• Loading stock data...
Sunday, July 6, 2025

Lacrosse’s Quest to Return to the Olympics

  • Lacrosse is on the shortlist for inclusion in the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Olympics.
  • Global participation in the sport has grown substantially in recent years.
A Canada defender guards a USA player during the World Lacrosse Men's Championship.
USA Lacrosse

SAN DIEGO — World Lacrosse president Sue Redfern was very clear when she took the podium before a game between the United States and Canada to open the 2023 Men’s Championship.

“We want lacrosse to return to the Olympic Games,” she said. “We want that to happen in 2028.”

That year, the Summer Olympics will return to the United States for the first time since 1996.

Los Angeles would be the culmination of a multi-decade plan to reintroduce North America’s oldest sport to the world stage and make it the global, multicultural game it was perhaps designed to be.

“I think lacrosse today has made so much progress,” the NLL’s San Diego Seals owner and Las Vegas Desert Dogs co-owner Joseph Tsai told Front Office Sports. “There’s no reason why lacrosse shouldn’t be in the Olympics.”

“There were just six countries playing when I first came in [almost 40 years ago],” Redfern told FOS, “and to see it now in 86 countries is just astonishing on the international stage.” Eight teams remain out of the 30 that began the Men’s Championship.

Premier Lacrosse League Assigning Designated Home Markets

The Premier Lacrosse League is hitting another milestone.
May 25, 2023

Lacrosse was contested at five previous Olympics, most recently in 1948 as a demonstration sport with no medals awarded. The sport has slowly built a global presence outside North America — and in 2005, the sport’s governing bodies made a collective decision to return in 30 years, Redfern says.

The International Federation of Women’s Lacrosse Association and the men’s International Lacrosse Federation merged in 2008 to create the Federation of International Lacrosse — which was then rebranded to World Lacrosse in 2019.

“We wanted to be viewed as a serious contender for Olympic inclusion,” World Lacrosse CEO Jim Scherr says of the merger and subsequent rebrand. “We wanted to modernize our logo and brand, and change the name to reflect that.”

Those were smart decisions: Men’s and women’s lacrosse gained full International Olympic Committee recognition in 2021, and the sport was one of nine shortlisted for inclusion by the LA28 committee in August 2022.

“We have been the fastest of any international federation to actually get to a shortlisting for a hosted city,” says Redfern. “Other federations talk to me and say, ‘How did you do that?’”

Aside from the merger and rebrand, Redfern attributes the success to the fact that the U.S. — where lacrosse has its biggest presence — is hosting the ‘28 Games. Hiring Scherr, a former Olympic wrestler and CEO of the U.S. Olympic Committee, was also helpful.

Now, the tight-knit lacrosse community will anxiously await the LA28 committee’s decision to recommend the sport or not — and if successful, the final decision will come at October’s IOC Session in Mumbai.

A USA women's lacrosse player shoots in a game against Hong Kong.
The USA women’s national team is the reigning world champion. Credit: USA Lacrosse

Less Is More

In both its men’s and women’s iterations, field lacrosse traditionally consists of 10 players per team on a large field, which sometimes leads to low scores and moments of inaction. Box lacrosse (typically only played by men) increases the speed and scoring but doesn’t fit the bill for a Summer Olympics, as it more closely resembles indoor ice hockey.

World Lacrosse responded by helping develop “sixes” — a six-per-side field version — combining the best of both disciplines.

“In terms of the visibility and watchability factor, having a closer relationship to an already internationally recognized sport such as basketball, which sixes mirrors very closely, I think is going to be easier for people to get involved in the game,” Athletes Unlimited director of lacrosse Abi Jackson says.

Following the 2020 Games, the IOC set a quota of 10,500 athletes who could participate in a Summer Olympics. Fewer players on the field means smaller rosters, which ultimately gives this version of lacrosse a more convincing argument for inclusion.

“If we take a game that we try to get into new countries, smaller countries, sixes is an ideal model,” says Redfern. “They don’t have to find so many athletes in the first place to get together and start playing. It’s a really great developmental game, so it’s a core sports strategy that we wanted anyway. Spain said to us after COVID that if we hadn’t had sixes, they would probably have folded as an association at that time.”

“It’s the great equalizer,” says Tsai. “You don’t have to have all the depth, and it makes the sport more competitive.”

An Archers player drives against an Atlas player during the Premier Lacrosse League Championship Series.
February’s PLL Championship Series highlighted the sixes format. Credit: Premier Lacrosse League

Pro Support

As part of the Olympic push, World Lacrosse has received ample support from burgeoning U.S. pro leagues like Athletes Unlimited, the National Lacrosse League, and the Premier Lacrosse League.

Redfern and Scherr say all three leagues have been cooperative, including meeting with the federation to suggest strategy and encourage players to promote international competition — the best example of this practice being the PLL’s Championship Series, an offseason tournament between the league’s top teams in the sixes format.

PLL CEO Michael Rabil told FOS, “We can’t just talk about [getting to the Olympics], we have to be about it, and we have to invest our own dollars as well to really try to build the sport.”

