While the sights of players, coaches and executives are set on the future of the league and their respective teams, the migration of talent to the PLL is still significant just in terms of numbers. This leaves teams with plenty of open roster spots to fill.
The names of available players may not be as well known as Rabil, Schreiber or Harrison, but league executives still believe there is enough talent to go around.
“There are plenty of players that are more than qualified to play in our league,” Brown said. “We have got college seniors which will be available to us. Our existing player pool, I’m not concerned about it.”
PHOTO BY JOSHUA KELLY/PRETTY INSTANT
MLL commissioner Sandy Brown says the league remains optimistic about its future despite the advent of the PLL.
Chesapeake Bayhawks president Mark Burdett said the team will fill out its roster in the same three ways it does every offseason: through the supplemental draft, the college draft and the open tryouts.
The supplemental draft is not new to MLL. Denver received significant contributions from Dillon Ward, Finn Sullivan, Eli Gobrecht, and Nick Tintle — all supplemental draft picks — to help win the championship in 2018. Burdett did say, however, that scouting will play an even more important role.
“There are a lot of good lacrosse players Division II or Division III who weren’t looked at very seriously who might’ve improved their games or were injured,” he said. “Scouting and recruiting is always important, but now, considering there’s a few more holes in everyone’s roster, the amount of time and attention our head coach and general manager have put into that is really important. You’re looking for that diamond in the rough.”
Burdett added that although there will be some unfamiliar faces on the sidelines, rosters in professional sports are routinely in flux.
“I don’t think it’s well understood in the MLL, rosters turnover pretty quickly,” he said. “Every three years, you probably have 80 percent of your roster changing. The PLL will draw talent out, but it will be replaced pretty quickly. Even if the PLL didn’t exist, we’d be turning over our roster based on age and life commitments. That is the reality of professional lacrosse.”
In addition to the league, the individual teams issued statements responding to the announcement of the creation of the PLL. One difference between the two leagues that was emphasized by the MLL teams was their connection to the communities in which they play. While the PLL will be a touring league, with all teams playing at one site, in one city, at a time, MLL teams represent various communities that they not only play in front of, but also are involved in.
The MLL fans, specifically the ones in Denver, were an additional reason for Adler to stick around.
“Playing for Denver is such an incredible experience with the Fourth of July game,” he said. “Playing in front of 30,000 people, in all my college athletics if you combine it and multiply it by five, it’s probably still not as much.
“I want to play for a fan base, for a home team,” he added. “That makes winning a championship more special. We’re not just representing a team; we’re representing a city. That’s a factor for me.”
MLL has undergone several changes in recent weeks: the start of the season was pushed back to June, two games were added to each team’s schedule, game day rosters expanded by one and the salary cap increased.
A large turnover of players is not one of the changes the league was hoping to go through, but executives knew the PLL was coming. The new league will not stop those involved in MLL from continuing to work to improve it.
“We made a lot of changes in a short period of time,” Brown said. “We can’t change everything as fast as people would like. There’s a lot more on the way. I have to focus on my business.
“We know we have a job to do,” Brown added. “We’re just scratching the surface. We’re just getting started.”