As many Americans are back to commuting to work, PLL players are once again flying or driving to games every weekend. It is something they have been looking forward to.
“I went to Japan twice in one year to teach the sport,” Glicini said. “I don’t mind traveling for the sport I love. If you get caught up in it after a loss, the travel isn’t as great, but if you’re able to occupy it with phone calls like this, getting work done on a plane, it goes by quickly. It’s definitely something I’m used to.”
“I have family and friends I get to see that I haven’t seen in a while,” Manny said. “I missed my Delta miles and getting a free trip at some point. There’s a lot of pros and cons. It feels like we’re back to normal in a way. Still wearing masks on planes doesn’t help, but the travel piece for me makes it feel normal in some fashion. I enjoy being able to enjoy going to different cities.”
In the first five weeks of the season, the league returned to three cities — Foxborough, Mass.; Atlanta, Ga. (the league played at Fifth Third Bank Stadium at Kennesaw State University as opposed to Georgia State Stadium, the venue from 2019); and Baltimore, Md. — and two new destinations on Long Island and in Minneapolis.
“One of the cool things I remember about pro lacrosse is it gives you an opportunity to see new places and see new cities,” Holman said, “[like] going to Minnesota and playing in front of fans that love the sport but don’t get to see the game at a high level with no Division I teams in Minnesota.”
The players have not been allowed to get up close with the fans and participate in the usual postgame autograph signings, but the players are happy just to have the fans back.
“It’s great to have support out there,” Atlas LSM Kyle Pless said. “Fans bring a lot to the game. It’s great to hear and see them back in the stands.”
“I was looking at the kids in the first and second row, pointing at them, dancing with them,” Holman said. “I threw a couple balls in the crowd. I feed off the energy of the crowd and my teammates. I do remember that at Gillette, like, ‘Dang, we’re back.’ I remember this feeling that this is why I love playing professional lacrosse.”
Throughout the season, PLL host and Manager of Content RJ Kaminski has highlighted the fans who have come from far and wide to be present at PLL games. There was one fan who drove 16 hours from Michigan to Foxborough, a family of three that drove 10 hours from Orlando to Atlanta, and another family with three young boys that drove four hours to the games in Minnesota.
For the players, the expression of gratitude from the fans was commonplace. Not knowing what the games would look like after playing inside bubbles last season, the fans have brought back an enthusiasm to the games that has sent a strong message to the players.
“Seeing all these fans in full force in just as good of numbers or better, it shows how much people love this sport and how much of an appetite there is for this sport,” Wasserman said. “They want to see lacrosse stick around, and the best way to show support is by going to the games.”