Getting a spot would be mutually beneficial: Softball, for example, saw a significant bump after the sport’s inaugural inclusion in the 1996 Games.

“The appeal of being able to watch the USA, Canada, and other countries participate in the Olympic Games for a U.S. audience would strike that chord with thousands and potentially hundreds of thousands of youth in the United States, and would create a resurgence of the growth of lacrosse,” says Scherr.

“I think the continued development and the renewed focus on youth participation in lacrosse is only going to drive the sport to a higher quality,” Jackson says.

A view of a Haudenosaunee Nationals player during a game at the World Lacrosse Men's Championship.
The Haudenosaunee are looking to be the first indigenous nation represented at the Olympics. Credit: Haudenosaunee Nationals Lacrosse

The Olympic Spirit

Lacrosse has one unique argument for Olympic inclusion: It hopes to make the Haudenosaunee the first indigenous nation to play under its own flag at the Games.

The Haudenosaunee Nationals — who changed their name from Iroquois Nationals in 2022 and are representing a confederation of Native American tribal communities — are the descendants of the people who invented the sport in the 12th century.

The organization is recognized by World Lacrosse and was permitted to participate in the 2022 World Games. It’s currently unclear whether the IOC would permit the Haudenosaunee to compete independently, but World Lacrosse has the team as part of its Olympic plans.

“Native Americans invented the sport, and that heritage, I think, is something that the Olympic movement really should pay attention to,” says Tsai. “The Olympic movement is about inclusiveness and wide participation.”

Lacrosse faces stiff competition for an Olympic spot. Other sports on the optional shortlist — such as baseball, softball, and cricket — enjoy wide participation across the globe. And even if lacrosse does make it, it will have to keep pushing to be included in subsequent Olympics, which Redfern says World Lacrosse is prepared to do.

But for now, the Olympic dream is alive and ready for its spotlight.

“The Olympics is the pinnacle of competition,” Jackson says. “It’s the perfect illustration of the ultimate spirit of athletics and competition.”

Linkedin
Whatsapp
Copy Link
Link Copied
Link Copied

What to Read

American Celebs Want to Be Sports Owners. Soccer Is Where They Start

As U.S. team prices climb, investors set their sights abroad.

Baseball’s Celebrity Row: Behind MLB’s First-Pitch Ritual

Often planned, sometimes spontaneous, the ritual throw is baseball’s celebrity row.

3,000 Hot Dogs, $20K in Prizes: Behind the Nathan’s Eating Contest

Nathan’s serves up thousands of hot dogs and $20,000 in prize money.

Geoffrey Esper Can’t Catch a Break at Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest

“Hot dogs is not one of my favorite competitions of the year.”

Featured Today

The Battle Over Wimbledon’s Ambitious Expansion Plan

A classic NIMBY standoff on one of the most hallowed grounds in sports.
Seattle Rough & Tumble
June 28, 2025

Women’s Sports Bars Are on the Rise. Survival Isn’t Guaranteed

Some women’s sports bars are cashing in. Others are clawing for funding.
June 27, 2025

Shitposters Have Taken the Reins of Pro Sports’ Official Voices

Meet the social media pros turning sports teams into internet trolls.
Jun 17, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers center Sam Reinhart (13) hoists the Stanley Cup after winning game six of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final against the Edmonton Oilers at Amerant Bank Arena
June 26, 2025

Stanley Cup’s International Summer Tour: Rules, Repairs, and Raucousness

No pro trophy tour compares to the NHL’s three-month global victory lap.
Jun 13, 2018; Moscow, Russia; A general view of a beer stand inside of Luschniki Stadium one day prior to the start of the FIFA World Cup 2018.

Saudi Arabia Says No Alcohol at 2034 World Cup

Saudi Arabia won’t allow alcohol anywhere during the 2034 World Cup.
August 30, 2024

Premier League Transfer Spending Has Already Topped $2 Billion As Deadline Looms

Saudi Pro League teams haven’t yet matched their English counterparts.
January 13, 2025

Gavin Newsom Reveals Status of 2028 Olympics As Los Angeles Wildfires Roar

Gavin Newsom says there’s a “Marshall Plan” to rebuild Los Angeles.
Sponsored

Hottest Matchups Following NFL Schedule Release

The NFL released the 2025 regular-season schedule, and anticipation is already building in the ticket marketplace with four months to go.
Paralympics Tiktok
August 25, 2024

The Wildly Successful Paralympics TikTok Account Isn’t What You Think

A cheeky TikTok account is opening the world of Paralympic sports.
August 11, 2024

Passing of the Torch: Los Angeles Set for Olympic Firsts in 2028

The city last hosted the Summer Olympics in 1984.
August 1, 2024

Saudi Arabia Submits Bold World Cup Bid That Includes a Cliffside Arena

The Saudis are proposing a new stadium in a futuristic city called Neom.
John John Florence (USA) surfs in men’s round two competition during the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Summer Games at Tsurigasaki Surfing Beach.
July 29, 2024

Olympic Surfers Won’t Get Their Full Paris Moment

‘We’re kind of separate off on our own little thing over here.’