Jordan Levine
Jordan Levine (born June 30, 1986) is a midfielder lacrosse player for the Washington Bayhawks.[1] Early lifeLevine, who is 5 feet, 8 inches tall, played baseball, basketball, and football at school.[2][3] He started playing lacrosse when he was 13.[3] As a high school senior he was captain of his Bethpage High School team, and was named All-Nassau County in football and basketball (where he played point guard).[3][4] CollegeAs a freshman season at University of Albany, where he majored in History, he was All-America East Conference (AAEC) and All-Rookie Team in lacrosse. He was named to the 2006 AAEC First Team, and in 2007 he set the Albany’s single-season NCAA Division I record with 91 GBs, and was AAEC Championship Team and First Team. He was named to the Jewish Sports Review College All-America team in 2007 and 2008, and in 2008 was also named AAEC First Team.[3][5] Levine was named to the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) All-American Second Team in his junior year,[6] and received an Honorable Mention the following year.[5][7] Dartmouth's head coach Bill Wilson said in September 2007:
Albany head coach Scott Marr called him "an outstanding athlete".[9] In February 2008, Quint Kessenich of ESPN wrote: "Jordan Levine is legit".[10] His career totals were 57 goals, 56 assists (eighth on Albany's all-time list), and 321 ground balls.[5] Pro careerHe was selected by the New Jersey Pride as the 10th pick in the first round of the 2008 MLL Collegiate Player draft.[3][11] As a rookie, he had 14 points on 5 goals and 9 assists for Toronto.[5][11] He played for the Toronto Nationals as they won the Major League Lacrosse (MLL) championship in 2009.[3] In February 2010 he was traded from Toronto to the Washington Bayhawks along with attackman Jeff Zywicki and defenseman Nick O’Hara for Kevin Huntley, midfielder Josh Sims, and two draft picks.[3][5][11] Washington General Manager Spencer Ford said: "Jordan Levine is an unbelievable transition midfielder who can play D, run between the lines and score. He will help us in a big way."[5][11] References
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