Career
McEneaney teamed with Hall of Fame players Mike French, Dan Mackesey, Bill Marino, Bob Hendrickson, and Chris Kane, and coach Richie Moran to lead the to the National Collegiate Athletic Association Men"s Lacrosse Championship in 1976 and 1977. He is currently ranked 6th all-time in Division I Assists with 164, 10th in career Points Per Game, and 18th in career Points. His top season was 1975 when he scored 31 goals and handed out 65 assists for 96 total points in 17 games, and was named the USILA player of the year.
That year, he was also awarded the Turnbull Award given to the top collegiate attackman.
His career was played in an era when freshman were not eligible to play varsity sports. He was also an outstanding football player, playing wide receiver.
He was named to the All-Ivy second team in 1976, when he led Cornell in receiving and was second in team scoring. McEneaney was voted the outstanding player in the 1977 National Collegiate Athletic Association Championship game and represented the United States in the 1978 World Lacrosse Championships.
He was inducted into the Cornell Sports Hall of Fame in 1982.
McEneaney was inducted into the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 1992. In 1995, he was named to the National Collegiate Athletic Association"s Silver Anniversary Lacrosse Team, recognizing his place among the best players of the first quarter century of National Collegiate Athletic Association lacrosse. McEneaney"s jersey number (#10) was retired by Cornell University on April 27, 2002, in memoriam.
Known for his athletic talents, McEneaney was also a poet and had desires to write a novel.
His family, along with the Cornell University Library, published a posthumous collection of his poetry entitled A Bend in the Road. In 2010, Eamon"s wife Bonnie published Messages: Signs, Visits, and Premonitions from Loved Ones Lost on 9/11.
The book is a collection of stories regarding people who have had supernatural experiences with friends and family members who died on September 11.