FROM SCORER TO REPORTER
Not every major storyline will unfold on the field. Kylie Ohlmiller, a 2022 gold medalist with the U.S. Women’s National Team and a fan favorite since her college days at Stony Brook, won’t play this season after sustaining an injury. Instead, Ohlmiller, the most prolific scorer (498 points) in NCAA Division I history, will add to her off-field resume as a sideline reporter working with Joe Beninati and the rest of the ESPN team.
Ohlmiller, who calls some Stony Brook games and regularly appears on CAA broadcasts as a color analyst, will add to the other part of her lacrosse portfolio by going inside the huddle to provide insights viewers might not otherwise be privy to.
“I’m so excited for her,” Apuzzo said. “She does such a good job. She’s very good at it. She’s very good.”
Abi Jackson, the director of sport for Athletes Unlimited Lacrosse, thinks the ability for Ohlmiller to make the transition is part of what makes AU — and women’s sports in general — special.
“That is another positive outcome around the bigger platform for women’s sports, right? Like, Charlotte [North] was calling ACC games, and Kylie’s a staple on Long Island and Stony Brook for games, so you get used to that,” Jackson said. “We would never have even known that was something that they could do unless we’re seeing them on TV.
“Kylie is a consummate professional in every aspect. AU is a place where she feels comfortable and confident and was comfortable and confident to entertain those conversations, and now she is going to be able to stay involved. That’s so critical.”
HOME IS WHERE LACROSSE IS
Athletes Unlimited is launching a new touring softball league in 2025 that will transition to a city-based league in 2026, a departure from the one-city, multi-week format that has defined AU’s four sports offerings since the organization began. The new league will play 60 games.
Could lacrosse eventually make the jump to a city-based league? The Premier Lacrosse League is in its first season of having teams assigned to geographic areas, but the league is still running a touring format.
“If we can get lacrosse there sooner rather than later, it would be huge for our sport,” Moreno said. “As much as Maryland is a huge hotbed for lacrosse, there are other hotbeds, whether that’s Long Island or Boston or Pennsylvania or New Jersey. I feel like all those areas could create so much more exposure and bring in consistently large audiences.”
Apuzzo called it “the ultimate goal” to have home cities, something both of AU Lacrosse’s predecessors — the UWLX and the WPLL — had before they folded.
For now, AU is focused on maximizing its current lacrosse format. It’s beneficial to have the content team around all the athletes in one place, Jackson said, as AU Lacrosse’s social media reach and impact has exploded in recent years. Maintaining that kind of creative control and ensuring that every athlete gets the same exposure has been critical to the league’s success thus far.
The other benefit of remaining in one place for a four-week season is the sense of urgency that is built up by the structure of the league. Opportunities to make significant moves in the standings are few and far between, so every play matters.