At the July 20 game against the New York Lizards, young lacrosse players were invited down to the field to form a tunnel and high-five Bayhawks players as they were announced onto the field. When Thompson was announced, he made it halfway through the line before the tunnel collapsed into a mob of children surrounding him.
That same day, in the midst of a heat wave, Thompson spent the morning and afternoon in three different media sessions as well as an autograph signing.
“Sometimes, it’s overwhelming,” he said, “but for the most part, I just try to be there for the fans as much as possible.”
Even opponents were amazed by him.
“He’s unguardable,” Outlaws attackman John Grant Jr. said after Denver played Chesapeake on the Fourth of July. “Clearly, if he’s not the best player in the world, he’s definitely in the top three. And unfortunately, watching him do it against my team is tough, but a dazzling player to watch. The league is very, very lucky to have a guy like that.”
All the attention Thompson received could be distracting for his team or cause some to get jealous, but his teammates share the admiration for Thompson, and most of it is because of how humble and unselfish he is.
“He’s a freak,” Costabile said. “The beauty of him is he’s not one of those players who does it himself, and it’s just about him. He really is a guy who makes everyone around him better. He’ll draw the slide. He’ll move it one more when it comes down. He’s a crunch time player. He wants the ball. He’s demanding, and he gets it done. People feed off his energy.”
“I’m very happy he is on our team,” long-stick midfielder Jesse Bernhardt said. “For a guy who puts up such highlight reel goals, he is a true team player. He puts up a ton of team points. He is always looking to distribute the ball. He knows himself. He knows he draws a lot of attention.”
Championship Weekend added more hardware for Thompson to add to his trophy case, winning the MLL Offensive Player of the Year award, MVP award, and MLL Championship. In the final, he scored two goals and added an assist, tying for the game-high in points.
For all the individual attention he received and success he enjoyed, it was being able to celebrate a victory with his team – which he said came together “as a family” – that was most important to him.
“At the end of the day, that’s the team effort. That’s the team goal,” he said about what the championship meant to him. “Me, personally, I try to stay in the moment every game I play, whether it’s a championship game and the game’s on the line or it’s midseason and it’s a blow-out. The opportunity to play is what I’m truly thankful for. It may sound a little silly to a lot of people, but a championship is no bigger than the next game or the last game. I try to live in the moment and enjoy the process, enjoy every day and this moment.”