2024 Premier Lacrosse League season
The 2024 Premier Lacrosse League Season was the 6th season of the Premier Lacrosse League (PLL). The regular season began on June 3 and ran through August 17th. The playoffs ran from September 2 through September 15. This is the first season where PLL teams were assigned to home cities.
2024 Premier Lacrosse League season | |
---|---|
League | Premier Lacrosse League |
Sport | Field Lacrosse |
Defending champions | Utah Archers (2023) |
Duration | June 1 – September 15 |
Number of teams | 8 |
6th Season | |
League champions | Utah Archers (2nd Title) |
Runners-up | Maryland Whipsnakes |
Season MVP | Jeff Teat |
Finals MVP | Brett Dobson |
The Atlas went 7-3 and earned the #1 seed on the back of Jeff Teat shattering the single-season points record with 64– the previous record being 44, and breaking the assists record with 28.
The Utah Archers were crowned champions on September 15th, beating the Whipsnakes 12-8, securing back-to-back championships for the first time since the Whipsnakes in 2019-2020.
Home Cities
editOn May 25, 2023 the PLL announced that the 8 teams will be assigned home cities for the 2024 season. The PLL's tour-based model would still be used with every team playing in one city every weekend (excluding byes), but the home team would play a weekend double-header in the new scheduling system. This move was explained by PLL co-founder and CEO, Mike Rabil in their announcement, “When we looked at our growth over the last five years, matched by our goals, objectives and expansion, tying our teams to home cities was a natural next step for the business."[1]
Starting on June 3, PLL fans were able to vote on which cities should receive teams, but the league would also be considering previous pro-lacrosse ticket success, fan engagement, venues, and TV ratings.[1]
Home cities and team identities were announced on SportsCenter on November 14, 2023. The eight teams would be the Boston Cannons, California Redwoods, Carolina Chaos, Denver Outlaws, Maryland Whipsnakes, New York Atlas, Philadelphia Waterdogs, and Utah Archers. All eight teams were rebranded with new logos, fonts, and jerseys. However, major changes came to the Maryland Whipsnakes and Chrome Lacrosse Club. The Whipsnakes changed their colors from red and green to red, black, and yellow to better match the Maryland Flag. The Chrome rebranded as the Denver Outlaws, sharing a name with Denver’s former MLL team.[2]
Home City Location Map
New League Structure
Alongside the addition of geographical teams, the PLL added conferences and a new playoff bracket for the 2024 season. In the new Eastern and Western Conference system, the top team from each conference will receive a first-round bye to the semifinals. The next best 4 teams, regardless of conference, will receive the final playoff spots, and subsequently the worst two teams, regardless of conference, will be eliminated from the playoffs.[3]
Player Movements
editPreseason
editNotable Retirements
- Michael Ehrhardt (LSM)- Graduated from Maryland in 2014 where he finished with 170 groundballs and 68 caused turnovers. He was a first-team All American and All-ACC in his senior season.[4] He was drafted 7th overall to the Charlotte Hounds in the 2014 MLL Draft.[5] Across his 10-year pro career with the Hounds in the MLL and the Whipsnakes in the PLL, Ehrhardt was a 6-time All Star, 5-time First Team All-pro, and 5-time LSM of the Year. He was a key piece to both of the Whipsnakes' PLL Championships and the USA's Gold Medal in the 2018 FIL World Championship.[6] Ehrhardt is widely considered one of the greatest defenders of all time, he retired on April 2.[5]
