“I thought he got slashed. You saw his arm, and he had red marks all over his elbow,” U.S. coach John Danowski said. “I didn’t realize that it was a lower body injury.”
Danowski did not speculate on the gravity of Kelly’s injury. But for the time being, the U.S. is down to one healthy goalie.
“Nobody knows,” Danowski said. “This is one of those things that you can’t overreact immediately. The doctors don’t even know the severity of it until he can relax, get back to the hotel and maybe tomorrow get reevaluated.”
FIL rules do not allow for injury replacements. Only the 23 players declared by teams at the beginning of the event can suit up during the world championship.
“To me, it’s a little bit of a fault in the system,” Danowski said. “In this day and age of health and being safety-conscious, it doesn’t really make a lot of good sense.”
Galloway, who shut out Australia in the first half, returned to the game and finished with seven saves in a 19-1 U.S. victory. Attackmen Ryan Brown, Marcus Holman and Jordan Wolf and midfielder Tom Schreiber scored three goals apiece. Midfielders Matt Danowski and Paul Rabil each finished with three assists. Twelve of Team USA’s 19 goals were assisted, continuing a trend that started in the tournament opener Thursday against the Iroquois.
But the players were not much up for celebrating — not with archrival and reigning gold medalist Canada looming Sunday (noon Eastern on ESPN2), and not with Kelly on crutches.
Following the post-game handshake, Galloway ran to Kelly, still sitting in a white folding chair with his head in his hands at the time, and put his arm around him.
“I just wanted to check in on him. He’s been unbelievable,” Galloway said. “We’ve been roommates for the training camp and for the games. To see him go down like that, how important he is for our team, it’s a big deal and it’s a big loss.”
Now the U.S. will lean even more on Galloway, whom teammates voted as one of the captains, along with Matt Danowski. After allowing three goals in the first seven minutes against the Iroquois, he has since given up just seven in the ensuing 139 minutes he has played. It has helped that Team USA has dominated possession behind faceoff man Trevor Baptiste (26-for-31 in two games) and has gotten stellar play from its rope unit, namely long-stick midfielder Michael Ehrhardt and short-stick defenders Jake Bernhardt, Will Haus and Kevin Unterstein.
“I had a little bit of jitters, but that’s not a good enough excuse at this level. You have to be ready to go,” said Galloway, who credited Kelly as well as assistant general manager Ben DeLuca for their encouragement. “A lot of guys, when they put on the jersey, they have a lot of pressure. That’s us included. Once we got that first quarter out of the books, we settled down, we dug back into who we are, and we’re starting to get comfortable together as a unit.”