Blaze veterans like Ratliff, Ghitelman, Rice, Justin Pennington, and Jeff Reynolds had gone through tough times prior to this season. The addition of players like Deemer Class (30 points, five two-point goals), Tommy Palasek and Matt Gibson (23 points apiece), Sergio Salcido (12 points in six games), and Joe Nardella (59.8 face-off winning percentage with the Blaze), along with rookies like Christian Cuccinello Connor Kelly, and Austin Sims has helped push the team late in the season.
“In my eyes, [Nardella is] the best face-off guy on the planet right now,” Ratliff said. “The chemistry with the rookies has been great.”
“Adding Tommy Palasek and Matt Gibson helped with our leadership,” Ghitelman said. “Having guys who had been there before in the locker room and add a little more of a fun atmosphere was so important in our game.”
Consistent contributions from veterans and rookies alike gave the team confidence. Even with the difficulty of three games in eight days, the Blaze viewed the situation as an opportunity.
“This week gave us an opportunity to come together closer as a team, dealing with adversity, whether its travel schedules, playing two games in a matter of three days, having the loss of your former coach in the back of your mind, but those things can bring you closer,” Banks said. “We were able to be closer which is something I think Coach Huntley would smile down on because we were able to be together for that time.”
When they hosted the second-place Chesapeake Bayhawks in a Thursday night matchup to kick off Week 14, the all-orange uniforms provided by new owner Andre Gudger — whom players and coaches raved about — gave the team an extra boost. Atlanta defeated Chesapeake, 12-11. Two nights later, the team traveled to Florida and beat the Launch, 16-13.
That leaves the Blaze with a 7-6 record heading into the final game of the season. A win against the 7-6 Denver Outlaws — who have been to the league championship each of the past two seasons — earns Atlanta its first playoff trip in franchise history.
The success the team has experienced in 2018 is a reward for sticking through the earlier challenges.
“The things we’ve gone through, it speaks volumes to what’s possible in sports,” Ghitelman said. “We’ll see what goes here, and we’re going to have fun doing it.”
Blaze players said the season is not a success unless they win, unless they head to the playoffs. Ford, however, is proud of their effort this season regardless of the outcome against the Outlaws.
“There is so much positivity and energy in Georgia,” he said. “It’s never easy in the MLL. It’s hard to win one game, much less get into the playoffs. The players can finally drive and compete knowing we trust them, an owner will tell them he’s proud of them, and they can push forward.”
Ford said the team dedicated Saturday’s game against the Launch to Huntley in honor of his birthday.
At the conclusion of the victory, with the Blaze on the precipice of history, Ford couldn’t help but think of how Huntley — a man he called his best friend — and he would celebrate.
“We’d be meeting over a meal. He’d be drinking a margarita. I’d have a beer,” Ford said. “The only thing he would want these guys to experience is one chance to compete for a Steinfeld Cup. He’d have a smile on his face. He’d say, ‘I told you so.’ He’d be positive. He’d be happy we got from year one to now, where every guy he cared so deeply about could ride into the sunset and compete for a championship.”