Skip to main content

What a player can accomplish when the outcome of a game is in doubt in the late going is a true measure of greatness. So, give Jordan Hall an A+ for what he did last Saturday night.

With Georgia down by two with less than four minutes remaining, the nine-year pro scored consecutive goals at 11:28, 13:39 and 13:53 of the fourth quarter to lift the Swarm to a 17-15 victory over the visiting New England Black Wolves and enhance their overall record to an NLL-best 5-1.

“We’d spoken to him about being more aggressive, taking more shots,” coach Eddie Comeau said. “We were pleased he was able to capitalize.”

Comeau knows Hall well. Comeau was on Canada’s coaching staff for its 2006 world field championship triumph and Hall was on the roster while still at the University of Delaware. Comeau later had Hall in his lineup when there was an NLL team in New York, and Hall helped Comeau-coached Canada win the 2011 world indoor title. When the Swarm needed left-side help for this season after Jesse King’s availability was erased by a summer ball injury, they concentrated their trade efforts on Hall.

 “Jordan is the ultimate team player,” Comeau said. “If you ask him to play out the D door, he’ll do that. If you ask him to take faceoffs, he’ll do that. If you ask him to take on a scoring role, he’ll do that. Whatever you ask him to do, he does it well. He does a lot of things, like setting picks, that don’t necessarily show up on the game sheet. He has a great work ethic and attitude and part of that is an intense desire to win. And when he has success he’s the first to say it was a team effort.”

Hall lives in Baltimore, where he is a sales rep for a global uniform and store supplies corporation.

The Swarm got him from New England for three 2016 draft picks. The Black Wolves used them to get Seth Oakes, who has scored one goal while getting into three games, backup goalie Doug Jamieson and a prospect who is not on the team. Meanwhile, Hall has nine goals and 22 assists for the Swarm.

 “We were pleased to get him,” Comeau said. “He’s a veteran leader, a character guy and a great player.”

Georgia is at Toronto on Friday and has to win to retain first place in the NLL East ahead of the surging Rock (4-1).

Behind the Scenes

Georgia captain Jordan MacIntosh said after his nine-point night (3g, 6a) that strength and conditioning coach Jonathan Loudermilk has helped him recapture optimum performance after recovering from an offseason injury. The 27-year-old RIT grad had to regain his stamina for the 18-game Swarm schedule.

 “I’m really lucky that Coach Loudermilk has been by my side and kind of whipped me back into shape pretty quickly,” MacIntosh said. “I’m finally feeling like myself, feeling comfortable out there.”

Loudermilk, 31, the father of three, is founder-owner of One Eighty Sports Performance in Hoschton, Ga. He is in his first year working with Swarm players.

Goals Galore

Calgary’s Curtis Dickson, who was Jordan Hall’s teammate at Delaware in 2007, fired in five goals in his team’s 11-7 home loss to Toronto on Sunday, including this improbable and incredible finish:

Dickson leads all NLL scorers with 22 goals in six games, including arguably the goal of the year.

SCORING LEADERS (Goals)

Rank
Name
Team
Goals
1 Curtis Dickson Calgary 22
2 Lyle Thompson Georgia 18
3 Rhys Duch Vancouver 18
4 Logan Schuss Vancouver 18
5 Mark Matthews Saskatchewan 17
6 Robert Church Saskatchewan 17
7 Corey Small Vancouver 17
8 Kevin Crowley New England 16 

High on Harris

Latrell Harris, 18, is the youngest player in the NLL. He scored his first pro goal, Toronto’s seventh, in the 11-7 victory at Calgary.

It is easy to see why the Rock coaches think so highly of the 6-foot, 215-pound defenseman from St. Catharines, Ontario. The team has the best goals-against average in the league and Harris has a full-time role. He was the 12th pick in the 2016 entry draft.

His goal was spectacular. With only his right hand on the shaft of his stick at the front of the Calgary crease, he swung the stick to get off a low shot that eluded goalie Frankie Scigliano as two checkers crushed him to the floor.

“That was awesome,” he said afterward. “I’ll never forget it.”

Harris played Jr. A box lacrosse in his home city and he played field lacrosse at a high school where his coach was veteran NLL goalie Matt Vinc of the Rochester Knighthawks.

Rosie to the Rescue

Toronto goaltender Nick Rose is having the best season of his career.

GOALIE LEADERS (minumum 100 minutes)

Rank
Name
Team
Sv%
1 Nick Rose Toronto 80.9
2 Mike Poulin Georgia 78.0
3 Aaron Bold Saskatchewan 77.9
4 Matt Vinc Rochester 77.7
5 Evan Kirk New England 77.2
6 Dillon Ward Colorado 76.6
7 Davide Diruscio Buffalo 76.2
8 Tye Belanger Vancouver 76.0
9 Frankie Scigliano Calgary 74.7
10 Tyler Richards Vancouver 73.3

Long Time Coming

John Rae was drafted 42nd overall in 2010, by Colorado, but did not crack an NLL lineup until this season with Rochester and, at age 27, the 6-foot-1 defenseman from Barrie, Ontario, scored his first pro goal Saturday. He ran with the ball out of his own zone and, when nobody attempted to check him, he kept right on going. His shot eluded Saskatchewan goalie Aaron Bold to give the Knighthawks a 4-2 lead.

