FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The 2021 Premier Lacrosse League champions kept their hopes of repeating alive thanks to an 11-3 victory over the second-seeded Chrome on Saturday at Gillette Stadium.
The Chaos were led by Josh Byrne, who recorded six points. It was the second time that the Chaos defeated the Chrome in an elimination game, knocking off Tim Soudan’s squad in the PLL Championship Series during the shortened 2020 season.
“We’ve been here before,” Byrne said. “We’ve had a tough regular season before, and I think we understand that at the end of the day, it’s what you do in the playoffs that counts. And I think we brought that today.”
The Chaos started the last regular season 0-3 before becoming the first team other than the Whipsnakes to win a PLL title. They finished 2-8 during this regular season, limping into the playoffs. The fans voted and gave them a 2.8 percent chance of winning the title — plenty of fuel for a team that needs little motivation.
“The funny part is, they’re even doubting us more this year than last year,” Towers told Jack Goods this week.
The PLL playoffs kicked off with Byrne assisting Mac O’Keefe on a power play goal following an offside penalty by the Chrome. The Chaos then scored the next four goals for a 5-0 lead early in the second quarter. Brendan Nichtern found Logan Wisnauskas on the crease for a power play goal for the Chrome’s first and only score of the first half.
The Chrome were plagued by poor shooting, failing to get nearly half their shots (19-for-35) on cage and giving Blaze Riorden (15 saves, 83 percent) easy save opportunities when they did get them on net. Their struggles were amplified on the power play, scoring on only 1 of 4 power play opportunities in the first half.
“We didn’t get our hands free a lot, and when we did, we didn’t take shots that could beat Blaze,” Chrome coach Tim Soudan said. “It was disappointing to see us struggle offensively.”
In addition to the Riorden’s performance, the typically slow-to-go Chaos defense disrupted the Chrome offense all afternoon with quick slides and suffocating double teams.
“We really wanted to make sure that we weren’t creating offense for them,” Chaos coach Andy Towers said. “I thought our defense played well up front and allowed Blaze to see shots that he could save.”