- Tucker Durkin (D)- Graduated from Johns Hopkins in 2013. He was a two-time First Team All-American and two-time Schmeisser Award winner as the NCAA's best defender. Durkin was drafted 3rd overall by the Hamilton Nationals in the 2013 MLL Draft. With the Nationals and Florida Launch of the MLL and the New York Atlas of the PLL, Durkin was a 6-time All-Star, 1st team All-Pro in 2019 and MLL DPOY in 2017.[7] He retired on March 13.[8]
- Tyler Warner (SSDM)- Graduated from Yale in 2018. He was a first-team All-American before being drafted 11th Overall to the Florida Launch of the MLL. In his 5-year career with the Launch and the Maryland Whipsnakes, Warner was a 2-time All-Star, the winner of the 2020 SSDMOY Award, and a Two-time PLL Champion with the Whipsnakes.[9] Whipsnakes Head Coach, Jim Stagnitta, had this to say about Warner “I think he's defined the position, before Danny Logan and Ryan Terefenko, he was the first one that I've seen that was as dominant as he was. And I think he made people realize the value in that position because he was so versatile. He could do so many things.” [10]
- Kyle Hartzell (M)- Graduated from Salisbury in 2008. He was a Captain of Salisbury's 23-0 undefeated DIII National Championship in 2008.[11] Hartzell started his MLL career with the San Francisco Dragons but spent time with several clubs before spending his last 5 MLL years with the New York Lizards. He was a 6-time MLL All-Star and a two-time champion. In 2019, Hartzell moved to the PLL and joined the Atlas where he was an All-Star in his first season. Hartzell finished his career with the California Redwoods and the Boston Cannons.[12] Hartzell retired on September 18 and is now an assistant coach for the Boston Cannons.[13]
Other Retirements
- Eddy Glazener (D) (Redwoods)
- Matt McMahon (D) (Machine and Archers)
- Jordan MacIntosh (M) (Rattlers and Chrome)
- Brian Phipps (G) (Machine, Bayhawks, and Whipsnakes)
- Stephen Kelly (FO) (Archers and Cannons)
- John Sexton (LSM) (Redwoods)
- Max Adler (FO) (Outlaws and Chaos)
- Jack Concannon (G) (Atlas)[14]
Free Agency
Free Agency occurred from March 4 to May 10. Eligible players were any player with an expired contract or any player who was not on an active roster for 30% of the clubs' games.[14]
- Attackmen: Jules Heninburg (Redwoods to Chaos).
- Midfielders: Sergio Perkovic (Redwoods to Chaos), Ronan Jacoby (Archers to Atlas), Jake Richard (Atlas to Waterdogs), and Colin Heacock (Outlaws to Whipsnakes).
- Defenders: Garrett Epple (Redwoods to Cannons).
- Goalies: Tim Troutner (Redwoods to Atlas).[14]
College Draft
editThe college draft took place on May 7 at 7 pm (ET) and was broadcast on ESPNU and ESPN+.[15] The newest PLL team, the Denver Outlaws made the most selections with 5, including the number one overall pick, Duke Attackman Brennan O'Neill. The Boston Cannons made the fewest selections with 3.
Trades
editIn the explanations below, (PD) indicates trades completed prior to the start of the draft (i.e. Pre-Draft), while (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2024 draft.
First Round
edit- No. 5: Redwoods → Atlas (PD). On March 15, the Redwoods traded their 2024 first round pick to the Atlas for Attackman Chris Gray and their 2024 third-round pick.[16]
Second Round
edit- No. 11: Whipsnakes → Outlaws (PD). On November 28, the Whipsnakes traded their Second and Third round picks to the Outlaws for Jackson Morrill and their Third Round Pick.[17]
Third Round
edit- No. 17: Outlaws → Whipsnakes (PD). See Pick 11.
- No. 18: Atlas → Redwoods (PD). See Pick 5.
- No. 19: Whipsnakes → Outlaws (PD). See Pick 11.
