Delverne Dressel

Delverne "Del" Dressel is an American lacrosse player and a National Hall of Fame member, inducted in 2002.[1]

Del Dressel
NationalityUnited States
ShootsLeft
PositionMidfield
NCAA teamJohns Hopkins University
CoachBrentwood School
NicknameDel
Career highlights
U.S. Lacrosse Hall of Fame, 2002

Career

Dressel played midfielder for the Johns Hopkins University helping the team to NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship titles in 1984 and 1985. Dressel was an exceptional midfielder who excelled at both offense and defense, playing before the game changed to specialized offensive and defensive specialists. He was awarded the Lt. Donald McLaughlin Jr. Award as the nation's top midfielder in both 1984 and 1985. He is one of only six college players to be named a first-team All-American four times, the others being Douglas Turnbull (Johns Hopkins, 1922–25), Everett Smith (St. John's, 1933-37), Frank Urso (Maryland, 1973–76), Jason Coffman (Salisbury St., 1993-96), and Michael Powell (Syracuse, 2001–04).[2]

Del ended his career at Hopkins as one of their all-time top scorers with 99 goals and 75 assists for 174 points, good for thirteenth all-time.

Dressel attended Gilman School, was a two time High School All American[3] and honored with the C. Markland Kelly award to designate the best high school lacrosse player in Maryland. After a brief enrollment at Harvard, Dressel transferred to Johns Hopkins. He would later go on to Tulane University medical school in 1990.

Dressel briefly head coached at the prep school level at Brentwood School.

Statistics

Johns Hopkins University

     
SeasonGPGAPtsPPG
198314271946--
198414271744--
198514231942--
198612222042--
Totals5499751743.22

Awards

gollark: You pay whole numbers and get multiple things.
gollark: Potatos.
gollark: Totally Spurious Pact?
gollark: Or I can have the devices take turns or something ridiculous.
gollark: Anyway, Rednot would probably be easier to do with *two* redstone lines, for proper full-duplex or whatever.

See also

References

Preceded by
Peter Voelkel
McLaughlin Award
1984, 1985
Succeeded by
Glen Miles
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.