This article originally appeared in the November print edition of US Lacrosse Magazine, available exclusively to members of US Lacrosse. Join US Lacrosse today and have the magazine delivered right to your mailbox while helping to support the development of the sport.
Gale Thorpe wasn’t surprised to see a voicemail notification from his father pop up on his phone one day this summer.
“My dad’s a big voicemail guy. He loves it,” Gale joked about father, Regy. “I don’t think I picked up, so of course I saw ‘Regy Thorpe voicemail,’ and I went and played it.”
But the younger Thorpe wasn’t expecting what he heard once he pressed play. His father, head coach of the U.S. indoor national team, was calling to tell him he’d made the 23-man roster for the upcoming World Indoor Lacrosse Championship in Langley, B.C.
Regy Thorpe started with his typical coach speak, but couldn’t hide his excitement for Gale, who’d grown up playing box lacrosse on the Onondaga reservation and continued to play in Canada through the 2019 summer.
“He congratulated me, saying thank you and telling me I was making the team,” Gale Thorpe said. “Toward the end of the voicemail, he turned into a father, saying, ‘Hey son, I’m really proud of you. Congratulations.’ I got the coach’s voicemail, but it slowly turned into my dad talking there.”
Thorpe, 24, was one of the young stars at the world championship. He finished with 27 points, helping to fuel a U.S. team that had its best shot yet to play for the gold medal — a barrier yet to be reached by the program.
The U.S. had a strong veteran core that included Joel White, Brett Manney, Chris O’Dougherty, Greg Downing and Anthony Kelly. Twice in five days, the U.S. came tantalizingly close to knocking off the vaunted Iroquois Nationals, only to fall short. The Americans couldn’t hold on to a third-quarter lead in a defensive struggle against the Iroquois in the Sept. 26 semifinals at Langley Sports Centre in Langley, British Columbia, losing 9-7. Two days later, they held off a late surge by England to claim their fifth straight bronze medal with an 11-8 victory.
Canada, undefeated all-time in WILC competition, defeated the Iroquois 19-12 in the gold medal game.