Amidst the wave of congratulations from former teammates and students at Fordham Prep, where Cipriano is known as “Mr. Cip” and has worked as a school counselor and lacrosse coach since 2016, he also noticed the reactions on social media that ranged from surprised to incredulous.
“When you look at some of the comments on Twitter, people are like, ‘Who is this guy?’” Cipriano said.
For a team whose motto is, “Every game is a revenge game,” Cipriano seems like he was plucked out of central casting. He feeds off the doubt and mentions he didn’t see his name in a single mock draft. He prefers to be under the radar. His Twitter account, @JulieTheCat25, is set to private.
“I wouldn’t want it any other way,” Cipriano said. “I love being that underdog and using that chip on the shoulder to fuel the fire.”
Given his pedigree, Cipriano might be the most underappreciated goalie in the PLL. But those who have played with him and been around him were the least caught off guard when they heard his name called in the draft. They know Copelan’s decision was based more on performance than loyalty.
“I wasn't surprised at all,” said Andy Towers, head coach of Chaos LC. “The fact that Cope coached him in college pretty much guaranteed it was going to happen, but Charlie’s ability speaks for itself. Even if he hadn't played for Cope at Fairfield, he was the obvious pick.”
Towers was torn over the decision whether to start Blaze Riorden or Cipriano after both played “lights out” during training camp at IMG Academy. He ultimately gave the nod to Riorden, who led the league in save percentage (55.8%) and was named goalie of the year.
Midway through the third quarter during Week 3 on a rainy afternoon at SeatGeek Stadium in Chicago, Riorden turned heads for something besides his play in the goal. He earned an unsportsmanlike penalty after he body slammed Redwoods midfielder Nick Ossello.
Clarke Petterson scored on Cipriano 23 seconds later after he replaced Riorden. But the goalie who tracks the ball with his top hand that he refers to as “the scope” even when it’s on the opposite end of the field, remained locked in.
“He is never going to point a finger after a goal,” Chaos defenseman Jarrod Neumann said. “That's a true teammate.”
When Petterson caught another pass on the crease, Cipriano matched his stick and made the point-blank stop.
“Charlie Cipriano says, hang on, I want to stay in,” NBC play-by-play announcer Brendan Burke shouted during the broadcast.
Cipriano made three saves and let in two goals during his three minutes and 50 seconds of relief. It was the only time he saw the field all summer.
“You have to have a next save mentality,” he said. “You never know what save is going to win the game.”
Chaos LC beat Redwoods LC in overtime, 12-11.
“I trust him more than probably most people that I've ever played with to be ready for any situation,” said Redwoods midfielder Brent Adams, who played with Cipriano at Fairfield and was selected one spot before him with the 53rd pick in 2012 Major League Lacrosse collegiate draft.