Having a partnership with the Dallas Cowboys, however, has helped the Rattlers with the transition. Cowboys and Rattlers players participated in a joint skills challenge, and the five-time Super Bowl champions help to promote the team on social media.
Getting to play in a facility operated by an NFL team has been a major upgrade for Rattlers players.
“When you play a professional sport, the highest level, and you list the things we went through in Rochester and the things that make guys happy, like we have a catered team dinner, and you’d think they were buying us apartments in Dallas,” Ranagan said. “The turf is apparently a new technology. I’ve never run on anything in it. You’re happy you’re playing indoors because it’s pretty hot in the summer time. We have a huge locker room. All that stuff is taken care of. It’s those little things you had to worry about in Rochester. Will the balls be at practice? Are we practicing? Do we have a place to practice? All those little things are off your mind because they’re taken care of for you. You don’t have to worry about administrative things. You’re focused on playing lacrosse.”
Being able to relax and focus strictly on lacrosse has been huge for the Rattlers. After starting the season 3-2, Dallas won six consecutive games and became the first team in the league to clinch a playoff spot.
The Rattlers players hoped that, in addition to putting themselves in position to win a championship, success in the regular season would make a good impression on the fans in Dallas. The early sampling suggests the spectators are happy with the product on the field.
Through Week 12, Dallas is second in the league in average attendance, with 4,689 fans per game, trailing only Denver. Prior to Denver’s annual Mile High Fourth of July game, which drew 29,973 people, Dallas was actually first in the league in attendance.
The fans aren’t just showing up, either; they are demonstrating a strong knowledge of the game of lacrosse.
“There’s a lot of IQ down there,” Lade said. “Lacrosse has been there 10 to 15 years now. A lot of guys live and coach there. You have these guys that played at a high level in college, and they’re spreading the game. Their IQ is very high because some of these guys going to Texas coaching and helping players learn the game of lacrosse down there.”
The consensus from Warder, Ranagan, and Lade was that, at the end of the day, it didn’t matter where the team played; as long as they were together, this team would be able to work together, overcome adversity, and compete with any team in the league.
Doing it in Dallas, in front of bigger crowds and in a nice stadium, however, is something Ranagan said they are all happy to be a part of.
“It certainly exceeded a lot of peoples’ expectations, and that’s not to say we weren’t expecting much, but when you come from where we came from, you learn not to expect much,” he said. “We could’ve continued playing at a high school in some small town, that didn’t matter to the guys, but to do it in a beautiful and fun facility has been more of an icing on the cake thing.”