Natalie Wills, senior manager of the NTDP and the driving force behind its creation, used the culture surrounding recent national teams as a model for success.
“The players that ultimately make that final [U.S. team] are the best humans,” she said. “We’re using these people to help us mold, build, select and identify the future them. Because they care and they’re selfless people, they’re part of this.”
Each trial featured drills led by fellow professional players like Dylan Maltz, Lauren Lea, Katie O’Donnell and others. Veterans like Greg Gurenlian, Will Manny, Adam Ghitelman and Matt Landis have also lent their talents and experiences to the players during the process. US Lacrosse partnered with the PLL and WPLL for phase one.
As for the players, the consensus was overwhelmingly positive for their first crack at the national team pipeline.
“I found out I was invited a week ago,” said Vincent Markazi, a goalie out of Twin Valley, Pa. “My mom said, ‘Would you be interested in this?’ I said ‘Sure.’ There’s no greater honor than representing the U.S. in a lacrosse game. We were working on hand speed. Gunnar Waltz was my goalie coach. Within the first 10 minutes, he gave us two drills to get better by myself, which was really cool.”
For the girls at US Lacrosse, the theme was grit.
“You just need to flip that switch,” said Brooke Matthews, a freshman from Bryn Mawr (Md.). “You have to steer away from, ‘It’s hot and I’m tired,’ and go to, ‘I’m ready to play and I need to do my best.’”
Work hard. Show grit. Play for something beyond yourself. Those are the pillars of the national team, and it was on display at the NTDP regional trials this summer. For the latest, go to teamusa.uslacrosse.org/ntdp.