When it wasn’t scoring goals, the U.S. U19 team was riding with success. Team Premiere seldom held possession on their offensive end — a testament to the intensity brought forth by Team USA.
Another sign of a cohesive team forming — cheering on ground ball battles.
“Before, in Columbus, we weren’t as meshed as one,” Grant Mitchell said. “Today, the biggest thing that stood out to me was when a guy would get a big ground ball, you’d hear a bunch of guys on the sideline screaming his name.”
With one game remaining at Spring Premiere against a Japanese team that nearly upset the U.S. Senior team, Myers is happy with where his team is. It is growing more connected. Players are learning the nuances of the international game.
With only a couple more opportunities for this team to come together, the progress shown between November and now is encouraging.
O’Neill Gaining Confidence
Lacrosse fans have been hearing of Brennan O’Neill for years — and he’s just a senior in high school. His highlights at St. Anthony’s (N.Y.) have gone viral on more than one occasion. He led his St. Anthony’s team to the CHSAA title with an amazing seven-goal effort last May.
The Duke commit is one of the most heralded recruits in recent years.
But the U19 national team experience is an entirely different beast. O’Neill joined a training team full of promising college recruits — many that have started their first semester in college lacrosse. As one of the youngest members of the training team, O’Neill has had to find his role on this U.S. offense.
Saturday, he made it apparent he’s starting to round into form for Team USA. He scored four goals against Team Premiere from a multitude of angles — diving, coming from x and a rocket from the top of the offensive zone.
The highlight of the day was his diving effort from the right side of the crease that gave the U.S. an 8-1 lead in the third quarter. He was simply taking what was given to him.
“Our team got good spacing and there wasn’t a slide, so I just went in and dropped it in,” he said. “If there’s no one in there and there’s good spacing, you can always go in and if there’s no double, that’s good for me.”
O’Neill has the raw talent to wow a crowd like the one that showed up to Incarnate Word on Saturday. With a complete effort from the U.S. national team, he was able to showcase it.
“It’s a matter of parts and pace and space and working together, and then ultimately someone is going to fortunate enough to be on the end of the rainbow,” Myers said. “Brennan knows he’s going to be a guy on the end of the rainbow a lot because it’s his job.”
It will soon be his job at Duke, once O’Neill graduates this spring. In attendance in San Antonio was his future coach, John Danowski, who led the Senior team shortly after O’Neill was finished.
This U19 national team process could help elevate his game to another level before he arrives in Durham.
Mitchell Brothers' Influence
It’s been a few years since Grant and Connor Mitchell butted heads, and elbows, while playing basketball in the backyard of their home in Buford, Ga.
“Sometimes it got heated,” joked Grant Mitchell. “We’d have to be split up for a second.”
Eventually, their one-on-ones gravitated to the lacrosse field, where both brothers became standouts playing youth lacrosse in the Atlanta suburbs. Both twins excelled with their athleticism and strength.
By 2017, the Mitchell family decided to move to Maryland to allow Grant and Connor the opportunity to compete at Calvert Hall (Md.). There, both emerged as top-of-the-line college recruits for a team that won the MIAA (A) title in consecutive seasons.
Both middies, Grant and Connor Mitchell were always better working together. After years of playing on the same line, they’re as cohesive a duo that Myers has at his disposal on this U.S. team.
The twins don’t always top the scoring charts as two-way midfielders, but they capitalized on chances to combine for five goals (Grant with 3 and Connor with 2). They also contributed on the ride, which was extremely effective Saturday.
“They’re going to get tough ground balls and play great defense,” Myers said. “A guy like Brennan is going to be a product of guys like Grant and Connor drawing doubles and moving the defense. The buy-in that we’re getting from guys for their roles has been great.”
Just six months separate this team from the world championships in Ireland. The Mitchell brothers would love to be there together playing with the U.S. — but they’re bringing the entire family along.
“If I’m lucky enough to go, it would be awesome both for my brother and for my teammates, as long as my family will be there to see it,” Connor Mitchell said.