- No. 22: Cannons → Whipsnakes (PD). On November 28, the Cannons traded their 2024 and 2025 Third round picks and LSM Matt Rees to the Whipsnakes for Midfielder Connor Kirst and Defender Bryce Young.[18]
Summary
editSelections by NCAA conference
editConference | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
America East | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
ACC | 4 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 11 |
Atlantic 10 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Big East | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 5 |
Big Ten | 2 | 1 | 4 | 4 | 11 |
CAA | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
Ivy League | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Patriot League | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Schools by number of draft selections
editSelections | Schools |
---|---|
5 | Duke |
3 | Notre Dame, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins |
2 | Virginia, Maryland, Rutgers, Michigan |
1 | Albany, Yale, Marquette, Syracuse, Penn State, Saint Joseph's, Villanova, Ohio State, Towson, Loyola (MD) |
Selections by Position
editPosition | Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Attack | 4 | 1 | 5 | 2 | 12 |
Defense | 2 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
Defensive
Midfield |
0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Faceoff | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Goalie | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
LSM | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
Midfield | 1 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 6 |
Notable mid-season player movement
editFree-agency
editVeteran Attackman and 6-year member of the New York Atlas, Eric Law was released by the Atlas on July 9. He spent the first half of the season on the physically unable to perform (PUP) list but was removed from the PUP list the day prior. Law was signed from the player pool by the Denver Outlaws the same day. Law was drafted out of the University of Denver to the Outlaws and played 6 seasons with them in the MLL.[19]
The Whipsnakes released their 2023 leading scorer, Attackman Will Manny to the player pool as a part of their final round of training camp cuts on May 30.[20] Manny went unsigned through the All-Star break until the Boston Cannons signed him from the player pool on July 15. Manny was drafted 14th Overall by the Cannons in the 2013 MLL Draft and played 5 seasons for the team, making this the second homecoming for a PLL player to his former MLL team in the 2024 season.[21]
Trades
editOn June 12, the California Redwoods traded Saint Joseph's rookie, Levi Anderson, to the Maryland Whipsnakes for a 2025 4th-round pick. Anderson was the Redwoods' 3rd round pick in the 2024 draft.[22] He was activated from the Unavailable-to-travel list and debuted on June 28 against the New York Atlas.[23]
On August 6th, the Philadelphia Waterdogs traded midfielder Ryan Conrad to the Maryland Whipsnakes for a 2025 2nd-round pick.[24] Conrad spent 5 seasons with the Waterdogs and played in 7 games in 2024, scoring 5 goals and 1 assist.[25] This trade came after the Waterdogs were the first team to be eliminated from playoff contention.[26]
On August 13th, the Maryland Whipsnakes traded midfielder Jackson Morrill to the Utah Archers for a 2025 3rd-round pick.[27] Morrill was traded to from the Chrome to the Whipsnakes in 2023[28] where he played 4 games, notching 2 goals and 8 assists.[29] This trade came at the trade deadline, Morrill was not activated for week 11.
Rule Changes
edit3 rule changes came into effect for the 2024 season.[30]
- A player cannot use a long pole on the faceoff. This rule change eliminated the strategy, used most by the Cannons and Waterdogs, of a long pole immediately contesting possession after the faceoff to drain the :32 second shot clock.[31] This change was met with immense criticism that the PLL was changing the faceoff too much and harming the game.[32]
- Expanded Definition of a Defenseless Player. The expanded definition now includes players who have just released a shot, and players who have received a pass before establishing possession. A defender may hit a player on the shot only up until their first step. A player has established possession after receiving a pass by taking two steps, cradling, or makes a move to avoid contact.[30]
- Updated replay procedures. Coaches now have two challengers per game and will be granted a third if the first two are successful. There are no coaches challengers in overtime. Officials can initiate reviews in the final two minutes and in overtime. Out-of-bounds plays, run outs, and shot clock resets are now reviewable plays.[30]
Training camp
editThe Premier Lacrosse League's 2024 training camp was held from May 24, 2024 to May 31, 2024 in Albany, New York at Tom and Mary Casey Stadium at The University of Albany. Teams began camp with a 30-man roster that was finalized on May 23. Teams were required to finalize their 25-man rosters on May 29.[33] Training camp consists of individual and multi-team practices, as well as scrimmages between the teams.
Tour map
editTour venues
edit- Notes
- ^ Capacity may not reflect the capacity for the PLL's purposes due to various areas of the stadium potentially being closed for lacrosse games
Schedule
editThe addition of home cities and conferences brought slight changes to the schedule. Every team has one weekend where they are the home team and play a weekend doubleheader. There are two weekends (Minneapolis and Fairfield) when there is no home team and every team plays. Each team will play in-conference opponents twice and out-of-conference opponents once.[35]
- Notes
- ^ All games broadcast on ESPN+ alongside the network listed.
Source:[36]
PLL on TV
editFor the 3rd season, the PLL is on ESPN platforms. Every game can be streamed on ESPN+, while 9 games will be broadcast on ESPN's linear platforms. Additionally, 7 games will be broadcast on ABC, a one-game decrease from 2023.
