Brendan Dawson
Brendan Dawson
Title: Head Coach
Phone: 610-896-1343
Email: bdawson@haverford.edu
Previous College: Salisbury '04

Brendan Dawson, the 2018 Centennial Conference Coach of the Year, recently announced his resignation to accept the assistant athletic director/head boys lacrosse coach at The Haverford School. Dawson earned conference coach honors of the year for third time during his coaching career after guiding Haverford to its first postseason appearance in seven years during the 2018 campaign where they joined three other teams that were ranked in the top 15 nationally.

Already establishing the Fords as one of the most dominant defensive units in the nation, Dawson has coached five All-Centennial Conference performers, including an LSM, two defenders, and one goalie. That list includes PJ Jackson ’17, who was named the Centennial Conference Defensive Player of the Year as a senior and garnered third-team All-America honors. Jackson also went on to play in the USILA North-South Senior All-Star game. In the classroom, Haverford has led the Centennial Conference in student-athletes named to the academic honor roll each of the past two seasons with 41 total honorees, including Jack Sollee ’18 – the William W. Ambler ’45 Award recipient for the highest cumulative GPA among all senior student-athletes at Haverford.

“Haverford is a special place where student-athletes can achieve great things in the classroom and on the field. I am excited and honored to become a part of the Haverford College community," stated Dawson at the time of his hiring.

“Brendan has a strong appreciation for and understanding of Division III athletics and is committed to providing an environment in which his student-athletes can excel both on and off the field,” said Haverford College Director of Athletics Wendy Smith ’87. “With an educational foundation in developing the whole student and a strong lacrosse acumen, Brendan is ideally suited to establish a successful men's lacrosse program within the Haverford community and the highly competitive Centennial Conference.”

Prior to Haverford, Dawson spent five years as the head coach at Widener where he compiled a record of 43-38, including a 29-9 record in the MAC Commonwealth Conference. His teams made the Commonwealth playoffs during each of his years at the helm with two appearances in the conference finals. The success of Dawson’s teams helped him to be named the Commonwealth Coach of the Year in both 2014 and 2016.

His players earned 31 All-Commonwealth Conference awards, headlined by the 2014 Defensive Player of the Year and 2016 Rookie of the Year. Under his tutelage, Dawson also had one player earn All-America honors in back-to-back seasons for the first time since 2006. He also saw two of his players participate in the USILA North/South Game.

With Dawson’s defensive background, Widener led the Commonwealth Conference in goals allowed during three of his five seasons, highlighted by the 2013 season when his team allowed just 5.7 goals per game – the third-best mark in all of Division III.

Prior to taking the head coach position at Widener, Dawson started men’s lacrosse at Aurora University in Illinois. Named head coach prior to the 2009-10 academic year, he led Aurora to 11 wins in its inaugural season on his way to being named the Midwest Lacrosse Conference Coach of the Year.

Dawson has ties to the Centennial Conference as he was the 2009 assistant coach and defensive coordinator for Dickinson College where he was charged with recruiting and brought in the Division III National Player of the Year in a class that featured three first-team All-America selections and another honorable mention honoree. He got his start in coaching at Salisbury University – his alma mater – where he served as a graduate assistant/defensive coordinator and helped the team capture the NCAA Division III National Championship in both of his years on the sideline. In just two seasons at Salisbury, he coached 17 All-Americans, including the short stick defensive specialist of the year, defensemen of the year, long stick midfielder of the year, midfielder of the year, and player of the year.

Dawson had a strong four-year career at Salisbury, helping the team to Division III National Championships in 2003 and 2004 when he served as team captain. He was named first-team All-Capital Athletic Conference in 2002 and was a member of the school’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. Over his four seasons as a student-athlete, the Sea Gulls notched a 58-7 cumulative record. Dawson graduated from Salisbury in 2004 with a B.A. in history and political science. He got his M.A. in teaching from Salisbury in 2008.