All three veterans intend to be back in Maryland in 2021 for the Women’s World Championships that will be hosted by nearby Towson.
“I’m looking forward to playing,” Nielsen said. “It’s still a special thing to play at this age and represent your country. It’s something I’m looking forward to, as long as I can stay healthy. My first World Cup in 2003 was in Towson. For it to be at Towson, and end everything where it all started it would be a cool reflective moment. I’m looking forward to playing and going for another one.”
Said Dobbie on retirement: “I got some great advice from Julie Foudy who played on US national team. ‘Don’t put a time line on retirement. Be in the moment, enjoy the moment. When it comes time to hang up your cleats, you’ll know it.’ I think I’ve tried to live in that space and perspective. I’m still competing at the highest level. I feel physically as fit this summer as I did at the last World Cup. I feel fortunate I’m able to do that. I’ll continue to do that as long as I can. I’m not putting a timeline on it, just trying to appreciate the moment and living in that as much as possible.”
The WPLL is helping to keep players in game shape and primed for top competition. It’s something that was missing four years ago.
“I remember 2013 and 2017 and literally the first game you played is the first game you played in four years,” said Nielsen, who unlike Dowd and Dobbie did not play in the UWLX that started in 2016. “Now to have a league where you can get reps in and it forces you to keep a stick in your hands if you want to play well, it’s great preparation and it’s fun. As a young kid, I wanted to be the best and be a professional athlete in some sense.”
Playing in the WPLL has helped them stay on top of their game. All three are devoted to working out at their respective schools, and the WPLL gives them a competitive aspect that they can’t get elsewhere.
“You have to stay sharp,” Dowd said. “I’m so passionate about the game and I’m really passionate about stickwork and all the little skills it takes to be a good player. That is what made me fall in love with lacrosse. That has not changed – all the little things. That part is easy to stay engaged and committed. And you have to work out and stay prepared. It’s going to take working out, shooting, and it’s going to take commitment. It’s not easy to do it. As a mature player, you understand what it’s going to take and then you go out and have fun and you’re ready to go.”
Dobbie says it’s not getting easier. She thinks defenders and goalies are more athletic than ever. And the WPLL has allowed teams to be more physical, and she’s adapted how she plays.
“I was a midfielder my whole life,” Dobbie said. “A lot of my training was focused on fitness and speed and a lot of time spent on defense because that wasn’t my best thing. Now it’s going to more of a box lacrosse style. It’s all tight, freeing your hands, popping open. It’s a good thing that I have that box lacrosse experience. That’s tied into the pro level and how physical the defense is and you have to be able to handle the pressure and handle the ball.”
The three are role models for sustaining a high level of play well beyond their college playing days. They continue to be among the best in a league that is made up primarily of 20-somethings.
“For some of the younger players in the league, it’s probably exciting to know in your 30s you can still compete at a high level,” Dowd said. “You can still try to dominate the game. It’s cool. All three of us are attackers. It’s one of the most elite, highly skilled positions. The fact that all of us hold roster spots and play well is really cool. It’s pretty unique. I think it helps that all three of us coach at the collegiate level so we all think about the game of lacrosse all the time, how can we get players and our team to perform and create great offenses that are hard to defend? And Dana and Hannah have incredible passion. We have an outlet to go and be the best players.”
After a recent game, a younger player asked Nielsen how she could sustain such a high level of play when she was struggling so recently out of college. Nielsen answered that it comes down to passion.
“Dana is one of my best friends,” Nielsen said. “Katrina Dowd is someone I played in college with. There’s so much respect for each other. We all know what we’re going through and know how much we love the sport. The ones that make it, to still be playing when you’re 30-plus, you have to have a love for it. You have to be invested in the game to be involved this long in it.”