Lacrosse star Lyle Thompson brings ‘medicine game’ to pipeline protesters
Last week, Lyle Thompson packed up his family, a couple of friends and dozens of lacrosse sticks and drove more than 24 hours from his home in upstate New York to the site of the Dakota Access pipeline protests.
The lacrosse star wanted to see the demonstrations for himself, and he hoped he could lift spirits at the protesters’ campsite through his sport, known by the Iroquois as the “medicine game.”
He also brought his wife Amanda, their three daughters, fellow pro player Bill O’Brien and University of Albany head coach Scott Marr to the Standing Rock Indian Reservation near the border between North and South Dakota. The plan was to organize a lacrosse game.
“All I’m trying to do is spread awareness and help other people, help other people in this world,” Thompson said Tuesday from Syracuse, N.Y., near Onondaga Nation, where he grew up. “For this case, it’s the people in North Dakota. It’s been people fighting for other people, the people of this world, everything living.


