When the Dallas Rattlers defeated the Denver Outlaws 11-8 on July 21, less than a week before the MLL All-Star Game, it could have been considered an anomaly.
Teams don’t typically win at an 86-percent clip (like the Outlaws were at 6-1), nor do teams typically go winless in an entire year (like the Rattlers were at 0-7). The 11 goals tied a season high for the Rattlers, and the eight goals were a season low for the Outlaw.
It turns out, it was the start of a trend rather than an anomaly.
Nearly a month after their previous meeting, the Rattlers defeated the Outlaws 17-12 on Saturday. It was Dallas’ fourth consecutive victory and Denver’s fourth consecutive loss.
“They played very unselfish,” Dallas coach Bill Warder said in a televised postgame interview on ESPN+. “It starts in the defensive end, where we’re playing exceptional six-on-six defense, and our goaltender is playing phenomenal. It’s limiting our opposing teams’ chances, and we’re getting more chances. They’re just playing so unselfish and dodging from different angles, which is key to that.”
The Rattlers jumped out to a 4-1 lead, but the Outlaws continued to claw back and keep it close, going into halftime with a tie game and taking the lead in the third quarter.
A 6-0 third-quarter run by Dallas, however, put the Rattlers up by four. Denver cut that lead in half, but a 2-pointer by Rattlers long-stick midfielder Eli Salama put the nail in the coffin.
“He practiced that about 50 times in the last day,” Warder said. “He took it twice tonight. It’s huge for him, because it’s on a fellow Canadian player, one of the best goalies in the world, Dillon Ward, so Eli was practicing that. He looked in the scouting report. Eli is a great transitional player.”
While the Outlaws have missed key players lately — Eli Gobrecht and Zach Runberg returned from injuries against the Rattlers, while All-Star Mikie Schlosser is still out with a hamstring issue — the Rattlers believe their resurgence is partially because of the continuity of their roster.
Dallas didn’t have to worry about players returning from the NLL season and rookies joining midseason like in years past, but the Rattlers had a lot of new faces join the team at the start of the season. Though stumbled through a season-opening seven-game losing streak, they also made several trades and brought individuals in from the MLL player pool.
Now, the team has been able to keep a consistent lineup, and it is paying dividends.
“Early on, you bring in a lot of new faces and guys didn’t have a sense of where are you going to be off ball,” Warder said. “Communication, being around each other, and believing in what we’re saying as far as the process, they’ve done that for four straight weeks. They’ve really played to a formula which has proved to be successful for us.”
Cannons climb standings
The Boston Cannons and the Chesapeake Bayhawks — two teams at the top of the league standings — met for the first time in Week 11, and it took overtime to find a winner.
Despite trailing by three goal in the second quarter, which was the largest margin in the game, Zed Williams’ third goal gave Boston a 12-11 victory Saturday.
Not only did the win put Boston in a tie with Chesapeake for first place, but it also marked the Cannons’ first victory over the Bayhawks since 2016.
“That was a great win for us,” Williams said in a televised postgame interview on Stadium. “It was a big confidence builder. I know we can go with anyone in this league. There are a lot of good teams in this league, and I know any given day, these guys will be ready to go.”
Williams’ first goal came with 33 seconds remaining in the second quarter and tied the game at seven. Chesapeake scored the first two goals of the second quarter, but Boston used a 3-0 run of its own to take the lead.
The Cannons went ahead 11-10 when Kyle Denhoff scored his second goal of the game with 2:59 remaining, but the Bayhawks’ Brendan Bomberry answered with his second goal of the night with 56 seconds left to send the game into overtime before Williams ended the game.
“I’m just glad our defense held them,” Williams said. “We got the ball back, and as soon as we got the ball, I knew I wanted it. I told Challen [Rogers], ‘Come set me a pick.’ Me and him have a good connection, and that’s what we ran.”