With the MLL Collegiate Draft coming at the conclusion of the college season, rookies were immediately available to help their teams, making the infusion of new talent a reason for excitement.
The first three players selected in the draft did not suit up, however, and six of the nine first round picks were not active. It was a fourth-round selection, though, that stole the show.
John Crawley, taken 33rd overall by the Charlotte Hounds out of Johns Hopkins, scored six goals and added one assist in his first Major League Lacrosse game.
The Hounds scored seven goals in the second period, with Crawley scoring two and assisting on another. He scored the first two goals of the third quarter to give Charlotte a 13-9 lead.
“I think he’s one of those players that gets the most out of himself every day,” Johns Hopkins offensive coordinator Bobby Benson said in an article in The Baltimore Sun prior to the team’s NCAA Tournament game against Duke in early May. “He practices hard, he plays hard, he brings that toughness and physicality to the way he dodges and plays, which I think has been really good for us. He’s definitely our emotional leader.”
On the other side of the field, Atlanta midfielder Adam Osika – a third round pick out of Albany – scored two goals and had an assist of his own. Osika’s first goal was Atlanta’s first goal of the third quarter, ending a 9-0 Charlotte run that started with just under 10 minutes remaining in the second quarter.
His second goal came with less than a minute remaining in the third quarter and gave the Blaze a 15-14 lead, one that was not relinquished for the remainder of the game.
For the Florida Launch, Nick Mariano, the fourth-overall selection and brother of Launch head coach Tom Mariano, scored two goals and his Syracuse teammate Sergio Salcido, the eighth pick in the draft and a Winter Park, Florida native, scored one goal, in the team’s victory over the New York Lizards.
“It’s kind of something we’ve been missing. Both (Nick) and Sergio came in, finished shots. I mean, they were shooting deep, and they were quality shots,” Tom Mariano said on the team’s website. “Nick is a goal scorer. I try to tell people, we didn’t draft him because of the name on his jersey, we drafted him because he’s a legit player. I think he proved that tonight.”
The Denver Outlaws also saw an immediate impact from a pair of rookies in their 19-13 victory over Boston. First-round pick Zach Currier, whom the Outlaws traded up three spots to draft, scored one goal and added two assists, while LSM Larken Kemp picked up three ground balls.
Although the Chesapeake Bayhawks lost to the Ohio Machine, 18-11, face-off specialist Ben Williams – a fifth-round pick out of Syracuse – won 23 of 32 face-offs and picked up 15 ground balls. He also had an assist.