Rochester lost 21-12 at home. Rae was in the dressing room before it ended. He went to the aid of a teammate and got ejected in the fourth quarter.

Coaching Milestone

Saskatchewan’s Derek Keenan coached his 207th regular-season game, passing former Buffalo coach Darris Kilgour for the all-time lead.

Kilgour maintains first place in all-time wins with 121. Keenan is second with 115. Seven more wins and the record will belong to the Rush GM-coach. His 2015 and 2016 league champions are 4-2 with 12 games remaining on their 2017 schedule.

Rookie Scoring

With three goals and three assists in Toronto’s win in Calgary, Tom Schreiber of the Rock leads all rookies with 29 points. That’s six more than Rochester’s Kyle Jackson.

Attendance Update

Only three of the nine teams — Saskatchewan, Toronto and New England — have increased average attendance in 2017 so far.

The breakdown (last season’s averages in parenthesis):

NLL ATTENDANCE (Average)

Rank
Team
2017
2016
1 Saskatchewan 14,754 11,737
2 Buffalo 13,695 15,833
3 Colorado 13,466 13,832
4 Calgary 11,245 11,471
5 Toronto 9,802 9,159
6 Rochester 7,195 8,164
7 New England 5,808 3,751
8 Georgia 3,794 4,667
9 Vancouver 3,328 3,758

Time Traveling

Feb. 23, 2006: The inaugural class of the NLL Hall of Fame inducted during a ceremony in Toronto consisted of league founders Russ Cline and Chris Fritz, players Gary and Paul Gait and the late coach Les Bartley.

Week 8 

Every team is in action and Georgia, Toronto, Rochester, Buffalo and New England each play twice during this busy NLL weekend. All times Eastern.

FRIDAY

Georgia (5-1) at Toronto (4-1), 7:30 p.m.

Toronto, coming off an 11-7 win in Calgary last Sunday, could take first place in the NLL East away from Georgia by winning this one.

The Rock have the No. 1 defense in the NLL with an 8.4 goals-against average, and the Swarm’s No.1 offense has been generating 15 goals a game.

Georgia is coming off a 17-15 home win over New England.

This will be the first of two meetings. The Rock are at Georgia on March 24. They met twice in 2016. Georgia won both, 12-7 at home and 20-17 in Toronto. The last Rock win over the Swarm was 14-9 at home on Feb. 14, 2015, when the Swarm called St. Paul, Minnesota, home.

New England (2-4) at Buffalo (1-4), 7:30 p.m.

Buffalo had a bye last weekend, while New England blew a late lead in losing 17-15 at Georgia.

New England edged Buffalo 13-12 at home on Jan. 28 and the two games these teams play against each other this weekend will decide the three-game season series and earn the all-important standings tiebreaker for one of them.

New England is 0-4 on the road.

SATURDAY

Toronto at Rochester (2-4), 7:30 p.m.

The Rock will be coming off a game against Georgia the previous night, while Rochester tries to regroup after relinquishing a halftime lead and losing 21-12 at home to Saskatchewan last Saturday.

This will be the second of three meetings. The Rock opened their season with a 12-5 win in Rochester on Dec. 29 and Rochester won 9-8 in Toronto on Jan. 28 so this game decides the season series.

Colorado (4-3) at Saskatchewan (4-2), 8:30 p.m.

Colorado is coming off a 10-9 overtime win at Vancouver, which was accomplished without John Grant Jr. and Jeremy Noble who have been recovering from head injuries. The manpower situation is even worse now: scoring leader Callum Crawford went down with what the team described as a lower body injury. So, what the lineup is going to look like in Saskatoon is a mystery.

Saskatchewan won its fourth in a row when it overcame a one-goal halftime deficit to win 21-12 at Rochester.

This is the first of four meetings. Saskatchewan won three of four last season.

Saskatchewan is 2-0 at home.

Vancouver (2-5) at Calgary (3-3), 9 p.m.

Vancouver’s 10-9 OT loss to Colorado last Sunday was its fifth consecutive defeat.

Calgary lost 11-7 to Toronto at home last Sunday.

This is the third of four meetings. Vancouver won 12-11 at Calgary on Jan. 6 and Calgary won 14-10 at Vancouver on Jan. 14. Calgary is 1-3 at home. Vancouver is 2-2 on the road.

SUNDAY

Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m.

The Bandits need to win at least one of their two games against the Black Wolves this weekend to gain some confidence after a slow start to their season. They are 0-2 on the road. New England is 2-0 at home.

Rochester at Georgia, 6:05 p.m.

This will be the first of three meetings. They’ll close out the season April 28-29 with a home-and-home set. Last season, Rochester lost two home games to Georgia and, in between, won 11-4 in Georgia.

Georgia is 3-0 at home. Rochester is 1-2 on the road.