Stagnitta is now in his third year as coach of the Charlotte Hounds. The team tied for first in the league with six other teams in his first season, making the playoffs on a tiebreaker, and finished two games out of the playoffs in his second season, although they were in contention into the final week.
As a former college coach, culture is very important to Stagnitta and something he’s tried to build with the Hounds.
“I told [Outlaws general manager] Tony Seaman [I won’t coach] if all I’m going to do is run a box and manage egos. I need to develop a team, a culture, and coach people,” said Stagnitta, whose college coaching career included stints as the head coach at Rutgers and Washington and Lee. “We have not only phenomenal players, but phenomenal guys. We push them. We have high expectations for them. It proves in this league you can truly work as a team. You can have a culture where people buy into roles like in a college team. It doesn’t happen overnight. We’ll have our bumps in the road, but I believe we have the culture and quality of people and commitment to overcome those things.”
Despite the strong start, the Hounds had plenty of personnel obstacles to overcome.
Of the top six scorers from the 2017 squad — John Haus, Ryan Brown, Joey Sankey, Mike Chanenchuk, Kevin Crowley and John Crawley — only one (Brown) has played in at least three games to start the 2018 season. Crowley (NLL commitments) and Sankey (injury) have yet to make their MLL debuts this year.
The team’s depth was tested; it passed with flying colors.
In Week 1 against the Boston Cannons, Kevin Cooper — who was acquired at the 2017 trade deadline but played in only two games for the Hounds — scored seven goals and assisted on two others.
In Week 2, Dylan Maltz — who went undrafted in 2017 and wasn’t even on a roster after training camps broke in April — scored four goals in his MLL debut. He continued to surprise many by scoring three goals and adding one assist against the Bayhawks and then scoring another two goals and assisting another goal against the Machine.
“Honestly, we had no expectations for Maltz,” Stagnitta said. “He has a great IQ. He has a skill set that works well with what we do. He’s performed well above and beyond for our expectations and someone who’s never played in an MLL game before.”
Maltz, who did not make the Outlaws roster out of training camp prior to the 2018 season, only wanted to be part of a team. Matt Rambo, a second-year attackman for the Hounds and Maltz’s line mate on Maryland’s 2017 NCAA championship team, vouched for his friend.
“I wanted to have fun and work hard and not let Matt down, putting my name out there and helping me get picked up,” Maltz said. “A lot of our success has to do with between-the-lines plays, whether that’s winning a ground ball or running out a shot. We’re playing at a really hard level. We’re underdogs. We were put last in the rankings. That motivates people. If you have good people and good chemistry, that goes a long way.”