When student-athletes graduate from college and pursue a professional career in lacrosse, they are thrust into the spotlight, but sometimes with little experience being in the spotlight as a leader. The well-rounded experience for collegiate athletes, from training to tutoring, is not a typical offering at the next level, despite the gradual shift in professional men’s lacrosse from its “weekend warrior” approach to a full-time profession.
But the Women’s Professional Lacrosse League (WPLL) is providing a new avenue for professionalism within the sport.
First, Team STX established a semi-pro dynamic within a post-collegiate club atmosphere in 2012. Then, the United Women’s Lacrosse League (UWLX), currently in its second year, offered the first semi-professional opportunity for women to play after college on four organized teams with a chance to claim a league title.
Now, set to launch in 2018, the WPLL, founded by Michele DeJuliis, the former commissioner of the UWLX in its inaugural season in 2016, will focus on personal and professional development, offering unique programming that cultivates confidence, courage, leadership and emotional intelligence beyond the field.
“We’re prioritizing that character development, so we can help them excel in life on and off the field,” DeJuliis said. “We want to help them become better role models. Some of them get out there and don’t know what they’re doing or realize what their power is – how they can actually impact these young women.”
The WPLL offers more than camps and clinics for the sport’s rising stars – they will get the same non-cognitive training as the pros.
“It really gives us the opportunity to harness that potential in a generation of lacrosse players becoming a generation of high-impact leaders,” DeJuliis said.
Establishing a foundation and internal programs for youth players within the WPLL provides an elite lacrosse experience with an additional edge. The professional players will make it a priority to provide feedback to the next generation. More details will be announced before the league’s draft in August.
“Our pro players are responsible for reaching out, making those connections and checking in on those kids to really close that relationship,” DeJuliis said. “These players won’t be out of touch. We want the players to really connect with these kids and have the opportunity to be leaders in our sport. For kids to have the opportunity to look up to these heroes is going to be exciting.”