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H
e had a stick in his crib with his name on it.
Doug Schreiber, Tom’s dad and a National Lacrosse Hall of Fame midfielder — like his son, one part goal-scorer and one part feeder during his playing days — confesses to it.
“He picked up the game early,” he says. “The second he got home, he definitely did have a stick.”
And so it began.
By the time he was 6 years old, little Tom was tossing a ball — lefty and righty — against a board in the family’s basement. By third grade, he was on East Meadow’s Nassau County PAL team, his first organized lacrosse team, coached by dad, and he began to define his game.
“Everybody that’s ever seen him play has talked about his versatility and vision,” says Doug Schreiber, who coached Tom in youth ball and in high school, where he’s the offensive coordinator at Catholic league power St. Anthony’s (N.Y.). “He picks up open guys and he snap feeds. He can really push the ball through a crowd and get it to where it has to be. And he’s always been very humble, a hard worker, and a team player. Sometimes you had to say, ‘Listen, don’t throw to Billy because he can’t catch, and we only have two minutes to go. But don’t tell Billy.’”
Schreiber, whose younger sister Chrissy played at Rutgers, tagged along to watch his older cousins play or see his father referee games across Long Island, and occasionally he caught a game involving Maryland, too. That’s where pops won an NCAA title in 1973 before embarking on a 50-day world tour — to California, Hawaii, Australia, Hong Kong, Thailand, New Delhi and England — with Team USA in 1974.
“It gave him a chance to see the world,” Tom Schreiber says. “The same thing as me, potentially.”
Four years ago at the Federation of International Lacrosse World Championship in Denver, Schreiber served as a volunteer assistant coach for the Uganda national team, the first of its kind from Africa, and watched as the U.S. took silver to Canada’s gold. If all works out as planned this year, he will do in Israel this July what his dad’s U.S. team did — win a world title — and be a central fixture in a golden story. Then maybe he’ll do it again in 2019 with the U.S. indoor team.
“Anytime you’re wearing USA on your chest and playing with a group like that on the world stage has got to be pretty incredible,” he says.
US Lacrosse Magazine met Tom Schreiber at his residence in Long Beach, N.Y., joined his father, Doug, at his childhood home in East Meadow, N.Y., and took to the field at the Mineola PAL complex for some shooting. Photos by Brian Schneider.
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T
he phone call surprised him. Schreiber was traveling back from Princeton’s alumni game last fall to his apartment on Long Beach on the South Shore of Long Island when he listened to the voicemail from Josh Sanderson, who had recently retired from the NLL and moved to the front office as Toronto’s assistant general manager.
Sanderson wanted to see if Schreiber had any interest in trying out for the Rock.
“I don’t know,” Schreiber said when he called back. “I don’t have any.”
But after a few days and recruiting calls from Hall of Famer Casey Powell, who played with Sanderson for the now-defunct Boston Blazers, and Rock defender Brodie Merrill, “I decided, ‘Why not?’” Schreiber says. “It was the first time, maybe ever, that there were no real expectations for me.”
Toronto forwards Colin Doyle and Sanderson had retired and Rob Hellyer, the team’s best returning offensive player, tore his ACL. With what it evaluated as a thin draft class, the Rock front office sought an unorthodox approach to fill a need.
Schreiber, along with fellow Americans Kieran McArdle and Connor Buczek — two of Powell’s former teammates with MLL’s Florida Launch — were the ingredients of the so-called “American experiment.”
Schreiber wore an outdoor helmet to his first Rock training camp last November and played with V-stringing patterns in his stick.
“I just had zero instincts at all,” he says, “but I tried to get better every time out.”