While the Chaos are making their third trip to the title game, it is the first appearance for the Waterdogs. That inexperience does not seem to phase them.
“The reality is past records don't matter. This is a new Chaos team,” Waterdogs attackman Michael Sowers said. “That's the mentality for the full 48 minutes. We're gonna go out, and we're just gonna play.”
Waterdogs midfielder Connor Kelly echoed similar sentiments.
“We have a great opponent led by Andy Towers. They’ve been incredible in the playoffs,” Kelly said. “We're happy to be here, but we're definitely not satisfied.”
Kelly is the only Waterdogs player to have won a PLL championship, as he did with the Whipsnakes in 2019 at Subaru Park — the same field on which he’ll get to compete for his second PLL title.
“I learned a lot from my time on the Whipsnakes on how to get the job done,” Kelly said. “I’m happy to be back [in the championship] and happy to be competing.”
The Waterdogs are nearing full strength after dealing with injuries earlier in the season. While Copelan confirmed that midfielder Mikie Schlosser will be out due to a lower body injury, he did announce that attackman Ryan Brown would return to the lineup after missing the past two games due to injury.
“Brownie has so much big game experience. He’s as smart of a lacrosse player as I’ve ever met,” Copelan said. “We’re happy to have him back.”
Sowers, who also battled injuries throughout the season and most recently dealt with a hamstring issue midway through the Waterdogs’ 11-10 win over the Whipsnakes in the semifinals last week, assured everyone he was ready to go for Sunday.
“I feel great,” he said. “I’m 100 percent.”
The Chaos also struggled with personnel issues, not only because of injury but also due the National Lacrosse League playoffs and military commitments. They entered the season missing seven players, six of whom were playing in the NLL Finals. The seventh was starting defenseman Johnny Surdick, who was forced to miss the entire season due to his service in the U.S. Army.
“People can look at challenges — whether it’s training camp, whether it’s injuries, whether it’s travel or family emergencies — and they can use those things as an excuse on why they’ve failed or they can use it as fuel,” Towers said. “And our guys have used it as fuel.”
Towers in particular gave credit to the play of long pole Matt Rees, who was inserted into the Chaos’ starting defense during their past two playoff wins, and defensive coordinator Jamie Hanford, who replaced former Chaos defensive coordinator and now volunteer assistant Ryan Curtis.
“Hanford has done an unbelievable job and he had what I think was the most challenging job to step into who he took over for and what we did last year,” Towers said. “All he’s done is step up and get better and better. I couldn’t be happier for him as a friend. He’d be the first one to tell you, ‘We’re not done yet.’”
As Towers prepares to coach in his third straight title game, he reflected on what it takes to be a championship team in the PLL.
“Everybody in this league has the talent to win a PLL championship,” he said. “It’s the group that connects best, shares a mutual passion and puts the success of the team ahead of anything else that has enough to win.”