Opening Weekend
The PLL had a record-setting opening weekend with the best merchandise sales weekend and the highest ever amount of active users on the PLL app. TV ratings also improved as ESPN engagement was up 23% and viewership from the 18-34 demographic was up 71%, both compared to last year. Additionally, the Archers vs Waterdogs game on ABC was the 3rd most-viewed game in PLL history.[37]
Regular Season Standings
edit2024 Western Conference Standings | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | W | L | SF | SA | Diff | ||||||||
Utah Archers Y | 6 | 4 | 129 | 120 | 9 | ||||||||
Denver Outlaws | 5 | 5 | 117 | 121 | -4 | ||||||||
Carolina Chaos | 4 | 6 | 100 | 110 | -10 | ||||||||
California Redwoods | 3 | 7 | 104 | 136 | -32 |
2024 Eastern Conference Standings | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | W | L | SF | SA | Diff | ||||||||
New York Atlas Y | 7 | 3 | 151 | 124 | 27 | ||||||||
Boston Cannons Y | 7 | 3 | 126 | 115 | 11 | ||||||||
Maryland Whipsnakes Y | 6 | 4 | 135 | 124 | 11 | ||||||||
Philadelphia Waterdogs | 2 | 8 | 111 | 123 | -12 |
Top Team in Each Conference Receive a first-round bye |
Top 6 Teams Qualify for the 2024 Playoffs |
Bottom 2 Teams Miss 2024 Playoffs |
Y = Qualified for the Championship Series |
Source:[38]
Postseason
editWith the new Home Cities format, the playoff bracket was changed to have two first-round byes for the conference winners and 6 teams total making the playoffs. The one seed plays the winner of the four and five seeds and the two seed plays the winner of the 3 and 6 seeds. The first round games took place in Foxbourough, MA in Gillette Stadium, the semifinals on Long Island, NY, and the Championship in West Chester, PA.[39]
Bracket
editQuarterfinals September 4 (Boston) | Semifinals September 10 (Long Island) | PLL Championship Game September 24 (Philadelphia) | ||||||||||||
#1 | Atlas | 11 | ||||||||||||
#4 | Whipsnakes | 11 | #4 | Whipsnakes | 12 OT | |||||||||
#5 | Outlaws | 10 | #4 | Whipsnakes | 8 | |||||||||
#2 | Archers | 12 | ||||||||||||
#6 | Chaos | 1 | ||||||||||||
#3 | Cannons | 4 | #2 | Archers | 10 | |||||||||
#6 | Chaos | 8 |
Boxscores and game summaries
editQuarterfinals
editTeam | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#3 Cannons | 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 4 |
#6 Chaos | 2 | 2 | 3 | 1 | 8 |
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#4 Whipsnakes | 3 | 3 | 3 | 2 | 11 |
#5 Outlaws | 3 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 10 |
Semifinals
editTeam | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | OT | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 Atlas | 6 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 11 |
#4 Whipsnakes | 3 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 1 | 12 |
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#2 Archers | 4 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 10 |
#6 Chaos | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
PLL Championship Game
editBoxscore
editTeam | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#2 Archers | 1 | 4 | 3 | 4 | 12 |
#4 Whipsnakes | 3 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 8 |
Championship Game Most Valuable Player
editUtah Archers goalie, Brett Dobson won back-to-back Championship Game MVP after a 17 saves and 68% performance. He is the first player in PLL history to win back-to-back Championship MVPs.[40]
Broadcast
editThe 2024 PLL championship game was broadcast on ABC and ESPN+ with Paul Carcaterra, Ryan Boyle, and Drew Carter in the booth, and Quint Kessenich reporting on the field.[41]
Injuries
editPre-game
edit3x MVP and 5x Midfielder of the Year, Tom Schreiber missed all of the playoffs after suffering a fractured clavicle in the Archers' final game of the regular season. He went on to win his fifth Midfielder of the Year this season.[42]
