When in the MLL, the Rattlers team was well known for having the closest locker room in the league. With so many of the same core pieces moving together to the Chrome in the PLL, that family-like culture moved with them. Those relationships made telling everybody they were retiring the hardest part about the decision.
“In terms of the players, those guys are my best friends,” White said. “That’s the group Soudo and [Chrome and former Rattlers assistant coach Jacques] Monte has built. We truly believe in the family mentality. We wanted to be able to look them in the eye and let them know this was our thought process, and this is where we’re going.”
Crotty, who was drafted a year before White and Galloway, has played with them with the Rattlers, Chrome and U.S. men’s national team. While he said it wasn’t a surprise they retired or decided to retire together, he did call their departures “the end of an era.”
He said what stood out to him, aside from their friendship, was the leadership they showed over the years.
“When we first started out together, we weren’t quite mature,” he said. “Now, the maturity, how prepared they are, and the leaders they’ve become, you could always see it, even in our younger years. You could always see they had those qualities; the leadership stood out. It got stronger as we grew up.
“I’m older than them. It’s not about age, though. It’s two guys you want to follow.”
After the final whistle against the Cannons, Galloway and White did a joint interview for the TV broadcast. Their teammates gathered nearby. They knew the end was coming, but it was a bitter pill to swallow.
“It stinks that’s how it had to end,” Crotty said. “I thought it would have been great to win the whole thing, but to keep this thing going with the news this was going to be it for them, just to have the opportunity to have another week. We can still talk, but without the season, it’s not the same. It was tough to have it end that way. For such great careers not to end in the playoffs was tough.”
On the field, the individual accolades were numerous. Both were multi-time All-Stars. Both represented the U.S. national team in international competition. Galloway won the MLL Goaltender of the Year award in both 2014 and 2016, while Joel White was the 2016 MLL co-Defensive Player of the Year.
Aside from that initial season in Rochester that ended with a 2-10 record — as well as this year’s 2-7 Chrome season — their teams have been largely successful. The Rattlers played in the MLL championship game three times. Unfortunately for Galloway and White, they never were able to get over that final hump, and a professional championship eluded them.
While both would have liked to have reached that goal, neither feels his legacy is tarnished without one.
“You want to leave here with people having a lasting impression of how you made them feel,” Galloway said. “I don’t have great statistics. I wasn’t an elite ball-stopping goalie, but I want people to think of the teammate I was and the preparation I did. If you play competitively, treat people the right way, you can have a career you’re proud of.”