Taken with the first pick in the fourth round, Wierman was the only faceoff athlete selected in the 2024 PLL Draft. In the first game of the season against the Chaos, he won 67 percent of his draws and with 10 ground balls.
Against the Archers, he took on Mike Sisselberger and won 64 percent and scored the first goal in the fourth quarter, as Denver outscored Utah 11-3 in the fourth quarter and overtime.
“Hats off to Luke Wierman in the second half,” Denver head coach Tim Soudan said in the postgame press conference. “When we needed him, he came up with some huge plays.”
For the Maryland Whipsnakes, the return of Joe Nardella after he missed 2023 with an injury has provided a big boost. While Petey LaSalla had a good rookie year filling in, Nardella did more than take back his spot — he took over as the top player at the position in the league.
He leads the PLL in faceoff winning percentage (72.3 percent) and went 31-for-31 with 28 ground balls in Maryland’s overtime victory over the Waterdogs in Week 3.
“I don't think one player is ever going to change your game, but one possession may,” PLL veteran faceoff athlete Jerry Ragonese said. “Not having 31 extra possessions, and somebody said, I think, they only scored one goal off that, off the 32-second shot clock with the 31 possessions. They still lost by one.”
The poster child for the resurgence of the faceoff athlete, though, is Zac Tucci of the Boston Cannons.
Beginning his second year in the league in 2023, Tucci earned the start in the first game of the season, but it did not go ideally. He went 4-for-14 against the Chaos.
“It was kind of just an unfortunate, unlucky, thick-minded, short-sighted game for me,” he said. “I still kind of had that stigma of always wanting to clamp and really just caring about that and caring about my stats in the game. That day, I just wasn't really hearing the whistle well to start, and instead of changing my move to something that would have been more productive, I didn't. I just kept trying to clamp, and it just was kind of eating me alive that game.”
Tucci remembered then-head coach Andy Copelan telling him he’d get the second week off and be brought back for the team’s third game against the Atlas because he played hard against Atlas faceoff athlete and eventual PLL MVP Trevor Baptiste.
That opportunity never came. Rookie James Reilly fared well, going 10-for-21 against Ierlan, and earned another opportunity against the Atlas. The rookie went 4-for-16, however, and the team turned to LSM Eli Gobrecht as well as do-it-all midfielder Zach Currier to take faceoffs the remainder of that game and the rest of the season.
While it seemed his time in the league was done, Tucci wasn’t ready to give up. A conversation with Ragonese, who was on the Chaos and saw his first game of the season, about his attributes helped give him the proper direction.
Tucci knew he wasn’t as good as Baptiste when playing with a knee on the ground or as good as former Major League Lacrosse MVP Greg Gurenlian at clamping. Ragonese helped him realize the attribute he had on his side was speed.