Scoring Summary
editFirst Quarter
edit- 11:34- Whipsnakes Matt Rambo Goal, 1-0 Whipsnakes
- 7:51- Whipsnakes Ryan Conrad Goal, Assisted by TJ Malone, 2-0 Whipsnakes
- 2:35- Whipsnakes Adam Poitras Goal, 3-0 Whipsnakes
- 0:50- Archers Matt Moore Goal, 3-1 Whipsnakes
Second Quarter
edit- 11:49- Whipsnakes Adam Poitras Goal, Assisted by Joe Nardella, 4-1 Whipsnakes
- 10:54- Archers Mason Woodward 2-point Goal, 4-3 Whipsnakes
- 10:18- Archers Tre Leclaire Goal, Assisted by Connor Fields, 4-4 tie
- 9:06- Archers Grant Ament Goal, 5-4 Archers
- 2:51- Whipsnakes Ryan Conrad Goal, Assisted by TJ Malone, 5-5 tie
Third Quarter
edit- 9:05- Archers Mac O'Keefe Goal, 6-5 Archers
- 7:22- Whipsnakes Ryan Conrad Goal, Assisted by TJ Malone, 6-6 tie
- 7:02- Archers Matt Moore Goal, 7-6 Archers
- 0:01- Archers Dyson Williams Goal, Assisted by Ryan Ambler, 8-6 Archers
Fourth Quarter
edit- 11:12- Archers Tre Leclaire Goal, Assisted by Matt Moore, 9-6 Archers
- 10:36- Archers Mac O'Keefe Goal, 10-6 Archers
- 6:01- Whipsnakes Zed Williams Goal, 10-7 Archers
- 5:28- Archers Connor Fields Goal, 11-7 Archers
- 3:19- Whipsnakes Mike Chanenchuk Goal, Assisted by TJ Malone, 11-8 Archers
- 0:49- Archers Mac O'Keefe Goal, Assisted by Grant Ament, 12-8 Archers
Brendan Krebs ended with 12 saves and a 52.2% save percentage. Brett Dobson wins his second-straight Championship MVP with 20 saves and a 71.4% save percentage.[43]
Regular-season statistical leaders
editStatistic | Player | Position | Team |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Jeff Teat (64)^ | Attack | New York Atlas |
One-point goals | Jeff Teat (28) | Attack | New York Atlas |
Two-point goals | Romar Dennis (7)+ | Midfield | California Redwoods |
Scoring Points | Jeff Teat (28) | Attack | New York Atlas |
Assists | Jeff Teat (36)^ | Attack | New York Atlas |
Shots | Brennan O'Neill (82) | Attack | Denver Outlaws |
Shot Percentage | Tre Leclaire (50%) | Midfield | Utah Archers |
Faceoff Percentage | Joseph Nardella (67.5%) | Face-off | Maryland Whipsnakes |
Save Percentage | Blaze Riordan (59.4%) | Goalie | Carolina Chaos |
Caused Turnovers | Garrett Epple (20)+ | Defense | Boston Cannons |
Source:[44]
^ New PLL single-season record
+ Ties PLL single-season record
Statistic | Team |
---|---|
Offensive | |
Scores per Game | New York Atlas (15.1) |
Shots per Game | New York Atlas (44.2) |
Shot Percentage | New York Atlas (32.8%) |
One-point goals | New York Atlas (139) |
Two-point goals | Boston Cannons (16) |
Turnovers (High) | Utah Archers (200) |
Turnovers (Low) | Boston Cannons (160) |
Defensive | |
Scores Against Average (Low) | Carolina Chaos (11) |
Scores Against Average (High) | California Redwoods (13.6) |
Two-Points Goals Against (Low) | Boston Cannons (4) |
Two-Point Goals Against (High) | New York Atlas (15) |
Caused Turnovers | Philadelphia Waterdogs (84) |
Groundballs recovered | New York Atlas (389) |
Saves Per Game | Utah Archers (14.1) |
Save Percentage | Carolina Chaos (57.3%) |
Power Play and Penalty Kill | |
Power Play Goal Percentage | New York Atlas (45.8%) |
Power Play Goals | Archers and Atlas (11) |
Penalty Kill Percentage | Maryland Whipsnakes (100%) |
Penalty Kills | New York Atlas (22) |
Penalties (Low) | Maryland Whipsnakes (11) |
Penalties (High) | New York Atlas (35) |
Penalty Minutes (Low) | Maryland Whipsnakes (8) |
Penalty Minutes (High) | Carolina Chaos (28) |
Source:[44]
Awards
editIndividual Season Awards
editOn August 22, the PLL announced the finalists for the 2024 End of Season Awards via Instagram. The Winners were announced on September 13th, two days prior to the Championship Game in Philadelphia. The players voted on the nominees and the winners were selected by the PLL Coaches and Front Office, Award Namesakes, and members of the media.[45]
