As MLL players transition into media and enjoy the process, they see it as something more players will get involved in. Flanagan wants them to know what they could be getting into, however.
“Every year, there’s so many guys interested in getting into calling college games,” he said. “It’s a lot harder than it looks. ‘It’s easy. I talk lacrosse every day.’ But when you have to articulate something and have a producer in your ear and are watching a replay, it’s harder than anything you’ve done.”
The newcomers may seem like some to competition, but Brooks welcomes the collaboration.
“I was talking to Tommy Schreiber and I said, ‘Hey, I see you’re starting a podcast,’ and he’s like, ‘Go figure. We start two weeks after you,’” Brooks said. “I said, ‘I don’t care.’ We want to help each other out.”
Rabil said that collaboration is essential not only to building individual brands, but the brand of lacrosse as a whole.
“In the influencer community, take YouTube, two influencers will do cross-channel campaigns. They’ll star in each other’s content, and both of their subscribers will grow,” he said. “Featuring Scott Rodgers, doing stuff with Kyle Hartzell, and sharing what Ned Crotty is doing or Rob Pannell, that’s a way that, one, you can create a platform for your peers to improve their following, and two, have more substantive content. It’s more dynamic and more interesting to see as a viewer.”
Since the dawn of MLL, a selling point of the league has been the players, both their talent on the field and their personality off it. With players as members of the media, not only do they get to show their own personalities, but they also share the stories of others. It is one way to grow the game.
“When I was first on Twitter, I’d tweet every day I was going to work out,” Rabil said. “That worked at first because it was a novelty. Now, no one wants to hear that. They know that. You’re a professional athlete. It’s how you create a unique message.”
“I think the more players that are successful in building off-field brands and having dynamic conversations with them,” he added, “the better our sport will grow.”