Michael Powell (lacrosse)

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Michael Powell
Born (1982-10-29) October 29, 1982 (age 38)
West Carthage, New York
NationalityUnited States
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)
ShootsRight
PositionAttack
NLL draft17th overall, 2004
San Jose Stealth
MLL teamsBoston Cannons
Baltimore Bayhawks
NCAA teamSyracuse University

Michael Powell (born October 29, 1982) is a former American professional lacrosse player who was a four-time First Team All-American at Syracuse University, played professional lacrosse for the Baltimore Bayhawks and Boston Cannons, and played on the United States team in the 2002 & 2006 World Lacrosse Championships where he was named to the All-World Team.

He is now an accomplished singer/songwriter and visual artist that tours regularly performing solo shows and with his band The Black River.

Highlights[]

Powell is the only player to win the Jack Turnbull Award as the top attackman in Division I lacrosse four consecutive times. Powell was also a four-time finalist for the Tewaaraton Trophy, the lacrosse equivalent of the Heisman Trophy, and is one of two male players to win the award twice.[1] He led Syracuse to two national championships and holds the school record for most career points.

High school career[]

Powell attended Carthage Senior High School in Carthage, New York, where he was a high school All-American.[2] He set the New York State high school records for most points in a season with 194 points in 2000, most points in a game with 15 points in 2000, and most assists in a season with 120 assists in 1999 and 115 in 2000.[3]

College career[]

Powell enrolled at Syracuse in the fall of 2000 as one of the most anticipated recruits in college lacrosse history. He wore the #22 Syracuse jersey, the same number previously worn by both of his older brothers Casey Powell and Ryan Powell, and by lacrosse legends Gary Gait and Charlie Lockwood.[4]

2001 season[]

In his freshman season, Powell tallied 30 goals, 40 assists (70 points), and 69 groundballs while leading Syracuse to the NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship title game against Princeton University. In the championship game, he scored an unassisted goal with just 16 seconds remaining in regulation to force overtime, but Syracuse lost to Princeton on a B.J. Prager goal with 41 seconds left in overtime. Powell became the first player in Syracuse lacrosse history to be named a First Team All-American as a freshman. He was also awarded the Jack Turnbull Award as the nation's top attackman, and was a finalist for the inaugural Tewaaraton Trophy.[5]

2002 season[]

In 2002, Powell scored 42 goals and 42 assists en route to leading Syracuse to a national championship. With four goals and three assists in the championship game, he was named the NCAA Tournament's Most Outstanding Player and won his first Tewaaraton Trophy.

2003 season[]

Powell missed the fall 2002 semester and fall practice at Syracuse but was able to regain academic eligibility before the 2003 lacrosse season. Scored 31 goals and 33 assists for 64 points. Despite the aggressive defenses that targeted him during the season,[6] he helped lead Syracuse to the Final Four, of what would eventually be 22 consecutive Final Fours, an NCAA records. Syracuse fell to Johns Hopkins University 19-8 in the semifinals.

2004 season[]

As a senior, Powell led the Orangemen to their ninth NCAA championship. In the NCAA tournament, Syracuse defeated top-seeded Johns Hopkins in the semifinal round 15-9 and then beat second-seeded Navy in the championship game 14-13. On the season, Powell scored 89 points (47 goals, 42 assists), surpassing the Syracuse record shared by his two older brothers to become the all-time leading scorer at Syracuse with 307 points. That number ties him for 12th all-time in NCAA history. Powell was again selected as a First Team All-American, becoming just the sixth lacrosse player to earn that recognition four times, won his second Tewaaraton Trophy, and his first Enners Trophy as the most outstanding player in men's college lacrosse.[7]

Professional career[]

Following his graduation, Powell surprised many in the lacrosse community when he chose not to play professional lacrosse for Major League Lacrosse in the 2004 season. Instead, he pursued a career as a professional musician. Powell, along with his two older brothers, also signed an endorsement contract with lacrosse equipment manufacturer Brine, Corp., with Mike working out of Brine's west coast office. Casey and Ryan had previously been employed by Warrior Sports.

In 2005, Powell joined the MLL and was drafted by the Baltimore Bayhawks, where he and teammate Gary Gait led the Bayhawks to the league championship. Powell also played in the MLL All-Star Game, where he was selected as MVP. He sat out the 2006 MLL season. On March 21, 2007, Powell, along with Ben DeFelice and a 2008 conditional draft choice, was traded from the Baltimore Bayhawks to the Boston Cannons in exchange for Ryan Curtis and Conor Gill.[8]

Powell was a member of U.S. World Team in the 2006 World Lacrosse Championship, where he was the U.S.'s leading scorer and was selected to the All-World Team. The U.S. team fell to Canada in the championship game, 15-10, marking the second time the Americans had lost to the Canadians in 14 contests.

Personal life and music career[]

Powell is a traveling musician and an accomplished writer with over two hundred songs.[9] Heavily influenced by Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, John Prine, and Townes Van Zandt. He has released 6 albums, "Strange Bedfellows" 2007, "Replevin" in 2009, "The Night The Date Was Tied" in 2010, "Kapow" 2011, "Tied To The Rail" 2014, "Classic Universe" 2018. The single "Twenty One Rounds[10]" was released on Memorial Day 2018 and was inspired by growing up in the shadows of the Fort Drum military base.

In addition to his older brothers, Casey and Ryan, Mike also has a younger brother, Mason.

Statistics[]

Syracuse[]

   
Season GP G A Pts PPG
2001 16 30 40 70 --
2002 17 42 42 84 --
2003 16 31 33 64 --
2004 17 47 42 89 --
66 150 157 (a) 307 (b) --
(a) 13th in NCAA Division I career assists
(b) 6th in NCAA Division I career points

Awards[]

Preceded by
Tillman Johnson
Lt. Raymond Enners Award
2004
Succeeded by
Kyle Harrison
Preceded by
Doug Shanahan
Men's Tewaaraton Trophy
2002
Succeeded by
Chris Rotelli
Preceded by
Chris Rotelli
Men's Tewaaraton Trophy
2004
Succeeded by
Kyle Harrison
Preceded by
Ryan Powell
Jack Turnbull Award
2001, 2002, 2003, & 2004
Succeeded by
Matt Danowski
Preceded by
Gary Gait
Major League Lacrosse All-Star Game MVP
2005
Succeeded by
Kevin Cassese

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Lacrosse: E-Lacrosse's The Latest Spin with Mike Spinner Archived 2006-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Boys High School All American Lacrosse Team - jamesmetzger.net
  3. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-11-29. Retrieved 2009-07-29.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ Syracuse.com's Printer-Friendly Page
  5. ^ SU Athletics - Michael Powell Named Attackman of the Year Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ For the fourth year, all eyes are on Michael Powell - and that's just the way he likes it - 2004 Lacrosse Guide
  7. ^ SU Athletics - Powell Wins Tewaaraton Trophy for Second Time in His Career Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ majorleaguelacrosse.com: Press Releases Archived 2007-05-02 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ http://www.politerebel.com
  10. ^ Twenty One Rounds, 2018-06-15, retrieved 2018-09-05

External links[]

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