In 2014, Dillon Ward won a gold medal with the Canadian National Team at the FIL World Championship, and he was named the tournament’s MVP. This year, Canada lost to the U.S. in the gold medal game, but Ward was named the tournament’s most outstanding goalie, highlighted by a 24-save effort in a 10-5 victory over the Iroquois Nationals in the semifinals.
Ward continued his successful run in Major League Lacrosse with the Denver Outlaws, filling in for an injured Jack Kelly. The backup at the start of the season, Ward made 16 saves to help Denver win the MLL championship and defeat the Dallas Rattlers, 16-12.
“It was being confident in myself and being confident in our defense where we could get stops,” Ward said. “The coaches trusted in me and the defense trusted me to make changes and put us in a position to succeed.”
For all his success, Ward was not a top collegiate draft pick. Since 2013, he’s played on three different MLL teams. Now in his second stint with Denver, Ward was acquired by the Outlaws in the supplemental draft on two different occasions.
To supplement something is to add an extra amount to something; the supplemental draft makes MLL players who are not protected on a team’s roster available for other teams to add to their roster. Most often, these players provide depth or coverage for players still playing their collegiate seasons or in the NLL.
Dillon Ward stepped in for an injured Jack Kelly and made 16 saves in the MLL Championship game against the Dallas Rattlers.
In Denver, however, the supplemental draft was a key component to building a championship roster.
“Our philosophy is they were all drafted out of college or picked up by somebody,” said Outlaws general manager and associate head coach Tony Seaman. “Somebody somewhere thought they were good enough to play in the league. I figure there was a reason [Chesapeake head coach Dave] Cottle picked this guy, or [Lizards head coach Joe] Spallina or one of the other coaches. I say let’s bring them in and see what they can do.”
Ward isn’t the only player acquired via the supplemental draft — referred to as the “trash heap” by Quint Kessenich during the broadcast of the MLL championship game — to play a large part in Denver’s success over the 2018 season and the final championship game. As the cliché goes, one man’s trash is another’s treasure.
Defenders Finn Sullivan and Eli Gobrecht, as well as midfielder Nick Tintle, were all supplemental draft picks at one point, and played a large role in the Outlaws championship victory.
“They play harder. They’ve got a lot to prove,” Seaman said. “I love guys that have things to prove.”
Nick Tintle played for the Denver Outlaws in the 2016 and 2017 seasons. He was left unprotected going into the 2018 supplemental draft, where he was re-selected by the Outlaws in the fourth round.
“He’s never won a championship,” Seaman said. “He came back this year for one reason. He was going to retire. He was hurt last year and couldn’t play in the championship game. I remember our discussion [prior to the 2018 season]. He said ‘I don’t care who you want me to play, I’ll play anybody and we’re not going to lose.’”
Willing to play wherever he was needed, the Outlaws coaching staff moved long pole Gobrecht — selected in the seventh round of the 2018 supplemental draft — to SSDM, only to move him back just a few games later. He played in every regular season game in 2018, scoring a goal and adding an assist. In the championship game, Gobrecht switched to cover Rattlers leading scorer Jordan Wolf, helping to hold him to only one goal in the final three quarters of the game.
Also at close defense, Sullivan went undrafted out of Hofstra University in 2016. He was selected by Denver in fifth round of the 2017 supplemental draft and played in all 14 regular season games in both 2017 and 2018.
Not only did Sullivan make the team, he became the team’s top defender, often guarding the other team’s top player.