SMITH HESITATED TO SAY YES.
In the wake of George Floyd’s murder and increased public awareness of police brutality in 2020, the Eyekonz players wanted to organize a march in the name of Black women who had died at the hands of law enforcement.
“It’s a little dangerous in Philly,” Smith told them. Her daughter was one of the ringleaders.
Instead, the team work-shopped public policy proposals to send to local and state officials. But they still wanted to march. So they researched the cases of previously nameless victims of police brutality and created posters to go with their lacrosse sticks. They marched from Eyekonz’s home field in Strawberry Mansion to the Philadelphia Museum of Art in the Fairmount neighborhood where Sloan Green lives.
“It translated onto the field. As soon as they did that, the whole program changed,” Smith said. “Their self-confidence — they felt like they belonged. And they knew they had a voice.”
Sloan Green lamented that teams today break down huddles with their sticks up. “We used to do hands in,” she said. “That was important, to touch each other.”
And to see hands that looked like yours.
“This is an amazing opportunity. You don’t see a lot of all-Black teams,” said 14-year-old Samiah Hayes, whom Smith singles out as having legitimate Division I potential as a lacrosse player if she applies herself in the coming years. “It’s a good way to build a family. I’ve learned to gain more self-confidence and to trust others more.”
Hayes was one of the players Smith chastised before sending them to “Mom Tina” under the tent. Sloan Green urged them to think feet-first on defense, like in basketball, but did not get a chance to say much more. Another coach competing in the 14U division of the World Lacrosse Women’s Festival — a white woman — interrupted them.
“I just wanted to say hi and thank you for what you’ve done for the game,” the woman said.
“It’s important for the new generation, not just with Eyekonz but across the world, to know the sustenance and the foundation that Tina Sloan Green created,” Smith said. “After she was sick, I was like, ‘You know what? What better way to give homage to the woman that paved the way not only for myself and for my players, but for women’s lacrosse, than to have her come back and share her knowledge?’ Since she came on, it’s like she never stopped.”
The World Lacrosse Women’s Festival features nearly 70 youth and high school-aged teams competing in conjunction with the World Lacrosse Women’s Championship. Click here for the latest results.