Welcome to “5-and-5,” a new series from US Lacrosse Magazine that features prominent athletes, coaches and personalities combining on-field perspective with off-field persona.
Ryder Garnsey knows better than most what makes a great highlight mixtape. The lefty attackman who led the Redwoods in scoring during the Premier Lacrosse League Championship Series consistently pulls off moves that look like they were dreamt up in a video game. The highlights from his post-grad year at Phillips Academy Andover in 2015 have garnered more than 185,000 views. The abundance of behind-the-back assists, one-handed goals and toe drags make the nine-minute compilation one of the apexes of the genre.
“I have never been the biggest, fastest, or strongest guy on the field, so I’ve always known that my stick skills and my creativity are going to be the avenue that I have to take if I’m going to be successful," Garnsey, who’s listed at 5’9” and 176 pounds, explained during his rookie year when he led all players in scoring after the All-Star break.
But who makes the cut when Garnsey goes down a lacrosse highlight rabbit hole? These are his words as written and excerpted from an interview with US Lacrosse Magazine’s Nelson Rice.
Mikey Powell (2006)
This video has one million views for a reason. It's the holy grail, and I could watch it on repeat all day every day. He was the guy that I wanted to be like. I got to watch him live in the Carrier Dome a couple times, including when he pulled off the front flip against UMass. The front flip isn’t in this video, but even without that, there are a bunch of moves that I could never pull off and are incredibly impressive. If I tried to bust them out in a game, it usually didn’t go too well for me, but I attempted everything, minus the flip in my backyard against my dad.
He really made that creativity cool, and I’ve tried to bring that into my game. He definitely looked like he was having a lot of fun out there, and I try to have a lot of fun every time I take the field as well.
When I went to the Final Four in Philadelphia in 2006, the Powell brothers were there doing a skills demonstration with a bunch of stick tricks and fakes. I remember getting totally lost and had no idea where the ball was for like 20 minutes. The goalie was in a similar boat.
He does things that no one ever had done and that you might never see again. It’s really on another level. For my money, that’s why he's the best player to ever play the game.