Nearly 500 players applied to try out for this U.S. team and over 100 attended the first tryout last August. Since then, the team has held five training camps, three of them within the last two months.
“We have a really great group,” Amonte Hiller said. “They get along well, they mesh well together and they’re pretty motivated to do what didn’t happen the time around.”
Canada is obviously the main rival for the U.S., but there are other challengers as well.
“I think there’s a handful of teams that are really, really making their mark in the world that are progressing at a fast rate,” Teeter said.
Australia, which won the inaugural U19 championship in 1995 behind Hall of Famer Jen Adams, and England are chief among the traditional competitors, but world championship events are about much more than the competition on the field.
At Wednesday night’s opening ceremonies, the stars of the event were the members of the Kenyan national team, which is the first African nation to compete in a World Lacrosse women’s championship. There’s a spirit of camaraderie that exists at these events with teams sharing dorm room halls, eating meals in the same dining facilities and breaking out into impromptu singalongs.
Amonte Hiller got to experience that as a player, playing in three World Cups for the U.S. team from 1997 to 2005.
“It’s obviously a different experience as a coach and it’s new, but I think just being in the dorms and that whole experience, it does bring back memories from my experiences and those are cherished memories,” Amonte Hiller said. “I’m looking forward to it, looking forward to the experience and creating more memories together.”
For Teeter, playing this championship in Canada provides extra meaning.
“Being 20-plus years in the business coaching women’s lacrosse, I’ve never coached a women’s competitive game on Canada’s soil,” Teeter said. “I’ve run camps here, but never a competitive game. That’s special. My grandparents are going to come watch me in my profession for the very first time. A lot or my extended family, my high school friends are buying tickets, so it’s really quite a good feeling.”
For the 18 U.S. players and the coaching staff, the moment is finally here.
“I think it’s exciting to take it all in,” Amonte Hiller said. “I think our group has a great appreciation for being here and is just really excited about the experience and seeing what happens next.”