Coming out of college, Chick, like many aspiring professional lacrosse players these days, had to choose between Major League Lacrosse or the Premier Lacrosse League.
“I got picked up in the PLL off the player pool, but the MLL was a better opportunity at the time,” he said. “I loved every second of it. Dallas was a great organization with a great coaching staff and great teammates. I had a blast, and I’m very thankful for the opportunity.”
This past offseason, Kyle Harrison — who works in PLL player outreach and plays for Redwoods LC — reconnected with Chick after first speaking a year prior.
Chick went on to be selected by Atlas LC in March’s PLL Entry Draft. He made the club’s active roster for the Championship Series, which began on Saturday in Herriman, Utah. Chick and Atlas’ first game was Sunday, an 11-10 win over the expansion Waterdogs.
“I want everyone’s best shot,” Chick said. “I want to see if I can hang with these guys.”
Chick is used to taking others’ best shots and shining. Along with his development as a player, he entered this summer with something else in his favor.
A coach’s mindset.
Chick spent the 2019-20 school year at UMBC as a volunteer assistant coach. He coached all over the field last fall and during the pandemic-shortened spring with the Retrievers.
“In the fall, I was working with the defense. Then spring came around, and I was actually working with Coach [Ryan] Moran and the offense,” Chick said. “I got the best of both worlds and was leading faceoff coaching as well.”
Fun fact: Chick even won 22 faceoffs at Lehigh. But he doesn’t pretend to know it all. He’s humble, selfless and only looking to improve, which only leads to continued growth.
“Coach Ryan Moran and Coach Joe Bucci at UMBC have been great mentors and great coaches to work alongside,” Chick said. “They’ve taught me a lot about coaching and the game. As a player, you don’t really think about building practice plans and all the work that goes behind the scenes of leading a team.”