The 2023 National Lacrosse League Entry Draft is slated for Saturday in Oakville, Ontario, Canada, with 98 incoming players ready to realize their professional box lacrosse dreams.
The NLL free agency period opening August 1, with a flurry of transactions and trades already impacting the way the draft will shake out. With just a few days left before the big day, get ready for the event with a full primer on the must-know information.
TOP PROSPECTS
NLL.com writer Stephen Stamp recently put together a breakdown of the top 50 prospects in the draft. That list is, of course, highlighted by Duke star Dyson Williams, who Stamp considers the player most ready for the NLL. The big lefty is the first of four forwards who Stamp has at the top of his big board.
A look at the top 10 of the top 50:
1. Dyson Williams, Duke (Brooklin Lacrosse Club MSL)
2. Adam Poitras, Loyola (Brooklin Lacrosse Club MSL/Whitby Warriors Jr. A)
3. Levi Anderson, Saint Joseph's (Albert Miners Sr. B)
4. Ryan Sheridan, Hofstra (Nanaimo Timbermen WLA)
5. Callum Jones, Norwich U. (Oakville Rock Sr. B)
6. Jake Stevens, Princeton (Brooklin Lacrosse Club MSL)
7. Brock Haley, Vermont (Brooklin Lacrosse Club MSL/Whitby Warriors Jr. A)
8. Ben MacDonnell (Brooklin Lacrosse Club MSL)
9. Matthew Wright, North Carolina (Peterborough Lakers MSL)
10. Bennett Smith, Queens (Victoria Shamrocks WLA)
TIME TO TURN IT AROUND
There are many intriguing teams in the NLL Entry Draft, but keep your eyes on the Georgia Swarm. The Swarm appeared to be limping toward one of the worst seasons in the NLL in 2022-23 before turning it around and nearly making the postseason. Now Georgia boasts three first-round picks (Nos. 6, 8 and 19) and nine overall. Whether all of those picks are used to bring talent in or as leverage to move up in the draft remains to be seen, but Georgia is in a fantastic position to surround its core with more firepower.
The Albany FireWolves join Georgia as the only team with three first-round selections, including the No. 1 pick. (The others come at Nos. 14 and 17.) The outlook for Albany is not quite as rosy as that of Georgia, especially after a league-worst 3-15 record in which the FireWolves went 0-9 at home and had a league-worst minus-66 scoring margin. Still, three first-round picks and six overall could help infuse the franchise with significant pieces for the future.
WAITING PATIENTLY
After falling in the Eastern Conference Finals to the eventual NLL champion Buffalo Bandits, the Toronto Rock have to wait awhile for their first pick in the draft — assuming a deal does not happen to move them up in the pecking order. Toronto will not make its first pick until No. 39, or the opening pick of the third round. By that time, many (if not all) of the day-one impact players will be off the board.
Toronto lost its first-round pick July 10 when it acquired Mark Matthews from the Saskatchewan Rush in exchange for Zach Manns, Adam Jay and the No. 12 pick. Its second-round pick was lost on March 13 when it acquired Greg Downing from the Albany Firewolves for the No. 32 pick.