Connor Shellenberger couldn’t stop glancing at his phone shortly after USA Lacrosse dropped its Sixes Evaluation Camp on July 29.
He checked the 23-man roster multiple times. Shellenberger knew he was among the players headed to Lake Placid, but he had a hard time believing he’d wear the red, white and blue.
“My name looks weird on that list,” he thought.
Shellenberger, who spent much of the 2021 college season with Virginia building the confidence that made him a standout star in the final four, needed to remind himself that he was worthy of playing with some of the game’s top players at the Sixes Evaluation Camp.
The First Team All-American who dropped 79 points for the eventual national champions now gets recognized on campus and around the Charlottesville community. He’s among the names mentioned in the all-too-early 2022 Tewaaraton race. Still, he had to shake the nerves while making the trip to Lake Placid to compete with names that he grew up idolizing.
“I definitely have to pinch myself,” Shellenberger said. “Finally getting to play with guys I grew up watching now is kind of eye-opening.”
Shellenberger did, indeed, stand out among the rest on the Sixes Evaluation Camp roster, but it wasn’t for a lack of skill or experience. At 13 letters, his last name was three letters longer than anyone else on the list. At 20, he's also the youngest player on the Sixes roster.
Once he took the field at practice in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. on Monday night, Shellenberger showed exactly why he belongs among this group of PLL professionals and former college stars. He slipped past opposing defensemen and flicked precision passes through tight windows, hinting box skills beyond that of the one summer in eighth grade he played indoors.
He followed that performance with another strong one at the Blue-White exhibition, held at the Lake Placid Summit Classic. In front of hundreds of lacrosse enthusiasts, Shellenberger contributed plenty of offense for Team Blue in a 23-22 overtime loss.
In his first Sixes experience, Shellenberger, the player, fit in just fine.
“It hasn’t settled in for me yet,” he said. “Going into practice, I just had to tell myself I do belong here, I can play. You only get to play this game for so long, so I’m trying to have as much fun as I can and let the work that we do take care of itself.”
The Blue-White exhibition was the first official lacrosse game for Shellenberger since his four-goal, two-assist performance, helping Virginia win a classic national championship game over Maryland on Memorial Day. In the four-game NCAA tournament, he dropped 24 points on 10 goals and 14 assists.
Since that day, Shellenberger’s victory tour hasn't featured much of the sport that helped him achieve relative fame in his hometown. With just weeks left before he’ll return to Virginia to start in preparation for the 2022 season, time is running out on a summer he’ll remember forever.
“It’s been fun just soaking everything in and trying to enjoy as much as I can and convince myself to get ready to move on,” he joked. “The guys keep saying when you win, you walk forever. Now we’ll be in the history books forever as a team.”
Coming into the 2021 season as a redshirt freshman and former No. 1 recruit, Shellenberger took much of the Cavaliers’ season to develop the confidence he needed to take over in May. A three-week break before Virginia’s NCAA opener offered Shellenberger a chance to reflect on his progress.
“I just mentally said ‘You need to stop saying you're in your first year playing college lacrosse. You need to take the next step right now,’” he said. “The game started to slow down a bit and I took a bit more pride in the preparation. It showed in the NCAA tournament, and now I have to keep it up so I’m not a four-game wonder.”
A confident Connor Shellenberger is a scary proposition for the rest of college lacrosse. If he were to suit up in next summer’s World Games playing Sixes, he could be a problem for the rest of the world.