennan O’Callaghan was named OAC Freshman of the Year and Co-Offensive Player of the Year. At year’s end, Olin was named OAC Coach of the Year.Prior to his head coaching tenure, Olin was an assistant coach at SUNY Potsdam men’s lacrosse immediately following his playing career.
As a player, Olin was a four-year starting goalkeeper for the Rutgers Scarlet Knights, where he was a three-time ECAC Defensive Player of the Week, two-time Big East Defensive Player of the Week, and finished his career ranked in the top 10 for saves in Rutgers men’s lacrosse history.
Bill and his wife, Katelynn, have four children: Findley, Brooks, Welles and Dempsey.
Scott Teeter is in his eighth year as head coach of the University of Louisville women's lacrosse team.
In 23 years as a head coach, he has compiled a 186-193 career record. He is 33-64 in eight years at Louisville.
In his first season at Louisville in 2018, the Cardinals won five of their first six games before finishing the season with a 6-11 record. He guided freshman Caroline Blalock and senior Emily Howell to All-ACC honors.
In 2019, the rebuilding Cards went 5-13 and Tessa Chad earned All-ACC honors. Louisville went 5-4 overall in a shortened 2020 season. The Cardinals recorded wins over Vanderbilt and Marquette, two teams they lost to the previous season.
In 2021, Louisville finished 5-11 overall against one of the most challenging schedules in history. The Cardinals played seven games against Top 5 teams and 11 against Top 10 teams. They moved into the IWLCA Top 25 following a 12-9 win over No. 24 Colorado on Feb. 18 and remained in both the IWLCA and ILWomen polls the remainder of the season. In the postseason polls, they ranked 19th in the IWLCA and received votes in the ILWomen.
Senior Caroline Blalock was named All-ACC Second Team, while Bella Karstien was named to the ACC All-Freshman Team.
In 2022, Louisville finished 7-11 overall. The Cardinals lost four close games by only one goal against Colorado, Virginia, Ohio State, and Notre Dame. Coach Teeter and the Cardinals hope to capitalize this next season with wins on those close battles. They recorded wins over Virginia Tech, Vanderbilt, and Cincinnati.
Graduate Caroline Blalock was named All-ACC Second Team and USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American Honorable Mention, while senior Hannah Morris and junior Nicole Perroni were named to IWLCA All-Region Second Team, and Ava Coyle was named to the ACC All-Freshman Team.
In 2023, Louisville earned victories over ranked opponents, including a notable win against No. 25 Colorado early in the season. They also secured key ACC wins over Duke and Pittsburgh.
Senior midfielder Nicole Perroni was named to the All-ACC Second Team, IWLCA All-Region Second Team, and earned an Honorable Mention from USA Lacrosse Magazine All-American. Freshman Negai Nakazawa was recognized on the ACC All-Freshman Team, and Allegra Catalano received honors as part of the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Women’s At-Large Academic All-District Team.
Academically, 19 Cardinals were named to the All-ACC Academic Team, tied for the second most honorees in the conference, and 11 players earned spots on the Intercollegiate Women’s Lacrosse Association (IWLCA) Division I Academic Honor Roll for maintaining a GPA of 3.50 or higher.
On the field, standout performances included Sara Addeche’s school-record 18 saves in a single game against Notre Dame. Senior Nicole Perroni also reached the impressive milestones of 100 career points and 100 career draw controls, while Madi McKee surpassed 100 career draw controls.
In 2024, the Louisville women’s lacrosse team finished 8-11 overall and 3-7 in ACC play, marking a program milestone with their first-ever ACC Tournament win over Virginia Tech.
Senior attacker Kokoro Nakazawa led the team with 61 goals and 21 assists, while midfielder Nicole Perroni added 45 goals and tied the program record for career caused turnovers.
Perroni earned multiple honors, including IWLCA Second Team All-American and USA Lacrosse All-America Honorable Mention, and was named to the All-ACC First Team, alongside Second Team honoree Nakazawa. Academically, the Cardinals placed nine players on the IWLCA Academic Honor Roll and 22 on the All-ACC Academic Team, underscoring their commitment to both athletic and academic excellence.
Prior to coming to Louisville, he served as head coach at Canisius for 15 years (2003-2017). Upon his arrival in Buffalo, he took the reins of a team that had won just 11 games in the program's first seven seasons. Under his guidance, he changed the culture of the program and was named MAAC Coach of the Year in just his third season after leading the Griffs to an eight-win improvement in 2005.
In 2011, Canisius won a school-record 14 games and capped the successful campaign with the program's first MAAC Tournament title. The Griffs added postseason championships in 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2017. In the run from 2011-14, the team became the first school in MAAC history to win four straight conference titles. Canisius also claimed regular-season crowns in 2013, 2015, 2016 and 2017 after sweeping through conference foes without a loss.
He was named the league's coach of the year again in 2015, 2016 and 2017, after becoming the first three teams in MAAC history to post a perfect 8-0 regular-season record.
He left Canisius as the winningest coach in MAAC history.
In addition, Teeter has also served as head coach of the Canadian Under-19 National Team since 2009. He guided the team to a bronze-medal showing during the 2011 championship in Hannover, Germany, before earning the country's first women's field lacrosse title at the 2015 FIL World Championship in Edinburgh, Scotland. In 2017, Teeter led the Canadian National team to a pair of silver medals, both at the FIL World Cup held in England and the World Games in Poland. Also in 2022, he helped Team Canada earn a silver medal at the World Cup in Towson, Maryland. Soon after that, Team Canada took down Team USA, earning a gold medal during the 2022 World Games in Birmingham, Alabama.
Before taking the head job at Canisius, Teeter served as an assistant women's lacrosse coach at Buffalo State College in 2002, where he helped guide the program to its best-ever finish. Prior to his work at Buffalo State, he served as a student-assistant coach and team manager for the Canisius women's lacrosse team for four years.
Teeter was a four-year letter-winner for the Canisius College ice hockey team and graduated with a degree in physical education in 2002. He earned his master's degree in physical education with a concentration in sport psychology and coaching from Canisius in 2004.
Teeter and his wife, Jennifer, have one daughter, Olivia, and one son, Lucas.