Lois Garlow of the Haudenosaunee Nationals lacrosse team heads toward the sideline during a match against Canada at the World Games in Birmingham, Ala., July 24, 2022. Members of the Haudenosaunee are hopeful they will have a chance to play the sport their people invented when lacrosse returns to the Olympics in 2028 in Los Angeles. AP PHOTO BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Lacrosse at the Olympics gives Native Americans a chance to see their sport shine

By EDDIE PELLS

AP National Writer

One of the first gifts any member of the Onondaga nation receives is called
a “crib stick” – a small lacrosse stick given to babies that symbolizes the
importance of that sport to people who invented it.

Nearly 1,000 years after lacrosse was first played on fields that could
sometimes stretch for miles across the Haudenosaunee confederacy, the sport
will be on the Olympic schedule in Los Angeles in 2028. Whether the
Haudenosaunee, a collection of six Native American nations whose
territory covers upstate New York and adjacent sections of Canada, will have a
spot in that tournament is a question that will keep the lacrosse world on edge
between now and then.

The final call will come down to whether the International Olympic Committee
will buck a decades-old tradition of only allowing participants from countries
with a national Olympic committee, or whether it will find a way to include
players under the Haudenosaunee (formerly known as the Iroquois) flag. Such a
move would pay homage to the Native American roots of the game in an
ecosystem that is always seeking more inclusiveness and diversity.

“Growing up an Onondagan, when we had a game in our territory, the whole
community came out,” said Leo Nolan, the executive director of the
Haudenosaunee national team. “It’s a community spirit, not just a sport. It’s
an integral part of who we are and what we’re about. How many other sports have
that kind of wherewithal, something that really has a true meaning? I don’t
know of many sports that have the same spiritual meaning that this has.”

Working with World Lacrosse, the sport’s international federation,
organizers for the Los Angeles Olympics leaned heavily into the Native
American history of the sport to sell the IOC on bringing lacrosse back to
the games as a medal event for the first time since 1908.

The story goes back much farther than that – to around the year 1100. Tribes
In northeastern North America often played games involving more than 100 men on
a side. Lacrosse was used to help tribes get ready for wars; it was focal point
of social gatherings, a religious experience and also sometimes a diplomatic
tool used to settle disputes. As the story goes, Canadian settlers liked what
they saw when they first laid eyes on the game. A dentist named George Beers
wrote the sport’s first rulebook in 1867.

Established in 1983, the Haudenosaunee national team has been a regular
participant at world championships since 1990.

“I got a glimpse of it, and everybody else did, too,” one of the team’s
founders, Rex Lyons, said in an interview on the team website about the feeling
of his people being included in a global competition. “We talked about having
our ancestors standing right there beside us, and we said, ‘Look where lacrosse
has taken us.’”

In 2014, the Haudenosaunee men’s team won its first world bronze medal. Last
year, at the Olympic-style World Games, the men’s team finished fifth (out of
eight) and the women finished seventh.

To compete there, it took sign-off from the Olympic committees in both the
United States and Canada. The team from Ireland sacrificed its own spot to
allow the Haudenosaunee to play. The decision for LA will ultimately rest with
the IOC, which did not immediately respond to emails from The Associated Press
seeking comment on its plans, which have not been finalized.

An LA spokesperson said “together, we intend to find creative solutions that
honor the sport’s heritage and allow participation for Haudenosaunee athletes,
while respecting the Olympic Games framework established by the IOC.”

World Lacrosse CEO Jim Scherr is also hoping there’s an opportunity to
include the confederacy.

“There’s a direct line from the origins of the game throughout their culture
up to today where they still participate,” Scherr said. “It’s the only sport
they participate in. We think it’s a unique circumstance in sports.”

Sarah Hirshland, the CEO of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee, said
honoring the Haudenosaunee’s role in the sport “is something we look at and
say, it’s very cool and exciting.” In a nod to the political realities of the
situation, she said if the IOC approves a pathway for the Haudenosaunee, “we
would want to make sure that everyone feels that the process to get there is
very, very fair.”

Nolan said that while the dream is for the Haudenosaunee to play on the
world’s biggest stage, simply getting lacrosse back into the conversation at
the Olympics is a victory of sorts.

“I think there are Olympic people involved who know this is really important, not just for indigenous communities, but for all of us,” Nolan said. “It’s a chance for us to share, more and more, about who we are and what we’re all about. “