When the Denver Outlaws won their first championship in franchise history in 2014, midfielder Drew Snider was happy to have played a part in it. Despite his own sense of fulfillment, however, he couldn’t help but notice the extra joy that teammates Jeremy Noble, Dillon Roy, Cam Holding, and Zack Greer had. Those four not only helped the Outlaws win the MLL championship, they were all part of the Canadian National Team that beat the United States and won gold at the 2014 FIL World Championships, giving them two championships in a matter of five weeks.
Snider was cut from the U.S. team in 2014, but he was a member of the team that beat Canada for the gold medal in the 2018 FIL World Championship. With the Outlaws one of the four 2018 MLL playoff teams, he also now has an opportunity to win two championships in one summer.
“When we won the MLL championship, knowing a lot of those guys on the team also won a gold at the Worlds, it was something I looked up to them in that regard,” Snider said. “I wanted that. I wanted to obtain that. All goes well the next couple weeks, I’d be accomplishing that goal as well. I did try to make that one of my goals.”
Excluding the injured Steven DeNapoli and Jack Kelly, 22 of the 23 players on the championship United States team play in Major League Lacrosse. Of those 23 MLL players, 13 are in the playoffs: Snider with the Outlaws; Jesse Bernhardt and Matt Danowski with the Bayhawks; Jake Bernhardt, Joe Fletcher, Kyle Hartzell, Rob Pannell, Paul Rabil, and Kevin Unterstein with the Lizards; and Ned Crotty, John Galloway, Joel White, and Jordan Wolf with the Rattlers.
Major League Lacrosse was already 12 weeks into the season prior to the start of the FIL World Championships. The players flew from the U.S. to Israel and then played seven games in 10 days.
While the players were focused on the task at hand, Crotty admitted he still thought about his Rattlers teammates.
“A bunch of us didn’t leave until Monday [July 22]. We caught the end of the Rattlers-Denver game,” he said. “After we won the [gold medal] Saturday [July 21], our team chat was blowing up. A bunch of guys were congratulating us. A bunch of guys stayed up and watched it, and then it was the other way around on Sunday. The guys who were still in Israel were blowing up the group chat as well, saying, ‘Congratulations.’”
While players were happy to get back to their MLL teams and teammates, returning to life in Major League Lacrosse after the World Championships, however, was not an easy task.
“I wish I could tell you [it was] on to the next thing, right back at it, but it’s different,” Crotty said. “You go to Israel for two weeks and after all that, you come together, win in dramatic fashion the way we won, win a gold medal, it’s an unbelievable experience, and it’s emotionally exhausting. No doubt. You come back, and it’s different. You work so hard to get out of the MLL mindset, the way the game is played while you're over with FIL, and then you come back and have to get back in that mentality.
“You go from being with a group of guys every single day, sleeping together, training together, working out, practicing, playing, all of that to now going back to the weekend thing,” he added. “Once you touch down in Dallas, you’re going to practice. The other guys on the team are very supportive, but no one wants excuses of, ‘Well, you know, he’s tired from the World Games.”
The players on the United States national team accomplished their goal. As competitors, however, their work wasn’t done, even with gold medals around their necks.
Major League Lacrosse players always have the Steinfeld Trophy as their goal, and the players returning from the World Championships used their teammates to help them refocus and provide extra motivation.
“There definitely was a little bit of that honeymoon phase afterward, but we’re not in Israel anymore,” Jesse Bernhardt said. “I won the MLL championship as a rookie, and for the past four seasons, I’ve missed the playoffs. I haven’t had a great taste in my mouth the past four years. There’s still that want and need to be successful with the Bayhawks.