Field and box goalies are drastically different positions, to the point that most outdoor goalies play the field in the indoor game, such as Blaze Riorden and Brett Queener, both of whom starred in net at Albany but play transition in the NLL and for the U.S.
Conversely, box goalies, such as Matt Vinc, will play the field outside. Vinc has starred as one of the NLL’s top goalies with Rochester for a decade, but when playing for Canada’s national field team, he’s a defenseman.
The differences of the goalie position in box as opposed to field lacrosse — be it the smaller net and crease, the bulky equipment or how one holds his stick — has eliminated several options of who might suit up for the national team. The only hope going forward is development from the grassroots up.
That means not relying on semi-pro leagues with older players picking up the position, but rather building for the future with true box goalies at the youth level who become pro players and go on to represent the U.S. in international competition.
With the NLL posting their stamp of approval on college leagues and developmental structures, as well as working more closely with US Lacrosse, the landscape is about to look a lot different in future years.
“If you look at the growth from just 10 or even five years ago, the number of goalies who would be considered for a national team or in our league, you could count on one hand,” said Brian Lemon, the NLL’s director of lacrosse operations. “Now there are 20,000 players in USBOXLA. You can do the math and figure out how many are goalies. As they develop, our scouts look at those guys.”
Last season in the CCBLL, goalies came from all over. Chandler Nayman has been especially impressive out of Cherry Creek (Colo.) High School and is on NLL team radars as a future draft pick. A 6-foot-4, 240-pound junior, Nayman also plays football for the Bruins. He was among several goalies interviewed in a USBOXLA article on this very subject.
“Being a box goalie has helped me a lot with field,” Nayman said. “It has made me better at using my body to make saves. It has also helped me stand my ground and not go for fakes.”
Seldom have American goalies that haven’t played in Canadian juniors been considered for professional roster spots.
“As a staff, we know it’s a concern,” Thorpe said. “We have a couple of guys who are younger and in the mix, and we want them to develop. USBOXLA has stuff going, there’s a few college box leagues that could help, but realistically to be a legitimate contender, I feel you have to go and play in Canada.”
But with players developing sooner in the states, that’s providing more options.
And if they can play pro? That just adds more options for the national team to find adequate talent.