The Premier Lacrosse League begins its eighth season on May 8, featuring head referee Matty Palumb, who has gained fame for his engaging interactions with players. Palumb has over 30 years of experience in lacrosse, both as a player and referee.
Key points
Premier Lacrosse League starts its eighth season on May 8
Matty Palumb is the head referee known for his engaging style
Palumb has over 30 years of experience in lacrosse
He is a three-time NCAA championship-winning goalie
Palumb has officiated in both Major League Lacrosse and PLL
Mentioned in this story
Matty Palumb
Premier Lacrosse LeagueNCAA ChampionshipsSyracuse
The Premier Lacrosse League launches its eighth season May 8, courting its biggest campaign yet. Since its 2019 inception, the professional menās league has been in a state of constant changeāa full sprint to grow its viewership, crowds, venues, media deals, and investors.
One thing that has remained is Matty Palumb.
The PLLās head referee, who leads the officiating crew for nearly every menās game as the league tours the country, is a star in his own right. His banter with players and coaches is woven into the PLLās slate of increasingly national broadcasts. Many of Palumbās interactions have gone viral, spreading outside the growingābut still realistically tightālacrosse circle.
Across more than 30 years, Palumb has seen the game in many forms: as a three-time NCAA championship-winning goalie at Syracuse, where he played for one of the most widely regarded teams of all time; as a menās college referee, where heās officiated multiple Division I national championships; and in the pro game, where he reffed in both Major League Lacrosse and now the PLL.
He knows his main-character energy is not for everyone. But he tells Front Office Sports that the noise simply doesnāt bother him, especially if it helps grow the game. As lacrosse continues to push its perceived limits, Palumb just wants the sport in front of as many people as possibleāas fast as possible. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
Front Office Sports**:** Even though refs are supposed to be largely invisible, youāve become an essential part of the PLL. How did that happen?
Matty Palumb: The college game is a little more conservativeāitās academic institutions and a lot of administrative types. The college atmosphere is a little more buttoned up compared to the PLL. Part of pro sports, obviously, is entertainment. Iāve never set out to entertaināIāve just kind of always been me and had fun with it. At the pro level, there are just more personalities and, administratively, people are more accepting of it.
FOS**:** What do you think it says about the state of the sport on the professional level that you have enough of an audience to go viral with your clips?
Q&A
Who is Matty Palumb in the Premier Lacrosse League?
Matty Palumb is the head referee of the Premier Lacrosse League, known for his engaging banter with players and coaches.
When does the Premier Lacrosse League's eighth season start?
The eighth season of the Premier Lacrosse League starts on May 8.
What is Matty Palumb's background in lacrosse?
Matty Palumb is a former NCAA championship-winning goalie and has officiated multiple Division I national championships and professional games.
How has Matty Palumb contributed to the popularity of lacrosse?
Palumb's viral interactions during games have helped increase the visibility and popularity of the Premier Lacrosse League.
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MP: Itās the natural relationship between refs and players and refs and coaches. Thereās always some type of antagonistic element to it. Theyāre not going to like everything you callāthereās never been a game where everything goes one teamās way, and thereās always something that goes against everybody at some point.
I think this thing was really born when we went to the bubble in 2020, and we were locked up for 20 days and doing two, three games a day. And they kind of had everybody captivated at home watching TV. I was a good element for people locked in their houses, looking to have some fun.
But listen, Iām going to miss a call in every game. Tough shitājust like you drop passes in every game, and just like [coaches] make decisions that you donāt like in every game. Games are imperfect, which is just fine. These are lacrosse games, not life or death. Sometimes we lose track of that, and I try to make sure thereās always time to have a laugh and have some fun. Iāll believe that until Iām dead.
FOS**:** Lacrosse is at a place where itās really still minting stars and, in some cases, youāremore recognizablethan some of the players. Is that a problem?
MP: Iām not sure thatās the case through everyoneās eyes. I think some people get more of a kick out of me than othersātrust me, Iām fully aware not everybody thinks Matty P is the bomb, and there are plenty of people like, āWhy doesnāt he shut up and ref?ā But this doesnāt come from ego at all. This is how Iāve always lived.
My core [belief] of officiating is if you watch me ref, thereās no denying that I love being out there, and I cherish it, and I donāt take it for granted. And I think when you attack things with good intentions, which is exactly how I attack the PLL stuff, I think most reasonable people say, āMatt, he loves to be out there.ā
FOS**: How does transparency in officiating play into growing the sport?**
MP: Womenās lacrosse [is particularly challenging]. If you made me go referee a womenās game, itād be a disaster. I donāt understand it. So, if I donāt understand it, I can guarantee you that any non-womenās-lacrosse-community person, a regular sports person, is going to absolutely have trouble understanding it. I think menās lacrosse is a little easier to digest for people rule-wise, because there are no stoppages that are very nuanced. Usually, in a menās game, if we stop, itās fairly obvious.
If we want to be mainstream, weāve got to be able to be understood by mainstream people. You watch a basketball game, you understand basketball, but that doesnāt mean you know every little ruleābut the general gist of the flow of the game. You have to make it so people get it, so the casual person can enjoy a game without asking 92,000 questions.
FOS**: When you think about that āmainstream,ā what would that look like for lacrosse? How can the sport reach fever pitch?**
MP: Continue to leak geographically. When I was a player, basically 99% of the good players were located between Boston and Washington, D.C., on the Eastern Seaboardāand refs and coaches. If you think about it, thereās no other game in the world that is like thatālike, thereās great soccer played in Oregon and Florida and the Carolinas and Texas and New York and New Hampshire. Thereās great football all over the country. You canāt say the same thing about lacrosse.
A kid in California or Washington or Texasāthe youth is starting to play in those areas, but they canāt go to a Division I lacrosse game. I donāt think thereās any doubt that the PLL is closing the gap, but still, the mecca of college lacrosse is Division I. College lacrosse is [expanding], but is still not there west of the Mississippi River. You can count [the programs] on one set of fingers, and itās the only sport in the world that you can do that with.
FOS**: Lacrosse has always had a conversation about its limitsāprep school sport, East Coast sport, niche sport. Is that ceiling real, or have we already broken it?**
MP: I think we continue to kind of poke holes in our ceiling. We bust through with the PLL. Iām a guy that was on the ground floor of [Major League Lacrosse]. Now, weāve got more people working in the substitution area in the PLL than the MLL had working total.
I donāt think the ceiling is done being lifted. Itās just that lacrosse is our little thing, and thatās kind of what we love about it. Of course, the danger of it being āour little thingā is all nobody else gives a shit about it. Now, itās our little thing thatās growing up to be a big thing with caretakers of the gameāguys like [PLL cofounders] Paul and Mike [Rabil]. I consider myself one of those on the officiating end.
Itās important to realize thereās more to it than just our guys, our buddies that play. It is more global, right? When the PLL goes to Japan, and you see those highlights in the clips of how nutty those people get about PLL lacrosseāitās really cool to see. It reminds you that itās not just your neighborhood game on Long Island or upstate or in Baltimore.
Weāve made really good progressāthe college part of it, the pro part of it, the indoor part of it, the womenās game. Thereās a lot of different flavors of lacrosse to sink your teeth into nowadays, and I think thatās cool.