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Shamrocks ready for 'unusual' WLA draft

The Western Lacrosse Association general managers, armed only with scouting reports from two years ago in 2019, will select today in the 2021 draft. The graduating juniors, of course, had their 2020 seasons wiped out by the pandemic.
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Victoria Shamrocks coach Bob Hayes and GM Chris Welch are ready for a little bit different WLA draft Thursday. TIMES COLONIST

The Western Lacrosse Association general managers, armed only with scouting reports from two years ago in 2019, will select today in the 2021 draft. The graduating juniors, of course, had their 2020 seasons wiped out by the pandemic.

鈥淯nfortunately, these players were denied their final season of junior just as a lot of them were coming into their own,鈥 said Victoria Shamrocks GM Chris Welch.

鈥淚t makes it tougher for the teams doing the drafting.鈥

It鈥檚 an unusual situation all-around.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been hard on the graduating players, and the junior coaches who may have been building a class for three or four seasons and then lost the payoff season, but it鈥檚 happening to everybody in every sport,鈥 said Rod Wood of Victoria, chair of the sa国际传媒 Junior A Lacrosse League.

Many of the sa国际传媒 players, however, will be playing field lacrosse as the NCAA Div. 1 season is scheduled to take place this spring. The sa国际传媒 Junior A League hopes to offer the players a box season, too, when they return home for the summer from the NCAA.

鈥淲e are cautiously optimistic,鈥 said Wood.

鈥淲e are looking at 14 to 21 games starting in mid-May. We are considering everything from cohort situations to round-robins. We need fans but are willing to give it a shot and take a financial hit to do it.鈥

It鈥檚 all about the players, added Wood.

Last season鈥檚 lost class will be featured tonight in the draft in a belated last hurrah. After several starry WLA drafts, this one doesn鈥檛 feature as many marquee-level performers but will still offer up some players that will be of immediate or long-term use for WLA teams.

鈥淭here are some solid players through the first two rounds but it tapers off after that,鈥 said Wood.

鈥淭here appear to be lots of guys in the middle of the pack range but I don鈥檛 think anybody is going to land a late find.鈥

As the defending WLA champions from 2019 鈥 the 2020 season was dark due to the pandemic 鈥 the Shamrocks will select seventh and last. The Coquitlam Adanacs, 2019 basement dwellers, will pick first. They will be followed in order by the Langley Thunder, Burnaby Lakers, Nanaimo Timbermen, New Westminster Salmonbellies, Maple Ridge Burrards and Shamrocks. The draft will go eight rounds.

鈥淭here is talent at the top of the draft, and it鈥檚 a decent year for Island players, but overall it鈥檚 not a deep draft,鈥 said Welch.

Among those top-end Islanders are Austin Madronic from Harvard of the NCAA and the Junior Shamrocks, Caleb Kueber of Mercyhurst of the NCAA and Junior Shamrocks and Thomas Vaesen of Montevallo of the NCAA and Junior Timbermen and Will Johansen of Robert Morris of the NCAA and the Junior Timbermen.

This will be the second year for a territorial protection, in which each WLA team will be allowed to protect one player from its catchment area. That player can鈥檛 be taken by another team. If a team does not protect a player, it will receive a compensatory pick. Teams will present their territorial protection choices to the league tonight before the start of the draft. Welch would not say if the Shamrocks will protect a player in their territory or who he will be.

The draft will be conducted tonight via Zoom and webcast beginning at 7 p.m., with Brad Challoner and Jake Elliott hosting, and can be followed on WLA social media channels or via the WLALacrosse.com.

鈥淲e are looking at a couple of options, from a full to reduced season,鈥 said WLA commissioner Paul Dal Monte, about the 2021 campaign.

鈥淲e have the benefit of time in that we play in summer,鈥 said Dal Monte, who added the WLA will release 2021schedule this month.

鈥淥ur players have such passion for the game and are anxious to get on the floor.鈥

The issue of fans being allowed into the venues will depend on the provincial health guidelines in effect this summer.

鈥淚deally, every team wants fans in the stands,鈥 said Dal Monte.

鈥淏ut we want to keep our players and fans safe.鈥

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