FOXBORO, Mass. — Kyle Hartzell's road to the top of the sport wasn't the same as most of his U.S. teammates, but it's a road that has seen success at every step.
He won a junior college national championship with CCBC-Essex in 2004. Three years later he won a NCAA Division III championship at Salisbury in 2007. He won two professional championships in 2010 - one with the Washington Stealth in the National Lacrosse League and one with the Chesapeake Bayhawks in Major League Lacrosse when he was the championship MVP. He added a second MLL title in 2015 with the New York Lizards.
But his eyes are clearly focused on the one title he hasn't won - gold with Team USA.
"This would mean the world to me," Hartzell said on Tuesday afternoon in between practices during the Team USA training camp at Gillette Stadium. "This is the only thing I haven't won. I've won an NLL championship, I've won an MLL championship, I've won a college championship. I haven't won an international championship. I've won a silver medal. I won a bronze medal in indoor back in Prague."
Hartzell is one of eight players from the 2014 U.S. team back for another shot at the gold medal after they fell to Canada 8-5 in the championship game in Denver four years ago. On Thursday, the U.S. team plays the MLL All-Stars at Harvard in its final event before leaving for Israel on July 8 for the FIL Men's World Championship.
"I've really been training my ass off and really working hard for this moment," Hartzell said. "I know this is the last one for me probably and it's all I'm focusing on now pretty much."
The memories from 2014 provide fuel, and they also help nurture a team-first attitude.
"I don't care how many reps I get," Hartzell said. "I'm focused on the team winning. Whatever my role is, that's what I'm doing."
"That's the fun thing," said assistant coach Joe Amplo. "To see the best players, and he's one example of it — this is really important to them, winning is important. I get the sense he'll do whatever we ask, whether it's play the wing, play close, play pole, play short stick. I wouldn't be surprised if we asked him to jump in the goal if he wouldn't jump in there. He's got that buy-in and that's what we're looking for."
"That's authentic to who he is, but he's also a world-class competitor," said Team USA midfielder Paul Rabil, one of Hartzell's longtime teammates. "He'll find his way into his natural position, but I think we have a lot of guys that would happily acquiesce to what's best for the team."