Jared Conners, who plays on the wing, said that moment sticks out when he thinks about Sisselberger. He said being comfortable enough to stand in front of his team as a rookie and speak out and to trust that his teammates wouldn’t judge him showed a lot of confidence, something he thinks Sisselberger takes on the field with him.
“His ability to take calculated risks but also not be afraid of making mistakes, I think that's really tough for a rookie to do, and being a guy that had a rookie season a couple years ago, you want to have the best first impression,” he said. “I admire the way he's been able to be authentically himself and just play with confidence and not worry about judgment or anything. I think it translates to how strong his performance on the field is.”
Confidence, however, is something that Sisselberger grapples with. It stems back to his childhood. He remembers being overweight and cut from multiple sports teams, including his hometown lacrosse team. He was embarrassed in front of his friends and thought lacrosse wasn’t for him. An opposing coach, however, saw something and encouraged him to face off knowing that he also loved wrestling.
Despite the success he’s enjoyed over his career, he said the position, especially at the pro level, makes confidence a delicate balance. As a specialist, he said the position is often seen as a deciding factor, and people will either praise you at the end of a game or blame you. There are only eight starting faceoff jobs in the league — six if you count the two teams that haven’t dressed faceoff athletes in recent weeks as part of a strategy with the new rule that teams that win the faceoff play with a 32-second shot clock as opposed to the 52-second shot clock.
It's why even though he struggled with English in school — “I couldn’t punctuate for [anything]” — his dream is to write a book about mental health in sports.
“I'm very open with myself, and I know when I have a problem, so I've seen therapists, talking about mental health and how pressure comes from sports and how it's actually detrimental,” he said. “Sports are supposed to be fun. At a young age, there's so much pressure these days with getting recruited, and, ‘Am I good at this? Am I good at that?’ Defining yourself in sports is something that I feel like is one of the biggest problems.”
Sisselberger said he maintains his mental health by taking a deep breath and reminding himself why he plays in the first place. He said lacrosse was never his way to achieve fame or glory or gaudy statistics. He played because he found something he was interested in. But he’s always been a competitor.
Sisselberger plays every game with a chip on his shoulder, and that chip is bigger in some high-profile matchups. The week before the All-Star Game, the Archers played the Redwoods. It was a contest between teams with 3-1 records playing for a spot at the top of the standings. It was also a matchup at the faceoff position between Sisselberger and the most recent faceoff athlete to be drafted in the first round: Ierlan.
Both players were involved in the tryout process for the U.S. national team roster roster for the recent 2023 World Lacrosse Championship. While Sisselberger felt he played well, he did not earn a spot on the roster. The team took two faceoff athletes: Baptiste and Ierlan.
When the two matched up during the PLL season, however, it was Sisselberger and the Archers who came out on top. The rookie won 10 of 15 faceoffs and picked up two more ground balls than the third-year pro while the Archers picked up a lopsided 10-3 victory.
“I'm honestly starting to get worried because I feel like he's winning so many and winning them so clean that it's like making my job almost useless,” Conners said. “Even when he's going against the best in the world like he did this past weekend, at worst, he's making it a scrap.”