SCORING RACE
Curtis Dickson jumped into the lead in the scoring race with four goals and six assists in Calgary’s 13-8 home win over Buffalo. The University of Delaware grad leads the league in goals with 46 and in points with 96.
Saskatchewan’s Mark Matthews has 31 goals and a league-best 64 assists for 95 points. The University of Denver grad has played two fewer games. Vancouver’s Corey Small has 92.
Dickson, Matthews and Small should be included with Thompson in MVP talk.
SCIGLIANO SHINES
Calgary won despite being outshot 54-53 by Buffalo. The Roughnecks needed a big game from Frankie Scigliano and he came through with one of the best games of his career to enable his team to jump past Vancouver into the third and final playoff berth in the NLL West. The Stealth lost 16-12 in Saskatoon.
Scigliano, 25, from Coquitlam, British Columbia, set the table for a ‘Necks win by not allowing a Bandits goal in the first quarter. It can be hard to see net behind the 6-foot-4 and 290-pound goaltender.
TIME TRAVEL
April 14, 1990: Average regular season attendance as announced by the league was 11,060 per game. (The 2017 average/game after 66 games was 9,125.)
April 16, 1994: The Philadelphia Wings overcame a three-goal halftime deficit and defeated Buffalo 26-15 to deny the Bandits a third consecutive championship in front of a capacity crowd of 16, 284 in Buffalo’s Memorial Auditorium. Paul Gait scored eight goals – seven of them in the second half – to win the MVP award. The game was broadcast live by ESPN.
WEEK 16
Five games are on tap as positioning for playoff positions becomes crucial. Every team is in action. Buffalo, in desperate need of wins to qualify, plays twice. All times are Eastern.
FRIDAY
BUFFALO at TORONTO, 7:30 PM
Buffalo’s 13-8 loss in Calgary was its third straight loss. It looks as if the Bandits, who won the NLL East last year, will miss the playoffs for the first time since 2013.
Toronto was idle last weekend. The Rock will be looking to win this one to strengthen its hold on second place.
This will be the third of four meetings. Toronto won 18-10 at home on Feb. 3 and Buffalo won 15-12 at home Feb. 25. They close the regular season together April 29 in Buffalo.
Toronto is 4-4 at home and is No. 1 on defense. Buffalo is 2-5 on the road and is ranked ninth and last on defense.
SATURDAY
BUFFALO at GEORGIA, 7:05 PM
The Swarm, No. 1 on offense, are 6-1 at home and will be licking their lips at the prospect of facing a Buffalo club that has been allowing more goals than any other team and will have played the previous night in Toronto.
Georgia is coming off a 21-12 win at New England last Friday.
This will be the second of three meetings. Georgia won 18-14 at Buffalo on Jan. 14. They meet again April 22 in Buffalo.
ROCHESTER at COLORADO, 9 PM
This should be a low-scoring affair. These teams score fewer goals than the other seven teams and their goalies – Rochester’s Matt Vinc and Colorado’s Dillon Ward – are among the goals-against leaders.
Rochester remains hopeful of overtaking New England to snatch the third and final NLL East playoff berth, while Colorado will try to nail down home floor for the NLL West semifinal.
Both teams were idle last weekend. Colorado is 4-3 at home. Rochester is 2-5 on the road.
This will be the only meeting this year. In the only meeting last year, Colorado won 16-14 at Rochester. They split two games in 2015. Rochester’s last win in Denver was 11-9 on March 1, 2014.
NEW ENGLAND at SASKATCHEWAN, 9:30 PM
Saskatchewan is 7-0 at home. New England is 2-5 on the road.
New England is coming off a 21-12 home loss to Georgia, while Saskatchewan beat visiting Vancouver 16-12 last weekend.
This will be the only meeting this year. In the only meeting last season, New England won 14-13 at home. In 2015, when the Rush were based in Edmonton, they beat the Black Wolves 18-9 at home.
The Rush have allowed more goals this year than last, which is a bit of a concern heading towards the postseason.
“We’re a team that prides itself to holding teams to 10 goals or under,” said defenseman Brett Mydske. “We haven’t done that so much this year. We look at video and find mental lapses and stuff that show there are four or five goals [each game] we could take back. We’ve just got to focus for a full 60 and we can get back to holding teams to 10 goals.”
CALGARY at VANCOUVER, 10 PM
The result should determine which of the two makes the playoffs and which is doomed to miss out.
Calgary beat Buffalo 13-8 at home last Saturday, while Vancouver lost 16-12 at Saskatchewan.
“We need to be grittier and hit harder,” said Stealth coach Jamie Batley. “We can’t let teams run through our middle. Offensively, for the last five or six games, we have been protecting well against our opposition’s transition and we need to get back to that and refocus our game heading into the game against Calgary.”
This will be the fourth of four meetings. Vancouver won 12-11 at Calgary on Jan. 6, Calgary won 14-10 at Vancouver on Jan. 14 and Vancouver won 13-10 at Calgary on Feb. 18.
Calgary is 3-5 on the road. Vancouver is 2-5 at home.