While the reigning PLL champion Whipsnakes had 20 Maryland alums on their roster at different points of last year, the Waterdogs come from 20 different schools. That includes two Maryland alums, Connor Kelly and Drew Snider, who Copelan snagged from the Whipsnakes through the expansion draft. Although Copelan missed on his first-round draft pick in the college draft after former Virginia attackman Michael Kraus signed with the Connecticut Hammerheads of the MLL, there’s no shortage of offensive weapons. The Waterdogs also added to their goalie corps in the second round of the college draft with Delaware netminder Matt DeLuca.
The team that will head to Utah contains Tewaaraton finalists, like Kelly, and its fair share of journeymen. Some have children and others, like DeLuca, are a couple months out of college.
Now they're all Waterdogs.
“It's a great mix of what the coaches have done balancing out veterans with some first-, second-, third-year guys,” goalie Charlie Cipriano said. “I think that chemistry is going to go a long, long way."
Back in the spring after the entry draft but before the Championship Series format was announced and players started to come to grips with shelter-in-place orders, the team’s relationship building looked a bit like the first couple weeks at any new (virtual) workplace. There were calls and group texts, plus a couple Zoom happy hours that Cipriano organized.
As summer approached and Copelan finalized his 22-man roster, including the marquee signing of Withers during the waiver period in late June, the name games and icebreakers turned into more tactical conversations.
“I don't think you can just go to training camp and plan on getting everything in during those few days,” Copelan said.
They discussed what worked well and what didn’t last year on players’ various teams. How could they best use the PLL’s rules of a 52-second shot clock, 15-yard two-point arc and a shortened field to their advantage?
The Waterdogs’ “positionless” composition seems tailor made for the PLL because, well, it was.
“We're past that point of getting to know each other,” goalie Tate Boyce, who’s on the team’s restricted roster, said back in June. “I think our group is already really comfortable. We tried to keep it light up until this point, but now it's time to start dialing what kind of identity we want to have as a team.”
Central to that identity is the fact that 16 players on the Waterdogs' 22-man roster came through the expansion draft. That means they were not protected by their former teams. Ryan Drenner scored four game-winning goals through the first six weeks of last season, yet the Whipsnakes went in another direction. Kieran McArdle was a two-time Big East player of the year at St. John’s and tallied 27 points last summer. Still, the Atlas only protected Ryan Brown and Eric Law. There are plenty more examples.
Talk with any of the Waterdogs and the conversation will eventually return to a similar theme. They’ll mention their “underdog” mentality. They’ll detail how they were overlooked and how they now have the opportunity to showcase what they’ve worked so hard for.
“I think a lot of people were surprised,” Cipriano said of the reaction when Copelan selected him with the fourth pick in the expansion draft. “That doubt gets me motivated to prove to everyone who I am.”
That statement and others would ring hollow, if they weren’t so true. So if you’re searching for a throughline with the Waterdogs, look no further.
“Not to sound corny, but the Waterdogs are hungry,” Boyce said. “They're ready to eat.”