While the O’Keefe signing was done, Bates was not finished remodeling the Archers roster.
“I think you’ll find we’re going to add another arrow to our quiver,” Bates said before the team announced it had also signed O’Keefe’s Chaos teammate, midfielder Challen Rogers.
Free agency was just one new wrinkle to the PLL offseason. There were two new playing opportunities that came about in the 2023 winter: the PLL Championship Series and an exhibition game in Japan against Japan’s national team.
Ambler, a midfielder, has gotten to experience all the offseason has had to offer. Not only was he chosen to play against Japan — he was also on the Archers roster for the Championship Series.
On the way to Springfield for the Championship Series, Rogers said there was a thought about it potentially being the last time he played alongside Manny and Holman, but once everyone arrived, he said that was never mentioned.
“As soon as we got to D.C., it was all business on how we were going to win the first game, how we would make adjustments to win the second game, and so on and so forth, so that we could win the Championship Series,” he said. “We didn’t, but I think what I respect about those guys the most was it wasn’t a topic of discussion because we were just dialed in and full steam ahead on how we could win.”
Ambler said he was disappointed the Archers couldn’t win a championship with the core group that had been together since the team’s inception. Not only did Manny and Holman leave in free agency, but so did goalie Adam Ghitelman. Defensive midfielder Dominique Alexander and long-stick midfielder Scott Ratliff both retired.
In Japan, Ambler played alongside Chaos long-poles C.J. Costabile and Jarrod Neumann, who gave O’Keefe and Rogers glowing reviews.
“Moving forward, I’m excited about the new opportunities and some of the guys that we’re bringing to our team. Obviously, they’re ballers, and they’re incredible lacrosse players,” he said. “All of [the Chaos players] said how great of teammates those guys are and how fortunate we are to have them.”
The original roster the Archers put together had a lot of close ties. Bates had coached Schreiber and Ambler at Princeton. Schreiber and Holman won a Major League Lacrosse championship together with the Ohio Machine. Ratliff and Ghitelman founded the Give and Go Foundation together. Holman, Manny, and Ghitelman were not only close friends but also assistant coaches with Utah in the team’s first season at the Division I level — under now Cannons head coach Brian Holman, Marcus’ father.
While some of those ties no longer remain, the new additions bring their own close relationships. Rogers plays on the Rock in the National Lacrosse League with Schreiber and midfielder Latrell Harris, and of course, there is the longstanding friendship of Ament and O’Keefe.
O’Keefe is excited to rekindle the magic they had playing together as Nittany Lions.
“Grant is just a super competitive kid, and I think we worked well off each other,” he said. “Seeing him grind as hard as he did when he was the best player on the team, it was pretty motivating to the rest of the guys and me as well.”
In 2019, Ament and O’Keefe helped Penn State earn a trip to the NCAA Final Four for the first time in program history. In the team’s quarterfinal victory over Loyola, both Ament and O’Keefe had nine points apiece.
“He was scoring everywhere and in every way possible,” Ament said of O’Keefe, who tied the NCAA tournament single-game record with nine goals.
In the team’s 21-17 semifinal loss to Yale, Ament had three goals and five assists, and O’Keefe scored three goals.
There was a lot of optimism about Penn State in 2020, and the team was off to a 5-2 start with a win over No. 20 Villanova and a thrilling 18-17 overtime victory over No. 6 Penn. Even their losses were great efforts, losing to No. 3 Yale and No. 7 Cornell by a combined three goals. Unfortunately for Ament and O’Keefe, that season was cut short due to the COVID-19 pandemic, offering nothing but the question of “What if?”
With O’Keefe reuniting with Ament on the Archers, they hope to answer that question in the PLL.
“We had some unfinished business,” Ament said. “The fact that we’re able to give this thing another shot with a really talented group around us, it is pretty special. I think we’re both excited to strap back up together.”