BALTIMORE – When they popped their navy blue helmets off afterward, Roy Colsey, all 44 years of him, was easy to find. Low-cut hair, grayed on the sides. Posing for a picture with four kids from his Connecticut-based youth lacrosse program.
Of course he’d talk about what just transpired.
Colsey, who was inducted to the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame in 2012 and last played professional lacrosse in 2008, was one of the 40 invitees who suited up Saturday night in a 60-minute Team USA indoor exhibition, which served as one-part evaluation opportunity in the 2019 U.S. indoor national team tryout process and one-part exposure for the box game in the United States before a packed crowd at DuBurns Arena in southeast Baltimore.
What exactly was Colsey doing here?
“I want to see the U.S. teams do well,” he said, voice hoarse after a game spent yelling directions and encouragement (and notching a goal and an assist). “I want to see us pick it up. I’ve been spending a lot of time coaching and teaching box lacrosse. This turned out to be a great opportunity to get out with the young guys and try to help them figure this out a little bit.”
Colsey won two national championships at Syracuse in the 1990s and was national midfielder of the year in 1995, then went on to have a celebrated Major League Lacrosse and National Lacrosse League career, playing eight and nine years in each pro league, respectively. His resume describes him accurately as one of the rare U.S.-born players to enjoy consistent crossover success in the indoor and field games.
He won three MLL titles with the Barrage and recorded more than 600 points in his NLL career, and he also was part of the U.S. indoor team in 2002 that beat Canada in the Heritage Cup.
Box lacrosse now is part of the curriculum and offerings of his instructional company, Superstar Lacrosse. A father of three, Colsey also coaches the high school team at Ridgefield (Conn.) and teaches physical education at a middle school in Chappaqua, N.Y. by day.
PHOTO BY COREY MCLAUGHLIN
Players from the youth team Colsey coaches in Connecticut were on hand to see the legend play on Saturday night.
His indoor experience – and that of 37-year-old Anthony Kelly, who also played Saturday – was wanted to help two 20-man rosters that featured players largely unfamiliar with the green turf, dasher boards and mammoth-padded goalies of the indoor game.
Many who played in the exhibition, like former Johns Hopkins midfielder Cody Radziewicz, who found himself guarding Colsey at one point, were nearly half Colsey’s age, had limited exposure to box lacrosse, or were completely new to the indoor game.
“It’s a difficult game to learn on the fly,” Colsey said. “Many of these guys have never played box lacrosse.”
Former Duke star Myles Jones was one.
In his first-ever box experience, Jones rotated shifts with Colsey on the left side of Team USA’s white squad that also included Marcus Holman and Rob Pannell.
“That man is full of knowledge,” Jones said of Colsey. “I could easily pick his brain and learn things about the box games. He was very vocal. He was a leader and he made plays when we needed it. That’s what you want from a veteran like him.”