The Women’s Professional Lacrosse League (WPLL), set to launch in the summer of 2018, debuts Saturday in its inaugural showcase at the US Lacrosse headquarters in Sparks, Md.
The exhibition weekend, which is free to the public, features a Legends Game, honoring 80 players and coaches who have paved the path for professional women’s lacrosse throughout history, and a Showcase Game (Lax Sports Network) that includes a selection of players from the WPLL’s inaugural five teams – Baltimore Brave, New England Command, New York Fight, Philadelphia Fire and Upstate Pride.
According to league founder and CEO Michele DeJuliis, as well as the participants, a bigger purpose surrounds this weekend. It serves as an opportunity to present the evolution of women’s lacrosse — connecting past, present and future generations — and grow the game as a unified front.
“This league gives past players something concrete to be proud of, current players something to embrace and participate in, and future players something to dream towards,” said New York midfielder Taylor Cummings, a three-time Tewaaraton winner at Maryland who won gold medals in the World Cup and World Games this summer with the U.S. national team.
Attacker Olivia Hompe (Upstate), a recent Princeton graduate and Tewaaraton finalist who also played in the World Cup for England, said this event was a “landmark opportunity” and “watershed moment” for the sport.
“To know how our game has come through this evolution to now where we’re bigger, stronger and faster, it will be eye-opening for both sides,” DeJuliis said. “We have an opportunity, but we have a responsibility to make that impact nationwide on that next generation.”
In addition to the Legends and Showcase games, the current players will take part in character development classroom sessions, which focus on professionalism skills and personal branding. The sessions align with the WPLL’s twofold mission to function as both a professional league for the sport and a development program for rising talent nationwide. The league was founded on the principle that it’s “for players, by players.”
While the teams are based in the U.S., Ohio State graduate and Canada native Cian Dabrowski (Baltimore) said her charge as a member of the Brave goes beyond the states. She wants to grow the game internationally as well.
“My responsibility is to contribute to spreading the game,” Dabrowski said. “The top players in the country are in this league, but I think it goes beyond that and helps grow the game outside of the U.S. Although there will be a lot of challenges, I think the WPLL provides a great platform, especially getting the sport more recognition on the Olympic level.”
“Being a part of the WPLL means being a part of the growth to this game,” added Danielle Etrasco (Philadelphia), a Boston University graduate and 2013 U.S. gold medalist. “We have the opportunity to show what it really means to represent and play for something bigger than ourselves. That alone is an invaluable lesson for the youth of lacrosse to learn from.”