Talk to anyone familiar with Mackenzie Burns, and one of the first traits they’ll describe is her toughness. “She’s one of the strongest women I know,” Debra Burns said.
“I would trust her with my life,” said Ally Kennedy, Burns’ college and U.S. teammate.
In middle school, Burns was diagnosed with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. At the time, she was one of just 50,000 children affected. Her joints ached constantly. She felt it most in her knees but was “in so much pain just doing everyday life.”
On her 13th birthday, doctors told Burns she’d never play sports again.
“I have it everywhere from my jaws to my toes,” she said. “Every joint imaginable, I have arthritis. Your joints get very stiff, and it hurts to move them morning and night. Most of my pain is in my knee. I’ve had multiple minor operations to get my knee drained and scoped out.”
To combat the pain, doctors prescribed Humera, a medicine that can reduce the severity of rheumatoid arthritis. It worked. Burns got back on the field and hardly skipped a beat.
“I guess it starts with when she was little,” Debra Burns said. “You could never tell her she couldn’t achieve anything. She still has that mentality. If she wants something, she’s going to go get it.”
Burns’ persistence led her to Stony Brook, where she started 67 games in four seasons for a team that climbed to No. 1 in the national rankings during the 2018 season. She was named the America East Defensive Player of the Year as a senior in 2019 and finished her Seawolves career ranked seventh in program history with 68 caused turnovers.
Burns’ success at Stony Brook led her to Team USA, for which her college coach, Joe Spallina, serves as an assistant. She will be among the 50 players competing in tryouts for the 2021 U.S. team Dec. 4-6 at US Lacrosse in Sparks, Md.
Burns first suited up for the U.S. team at the Spring Premiere in January 2019, featuring exhibitions at Stanford against England and the host Cardinal. Nine months later, she was in Sparks for the Fall Classic games against Canada and Maryland.
Unbeknownst to the Burns family, a photo of Mackenzie rising high for a draw when she was a member of the Long Island Yellow Jackets U15 team competing in the US Lacrosse Nationals hangs inside the building. It’s on the second floor, just past the precipice of the stairwell and in front of the elevator. You can’t miss it.
Burns’ lacrosse life came full circle when she was wearing red, white and blue and posing for pictures next to that throwback. Her maternal grandfather was Choctaw, and although Burns first discovered lacrosse without the influence of her Native American heritage, her cousins are proud that she embraces the sport of her ancestors.
Burns’ parents expressed similar pride in her ascent to the pinnacle of the sport.
“When she got the phone call to be on Team USA, it was indescribable,” Joe Burns said. “Even depending on how far she goes, just a chance to get a picture of her with the USA jersey on far exceeds anything we could have imagined.”