Award Winners
editAward | Winner | Team | Notable Statistics | Notable notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jim Brown Most Valuable Player | Jeff Teat | New York Atlas | 64 points (28 goals and 36 assists) | Broke the single-season points and assists records. |
Eamon McEneaney Attackman of the Year | Jeff Teat | New York Atlas | ||
Gait Brothers Midfielder of the Year | Tom Schreiber | Utah Archers | 27 points (10 goals, 1 two-point goal, and 15 assists) | Third straight season winning Midfielder of the year and five out of the last six seasons. |
Dave Pietramala Defensive Player of the Year | Matt Dunn | Maryland Whipsnakes | 11 caused turnovers, 13 ground balls, and 4 points. | Third DPOY, second in the PLL. |
Oren Lyons Goalie of the Year | Blaze Riorden | Carolina Chaos | 92 saves, 59% save percentage, 9.8 scores against average, and 3 points. | Fifth win in 6 seasons. |
Paul Cantabene Face-Off Athlete of the Year | Trevor Baptiste | New York Atlas | 66% face-off percentage, 109 ground balls, and 6 points. | Fourth win in a row, longest active streak in the PLL. |
Brodie Merrill Long Stick Midfielder of the Year | Tyler Carpenter | New York Atlas | 6 caused turnovers, 41 ground balls, and 7 points. | |
George Boiardi Hard Hat Award - Awarded to the SSDM of the year | Danny Logan | New York Atlas | 3 caused turnovers, 9 ground balls, and 2 points. | Third win in 4 seasons. |
2024 Rookie of the Year | TJ Malone | Maryland Whipsnakes | 37 points (19 goals and 18 assists) | Led all rookies in points, goals, and assists as a third-round pick. |
Dick Eddell Coach of the Year | Mike Pressler | New York Atlas | Second-season as coach of the Atlas. Improved from 2-8 to 7-3 this season, securing the #1 overall seed. | |
Dave Huntley Sportsmanship Award | JT Giles-Harris | Denver Outlaws | ||
Welles Crowther Humanitarian Award | Romar Dennis | California Redwoods | ||
Jimmy Regan Teammate Award | Ryan Ambler | Utah Archers | ||
Brendan Looney Leadership Award | Tom Schreiber | Utah Archers | Back-to-back wins. | |
References:[45] |
List of awards and finalists
editThe winner of the award are highlighted in Bold.
Jim Brown Most Valuable Player
edit- Jeff Teat - Broke the single-season Points and Assists records.
- Blaze Riorden
- Asher Nolting
- Tom Schreiber
Eamon McEneaney Attackman of the Year
edit- Jeff Teat - Led league in points, goals, and assists.
- Zed Williams
- Michael Sowers
- Asher Nolting
- Marcus Holman
Gait Brothers Midfielder of the Year
edit- Tom Schreiber
- Grant Ament
- Matt Campbell
- Dox Aitken
- Zach Currier
Dave Pietramala Defensive Player of the Year
edit- Matt Dunn
- JT Giles-Harris
- Garrett Epple - Led the league in caused turnovers (20).
- Gavin Adler
Oren Lyons Goalie of the Year
edit- Blaze Riorden - Led the league in save percentage (59.4%)
- Brett Dobson - Led the league in saves (147).
- Liam Entenmann
- Colin Kirst
Paul Cantabene Face-Off Athlete of the Year
edit- Trevor Baptiste - Led the league in face-off wins (174).
- Joseph Nardella - Led the league in face-off percentage (67.5%)
- TD Ierlan
Brodie Merrill Long Stick Midfielder of the Year
edit- Tyler Carpenter - Led LSMs in ground balls (41).
- Ethan Rall - Led LSMs in caused turnovers (12)
- Jared Conners
George Boiardi Hard Hat Award - Awarded to the SSDM of the year
edit- Danny Logan
- Ryan Terefenko
- Zach Geddes
2024 Rookie of the Year
edit- TJ Malone - Led rookies in points, goals, and assists.
- Liam Entenmann - 2nd in save percentage (58.7%)
- Tyler Carpenter - Won LSM of the Year.
- Connor Shellenberger
- Brennan O'Neill - Led rookies in scoring points (21).
