Toronto and Vancouver will be in their home arenas for the NLL division semifinals but it’s a dubious advantage.
Of the six playoff teams, only the Rock and the Stealth have losing home records, 4-5, and their opponents are partly responsible: the New England Black Wolves won their only regular-season game in Toronto and the Colorado Mammoth split two games at Vancouver.
Game times Saturday are 7 p.m. ET in Toronto and 10 p.m. ET in Langley, British Columbia.
The winners will be at home to begin the division finals against top seeds Georgia and Saskatchewan the following weekend.
East
NEW ENGLAND at TORONTO
Toronto last won the Champion’s Cup in 2011. The last title won for the New England franchise was in 2001 by the Philadelphia Wings.
2016 PLAYOFFS: Toronto missed the playoffs; New England beat Georgia 14-13 in the division semifinal before losing 15-10 and 20-15 to Buffalo in the division final.
2017 SEASON: New England took the season series 2-0. On March 3 in Toronto, Kevin Buchanan scored four goals and Evan Kirk made 47 saves in a 10-9 win. On April 2 at Uncasville, Connecticut, Shawn Evans scored three goals and Kirk made 56 saves in a 15-14 win.
The Rock have struggled of late. They lost four in a row before a late-game rally lifted them to a 19-15 win in Buffalo in their schedule finale last Saturday. Now they must win their next game to stay alive.
“It’s one game, win or go home,” said head coach Matt Sawyer. “We’re excited to have got in and about playing at home. We have to be at our best playing a really good opponent in New England. They’ve got a really good offense and some big-time players you need to pay attention to.”
He’s hopeful: “We plan on sticking around for a while.”
The Black Wolves lost their last two games including a 17-16 overtime thriller to Vancouver in blowing a chance to finish second and be host for this semifinal. They are 3-6 on the road this season and 8-10 overall.
“Now the real season starts,” said head coach Glenn Clark. “We probably had a bit of a disappointing regular season based on expectations but the slate gets wiped clean. People really show their worth at this time of the year.”
On the Rock, Clark said “they’ve got some guys who can really shoot the ball.”
“Tom Schreiber is having a remarkable season. They push the ball in transition well. You have to worry about shutting down their transition and be active on defense and not give up easy shooting lanes.”
OFFENSE
New England is ranked No. 4 with an average output of 12.22 goals a game and Toronto is No. 5 with 12.17/game. Schreiber had a team-best 94 points for the Rock and Brett Hickey scored a team-high 45 goals. Shawn Evans led the Black Wolves in points, 104, and Kevin Crowley led in goals, 45.
Keep an eye on Crowley.
“He’s having an unbelievable year,” said Clark. “He’s been playing so well all over the floor. He’s one of the best in the league in shutting down transition and creating turnovers as an offensive player. He’s had such an impact all over the floor, not just scoring big goals.”
Schreiber is a key cog in the Rock attack. He’s a disciplined player. He takes a ton of punishment from checkers but does not retaliate. He has yet to be assessed a penalty.
“He’s faced a lot more attention and he seems to be handling it well,” Sawyer said. “Teams have tried to rough him up and intimidate him. He’s a special player and we’re glad to have him.”
DEFENSE
Toronto’s 11.11 GAA is No. 2 in the league compared to New England at No. 8 with a 13.56 GAA. Nick Rose of the Rock has the fifth-best save percentage in the league, .774, while Evan Kirk of the Black Wolves has a seventh-best .771. Both started and were pulled during their games last Saturday.
“Kirkie would admit he’s had an up and down season but we’re not looking at 18 games now,” Clark said. “We’re looking at one. We’re hoping we get his A game.”
“Evan Kirk is on a two-year run being one of the top goalies in the league so we have to find a way to solve him,” Sawyer said. “We had a lot of shots in the two regular-season games. We’ve got to be better finding the back of the net behind him.”
Rose’s April starts saw more balls go into Rock nets than during earlier games, but Sawyer has the utmost confidence in him.
“Defensively, down the stretch we weren’t as strong as we wanted to be,” he says. “But we have no concerns. We feel we have two strong goalies and we expect either of them to be good.”