Since the team’s inaugural season in 2006, the Denver Outlaws have hosted Mile High Fourth of July, a show produced by Zambelli Fireworks. According to the team’s website, “more than 10,000 fireworks rounds will be ignited and paired with a music video tribute on the stadium’s 220-foot-long by 40-foot-high ThunderVision screen.”
The game is one of the most attended lacrosse events each year, drawing an average of 25,531 fans. The event has brought in at least 20,000 fans every year since 2008 and has drawn 30,000 fans on three separate occasions, including a record 31,664 people in 2015.
“It’s incredible,” said Eric Law, a Colorado native, University of Denver graduate and member of the Outlaws since 2013. “I went when I was in high school and a youth player. It was fun to watch the highest level of lacrosse there is. With the buzz and how many people are in the stands and the fireworks and Fourth of July, it is a unique and incredible event the Outlaws have done for the past decade. It’s tough to put it into words. It’s almost unexplainable. You have to be there to get the full experience.”
Not only do the Outlaws dominate the Fourth of July in the stands, they do so on the field as well. The team is 8-4 in Fourth of July games, winning with an average margin of more than six goals. Twice, including the 2017 victory over the Atlanta Blaze, the Outlaws have won by double digits.
The only team ever to beat the Outlaws on the Fourth of July is the Boston Cannons, who will play in the 2018 version of the game. Boston, the only team to play Denver more than once on July 4, is a perfect 4-0 going into the game Wednesday (7 p.m. MT).
Despite the home team’s usual advantage, visiting players still hope to be playing in Denver for the holiday.
“Every year, when the schedule comes out, it’s the first thing I look at, if I’m in that game,” said Atlanta long-stick midfielder Scott Ratliff, who has played in the game as a member of both the Blaze and the Cannons. “It’s one of the coolest lacrosse environments I’ve played, and I’d include the final four.”
“The crowd in Denver, on top of the number of people, they love lacrosse there. There’s no doubt who they’re cheering for. It makes it an exciting environment,” Ratliff added. “The final four is the biggest audience you’ll play in front of, but the majority is watching at home. It’s bigger than just a regular season game, but the atmosphere as far as the crowd goes is not as good as the Fourth of July game. The final four weekend, you have all sorts of lacrosse fans there. They don’t have extreme loyalty to any team. In Denver, everyone is cheering for the Outlaws.”