Dick Edell Coach of the Year
edit- Mike Pressler
- Tim Soudan
- Jim Stagnitta
Dave Huntley Sportsmanship Award
edit- JT Giles-Harris
- Myles Jones
- Matt Deluca
- Piper Bond
Welles Crowther Humanitarian Award
edit- Romar Dennis
- Mike Sisselberger
- Nakeie Montgomery
- Brett Makar
Jimmy Regan Teammate Award
edit- Ryan Ambler
- Cole Kirst
- Austin Kaut
Brendan Looney Leadership Award
edit- Tom Schreiber
- Marcus Holman
- Matt Dunn
Coaching Changes
editOffseason Changes
editOn March 28, 2024 it was announced that Legendary Denver Coach, Bill Tierney would take over the Waterdogs Head Coach vacancy. Tierney had spent the last 14 seasons coaching the University of Denver, taking them to the tournament 10 times and winning the National Championship in 2015. Tierney is taking over the Waterdogs from 4-year Head Coach Andy Copelan.[46]
Uniforms
editHome City Uniforms
editEvery team was given two new uniforms for the 2024 season showcasing the new assigned cities.
The PLL continued its partnership with Champion, while six teams displayed additional jersey advertisements.
- The Waterdogs have a Dude Wipes patch on the right side of the chest for both uniforms.
- The Whipsnakes have a Whirlpool patch on the right side of the chest for both uniforms.
- The Redwoods have a Progressive patch on the right sleeve for both uniform.
- The Chaos have a Rebel Bourbon patch on the right sleeve for both uniforms.
- The Atlas have a Charlotte's Web patch on the right sleeve for both uniforms.
- The Archers have a Progressive patch on the right sleeve and a Utah Sports Commission patch on the left sleeve for both uniforms.
Source:[47]
Callum Robinson Death
editFormer 6-year pro-lacrosse player Callum Robinson, his brother Jake, and their friend Jack Rhoad were killed during a surfing trip in Mexico on April 27. An outpouring of support and stories came from the entire lacrosse community after news broke. Callum was a loved and respected member of pro lacrosse for his entire career and beyond.[48] Callum played for the Atlas for 2 seasons and the team showed a tribute to him by displaying a "CR" patch on the left chest of both uniforms and a "Big Koala" (Callum's Nickname) sticker on all helmets.[49]
Alternate Uniforms
editJuly 8–9 in Eagan, Minnesota, was the PLL's Indigenous Heritage Weekend for the 2024 Season. This included unique jerseys designed by Patrick Hunter "a 2Spirit, Ojibwe artist, graphic designer, and award-winning entrepreneur",[50] on-air analysis from Jeremy Thompson, and orange chip straps dedicated to Every Child Matters, a movement memorializing the thousands of children killed in Canadian Residential Boarding Schools.[50] The PLL held their annual Throwback Weekend for the 2024 season July 19–20 in Fairfield, CT.[51] Each team was given a new retro-designed logo and throwback style porthole jerseys.[52]
All-Star Game
editThe 2024 PLL All-Star Game was held at Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Stadium on July 13. New in 2024, the All-Star teams were divided by conference. The West Team was coached by Archers coach, Chris Bates, and the East Team was coached by Waterdogs coach, Bill Tierney. Just as in years prior, there was a variety of skills challenges before the All-Star game, also on July 13.[53]
The East defeated the West 15-12.[54]
Skills Challenge
The All-Star Skills Challenges included 5 competitions,[55] some including women's lacrosse players from Unleashed Women's Lacrosse, the women's training and content arm of the PLL.[56]
4 PLL players and 4 Unleashed players competed in the Accuracy Challenge where players hit various targets on an open net. 4 PLL players and 4 Unleashed players competed separately in the Fastest Shot Competition. The Goalie Challenge included 4 PLL goalies and the new "Air-Gait Challenge" had 4 PLL players attempt their best "Air-Gait" crease dive style goal. Finally, teams of 2 PLL players and 2 Unleashed Players competed East against West in the Derby Challenge which included a sprint, agility and dodging course, wall ball, and accuracy shot.[53]
Challenge | Winner | Team |
---|---|---|
Air-Gait Competition | Ryder Garnsey | California Redwoods |
Accuracy Competition | Marcus Holman | Boston Cannons |
Goalie Skills | Tim Troutner | New York Atlas |
Fastest Shot | Jarrod Neumann | Carolina Chaos |
Charlotte North | Boston College | |
Derby Challenge | West (Tom Schreiber, Piper Bond, Izzy Scane, and Emily Hawryschuck) | Utah Archers, Northwestern, and Syracuse |
Source:[57]
Viewership
The PLL posted a 35% increase in All-Star Game viewership on ESPN. This increase coincided with other increases at the midseason point of the season. Both online and in-person stats increased. The PLL posted a 47% raise in PLL App users and an increase of 159% in social media views. Alongside a 16% increase in attendance and a 32% raise in merchandise sales.[58]
References
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- ^ "2024 City Teams". Premier Lacrosse League. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
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- ^ "Michael Ehrhardt- 2014 Men's Lacrosse Roster". Maryland Athletics. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
- ^ a b "Five Time LSM of the Year Michael Ehrhardt Announces His Retirement". Sticks In Lacrosse Blog. 2 April 2024. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
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- ^ "Tyler Warner". Premier Lacrosse League. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
- ^ "Two-time Champion Tyler Warner announces his retirement". Premier Lacrosse League. 30 January 2024. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
- ^ "U.S. Gold Medalist, 16-Year Pro Kyle Hartzell Retires". USA Lacrosse Magazine.
