Schreiber, Wolf and McArdle all were tasked with the responsibility of reversing the fortunes of their respective MLL franchises. While none of them did it alone, they all have delivered on the expectation that comes with being top draft picks.
In 2015, McArdle, Wolf and Schreiber finished second, third, and fourth in the league in points, respectively. All three were in the top 15 in scoring in 2017 despite none playing more than 10 games.
McArdle said it has been an honor to help his team and the league grow with other players from his draft class. The Launch will make their first MLL playoff appearance Saturday at Ohio (7:30 p.m. Eastern on Twitter). Rochester visits Denver in the other semifinal (4:30 p.m. Eastern on Twitter).
“As a group or individually, you have an impact like that, all three of us have helped our teams tremendously,” McArdle said. “It’s a real cool feeling to succeed with guys in your draft class and down the line. In the future, if Lax Sports Network or [US Lacrosse Magazine] are talking about draft classes and our names are thrown around, that’s a real cool honor.”
Wolf, who won back-to-back NCAA Division I championships with Duke in 2013 and 2014, related his MLL experience to what he had in college.
“The Rattler locker room and culture is really tight,” he said. “I learned that early on with Kevin Leveille, Joel White, Jordan MacIntosh. It was really difficult, because I felt like a freshman and wanted to win it again for the seniors, and honestly four years in, I’m still trying to win them a championship.”
Schreiber said he would trade all of his points for the ultimate team prize.
“Going back to the Machine and building this thing and being a part of this process, we’ve made the playoffs the last couple years and the championship last year,” he said. “If I score zero points the next two games and we win, I’m happy.”
Their pasts, although different, are success stories. Their futures, most likely intertwined, will be talked about in length. What the three players each are focused on, however, is the present and their opportunity to win their first MLL championships.
“We knew our fate in Rochester could be coming to an end, which would be awful,” Wolf said. “So we’re just trying to win.”
“I won a championship my senior year of high school, and it was one of my best memories playing lacrosse,” Schreiber added. “It’s an effort to do it again at the next level. It didn’t work out in college. I’m excited to do that now, and to do it with this group that gels and has built something special would be even better.”