Notre Dame Lacrosse: Faith, Persistence, and the Work of Belonging is a sweeping cultural history of Notre Dame men's lacrosse, offering a powerful examination of how a Midwest program challenged the East Coast stronghold, reshaped national expectations, and carved out a place in the evolving landscape of NCAA lacrosse. Blending the intensity of college athletics with the deeper narrative currents of institutional identity, competitive legitimacy, and the long fight for recognition, this book takes readers inside the structures, rituals, and quiet pressures that define the sport. Through atmospheric storytelling grounded in archival detail, it reveals how faith, discipline, and an unromantic form of endurance forged Notre Dame's ascent from outsider to standard-setter. The narrative traces the program's roots in the early 1980s, when Notre Dame lacrosse emerged far from the sport's traditional geography and the evaluative preferences that shaped national rankings. As the team grew through uneven schedules, regional skepticism, and the burdens of limited visibility, it developed an identity anchored in persistence rather than pedigree. The book explores how Kevin Corrigan's steady, unsentimental leadership created a framework capable of withstanding decades of competitive pressure, and how the players-across generations-transformed meticulous preparation into a form of cultural resistance. Their success was never inevitable; it was accumulated, rep by rep, season by season, within an environment that demanded proof long after parity had been achieved. As the sport expanded, the team's rise intersected with broader forces reshaping college lacrosse: the nationalization of recruiting pipelines, conference realignment, the increasing analytical sophistication of committees, and the layering of media visibility onto programs once ignored by legacy coverage. Against this backdrop, Notre Dame's ascent reveals not only the volatility of belonging but the cost of maintaining it. The book examines the moments when the program became a metric for others, when institutional perception shifted subtly but decisively, and when recognition introduced new pressures disguised as opportunity. Through scenes drawn from locker rooms, practice fields, operations offices, and committee workrooms, readers witness how belonging is never a finish line but a discipline-an ongoing negotiation between identity and expectation. At its core, Notre Dame Lacrosse: Faith, Persistence, and the Work of Belonging is a meditation on what it means for a team to build itself in full view of structures that did not anticipate its success. It offers a portrait of athletes and coaches who learned to inhabit scrutiny without being defined by it, and a program that discovered its place in the sport not through spectacle, but through exacting continuity. For readers interested in lacrosse history, college athletics, institutional culture, or the quiet architecture of competitive identity, this is a story of how belief becomes practice-and how practice becomes legacy. Step into a narrative that invites you to consider how memory forms around effort, how institutions bend slowly under the weight of persistence, and how belonging, once earned, asks its own ethical questions of those who hold it.