- ^ "Kyle Hartzell". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ "Boston Cannons hire Kyle Hartzell as an assistant coach and defensive coordinator". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ a b c "Free Agency". Premier Lacrosse League. Retrieved 2024-06-05.
- ^ "Draft". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ "Chris Gray Traded to California Redwoods". Premier Lacrosse League. March 15, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ "Whipsnakes Trade Two Picks For Chrome's Jackson Morrill on Deadline Day". Inside Lacrosse. August 22, 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ "TRADE: Maryland Whipsnakes acquire LSM Matt Rees". Premier Lacrosse League. November 29, 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ Adams, Topher. "Outlaws claim Eric Law off waivers, reuniting with four-time All-Star". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ Brown, Kevin. "PLL 25-Man Rosters Announced: Whips Release Manny, No FOGO for the 'Dogs & More". Inside Lacrosse.
- ^ Griffin, Sarah. "'I want to be a part of something special': Will Manny's new beginning with Cannons". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ Lamberti, Adam (June 12, 2024). "Redwoods trade Levi Anderson to Whipsnakes for 2025 draft pick". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ PLL Beat Writers. "Top takeaways from Whipsnakes' upset of Atlas in Minneapolis". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ Miller, Wyatt. "Waterdogs trade Ryan Conrad to Whipsnakes for 2025 draft pick". Premier Lacrosse League.
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- ^ "TRADE: Chrome LC Trade Jackson Morrill to Whipsnakes LC". Premier Lacrosse League.
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- ^ a b c "Premier Lacrosse League Announces Rule Updates for the 2024 Season". Premier Lacrosse League. March 1, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ "Sources: PLL to Eliminate Longsticks at the Face-Off Stripe". Inside Lacrosse. January 12, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ Dan Arestia [@danarestia] (January 12, 2024). "Long poles are being banned from facing off in the PLL. Enough tinkering with the faceoff and creating a monster that people clearly don't like. It's a joke. Either let the pros build it like they did PLL year one, or get rid of it. It looks like that's the goal anyway" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ "PLL rosters finalized: Top takeaways from each 25-man squad". Premier Lacrosse League. May 29, 2024. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ "Dr. Mark & Cindy Lynn Soccer Stadium — Campus Tours". louisville.edu. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
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- ^ "2024 Regular Season Standings". Premier Lacrosse League.
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- ^ PLL Beat Writers. "Top takeaways as Archers claim 2024 Cash App Championship". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ Coryell, Olivia. "Premier Lacrosse League Championship Live from Philadelphia on ABC and ESPN+". ESPN Press Room.
- ^ Carey, Zach. "Archers' Tom Schreiber out for season with fractured right clavicle". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ "2024 PLL Schedule: Cash App Championship". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ a b "2024 Regular Seasons Stats". PLL Stats Home.
- ^ a b PLL (2024-09-13). "2024 Premier Lacrosse League Awards". Premier Lacrosse League. Retrieved 2024-09-15.
- ^ "Bill Tierney Named Head Coach and General Manager of Philadelphia Waterdogs". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ "Premier Lacrosse League Unveils New Uniforms for the 2024 Season". ESPN.
- ^ "Remembering Callum Robinson, the Big Koala with an Even Bigger Heart". USA Lacrosse Magazine.
- ^ ESPN. "ESPN on X". X.
- ^ a b "PLL Announces Indigenous Heritage Weekend to Take Place in Minnesota July 8–9". Premier Lacrosse League.
- ^ "Fairfield Throwback Weekend". Premier Lacrosse League.
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