Following her Princeton career, DeCecco went on to represent the United States in the 2005 World Cup in Annapolis, Md. The result wasn’t what she hoped for — a loss to Australia in the gold medal game — but it’s a memory she’ll cherish forever.
“My husband was in the military at the time and had just come back from a deployment,” DeCecco said. “Hearing the national anthem played while you’re wearing red, white and blue at the Naval Academy was pretty surreal. Australia, with Jen Adams and Hannah Nielsen, who was super young at the time, was tough, but I’m grateful for the opportunity to represent my country.”
DeCecco was one of the lucky ones, getting the chance to play at a high level after college. That’s part of the reason she left a successful career in the senior living industry to work in the front office for the Women’s Professional Lacrosse League three years ago.
“I was happily going along in my career, and this opportunity to combine my love of the sport with the business acumen I’ve got along the way came up,” DeCecco said. “I’m learning a lot. Starting a new professional league is not something a lot of people get to do.”
The WPLL completed its second season this summer with a thrilling championship game played before a packed house at US Lacrosse headquarters and a national television audience on ESPNU.
“I love when Princeton players continue in the game,” Sailer said. “Whether they’re club owners, or coaches or now with Rachael being involved with the WPLL. To totally change careers and go for something that was unknown and basically a startup with no guarantee of success, that’s some risk taking. And Rachael would take risks as a player.”
“It’s something I wanted my kids to see,” DeCecco said. “You follow your dreams, and you do what makes you happy.”
DeCecco has always chased her dreams, and that’s part of the reason she finds herself entering the Hall of Fame alongside the sport’s legends.
“When she first found out she was going to be inducted into the Hall of Fame, she was shocked,” Sailer said.
Her coach wasn’t.
“She was so dominant in her position, and there was no better in that time,” Sailer said. “She was a huge influencer in the outcome of a game. I don’t know that she saw herself like that in the moment, but she was that kind of player.”
The National Lacrosse Hall of Fame, a program of US Lacrosse, was established in 1957 to honor men and women who by their deeds as players, coaches, officials and/or contributors, and by the example of their lives, personify the great contribution of lacrosse to our way of life. The Class of 2019 will be officially recognized at the induction ceremony in Hunt Valley, Md., on Saturday, Oct 19. Tickets for the event, sponsored by RPS Bollinger and the Markel Insurance Company, are available at uslacrosse.org/HOF.