Once you show you can shoot the two-pointer, the defense starts to open up. Suddenly, you have more options.
“People come running out at you,” said Ratliff, who entered the club with the Atlanta Blaze but is now with the Archers. “You can face dodge, you can start to move the ball and obviously get a ton of assists and double assists because defenses have to rotate pretty early to protect the arc. It’s a big part of the game. CJ showed that against us. He led that charge in the second half. Not only did he put up all those points, but there were two or three goals created because of us having to adjust.”
That’s all before mentioning the unmeasurable impact of a pole goal.
“I always compared it to like a pick-six in football,” Ratliff said. “Yeah, a long-pole goal is the same amount of points, but there’s also a little bit of an emotional boost that comes with it.”
Bocklet wasn’t alone when it came to early adopters. Ask the members of the LSM hat trick club about their influences and three names pop up often: Brodie Merrill, Kyle Sweeney and Joel White.
Among the most polished when arriving in the professional ranks was Ratliff, who looked up to that trio. He didn’t have the luxury of specializing while growing up in Marietta, Georgia. A player with his abilities was needed all over the field.
When he went on to Loyola, he had the opportunity to work with defensive coordinator Matt Dwan, a former LSM himself. Dwan and then-offensive coordinator Dan Chemotti, now the head coach at Richmond, recognized Ratliff’s skillset and wanted to maximize it.
“They built it into our game plan,” Ratliff said. “It was almost like our D-middie group was the de facto third line midfield from a production standpoint.”
He finished his career with the Greyhounds with 30 goals, a school record for a long pole, in addition to 14 assists in 58 games. By his third MLL season, he was more than a point-per-game player with the Cannons.
An offensive approach with Ratliff was pushed to the limit one season in Atlanta when he was weaved into offensive sets. But don’t think LSMs have just become glorified snipers, either. Scoring goals is just one facet of the job.
“You’re just involved in so many different aspects of the game,” said Ehrhardt, a three-time LSM of the Year winner with the Whipsnakes. “Faceoff, winning possession, the clearing game, the riding game too, and then especially you’re involved in the defensive end and the offensive end. You’re really touching every part of the game at that position. It definitely is one of the more important positions on the field.”
Versatility is the name of the game. A varied skill set used to set you apart from the rest. Now, it is almost required to reach the highest level.
“There was only a couple of long sticks doing what they are doing today,” Hartzell said. “Now, you’re seeing pretty much every team has a long stick that can score in transition. You look at the Chaos, they’ve got two long-stick middies that can put up points.”
Costabile’s opportunity to etch his name into the record books was far from certain. A longtime stalwart on the Chesapeake Bayhawks, he went undrafted in the entry draft following the PLL-MLL merger and found himself in the player pool.
“I thought about retirement basically last year,” Costabile said. “I was in the Maldives with my girlfriend, and I get a call from [Chaos coach Andy Towers]. He goes, ‘Hey, did you hear that we picked you up?’ … The rest is history.”
Since, he’s helped the Chaos to a championship and worked his way back to being an everyday player. His teammate Jarrod Neumann hyped him up this week as being the frontrunner for this year’s top LSM honor.
“CJ is ageless,” Towers said following the Archers matchup. “I mean, the reality is the guy is like Superman. He is just relentless in terms of how competitive he can be.”
That edge has pushed him into elite company at the age of 32. And he’s not done yet.
“You kind of have a chip where you want to prove to people that you still got it,” Costabile said. “I think the PLL, the way the game is designed, I think is helpful for my game as well. Very up tempo, transition, fast-faced, shorter field, two-point line a yard in from where it was in the MLL. I think my skillset is very adaptable to the style of play here.”