The K90 Nordic Ski Jump at Utah Olympic Park is also known as the “large hill.” That seems like an understatement. From the top of the jump at an elevation of more than 7,500 feet, there are soaring views of the Wasatch Mountains. You almost have to squint to see the ground.
Constructed for the 2002 Salt Lake games, the facility has served as the Olympic trials site and a training hub for Olympic hopefuls. During the summer, it doubles as an extreme tubing destination where riders, who must be at least 13 years old, can hit speeds of up to 50 mph. They reach the top of the landing hill via a chair lift.
A handful of Archers LC members had other plans last Friday. They summited K90 on foot. Twice.
“The first time, we let everyone go at their own pace,” said Archers attackman and 2019 PLL All-Star Will Manny. “The second time, we did a group run where the guy at the end would have to sprint to the front, then the next guy would go.”
They made it to the top in six minutes. “Footwork Friday,” Manny captioned a picture he posted on Twitter of the crew at the peak of the jumping ramp.
Like Manny and his Archers teammates, Premier League Lacrosse pros across the country have had to get creative during quarantine to prepare for the league’s Championship Series. They’ve trained in garages, backyards, basements, local parks and almost everywhere in between. They’ve pushed trucks and raced down sand dunes, and they have been kicked off their fair share of fields. They’ve worn weighted vests and built their own bench press bars. They’ve gotten a little help from man’s best friend and their girlfriends.
Tom Schreiber dished out the second most assists in the PLL last season, including several to Manny. But over the past couple months, the 2019 midfielder of the year has turned to his fiancé, Kathleen Sharkey, a member of the US National Field Hockey team that placed fifth at the Rio Olympics, for a passing partner.
“Her lacrosse skills are getting there,” Schreiber said.
In previous years, the shifting starts of the indoor and outdoor pro leagues prevented overlap, but also hindered Schreiber’s recovery process. He spent the majority of his time rehabbing from knee surgery and then a rotator cuff injury he sustained after a hit by Garrett Epple during the Archers round one playoff loss to the Redwoods. But with the cancellation of the NLL season and the PLL Championship Series slated to run from July 25 to August 9, Schreiber is no longer in a maintenance phase.
“I've really been able to get back to 100 percent for the first time in two years,” he said.
That sentiment was echoed by most of the PLL pros interviewed for this article.
“I feel like I am in the best shape of my life,” said Redwoods midfielder Joe Walters, who noted that he now looks forward to training every single day.