No Place Like Home?
Vancouver is still looking for that elusive first home victory as a franchise since 2017 after a 14-10 loss to Saskatchewan.
The difference was the first and fourth quarters. The Rush blitzed the Warriors out of the gate with a 4-0 run, propelling the team to a 5-3 lead after the first frame. The Warriors cut the lead to one by the break and were only down two going into the final period, but another four-goal run by the Rush doomed Vancouver to a 1-4 record.
Saskatchewan’s Ben McIntosh notched five goals for the second straight game, while Mark Matthews had two goals and five assists.
Awareness of the Game’s History
Saturday night featured a bad look for the sport when Philadelphia Wings in-arena host Shawny Hill made statements about Swarm star Lyle Thompson that can easily be interpreted as racially charged.
“2019 and the @NLLwings arena announcer saying ‘let’s snip the pony tail’ to the whole arena and fans saying they’re going to scalp me… damn Daniel,” Thompson tweeted last night.
Both the Wings and the NLL have issued statements condemning the comments, while Hill has taken to Twitter to apologize.
“I am deeply sorry for my insensitive statements during last night’s game,” Hill wrote. “My words were poorly chosen and were not intended as racially motivated. I understand the profound hurt my words have caused. I offer my sincere apology. My words do not reflect my personal beliefs, but represent a lack of knowledge on heritage and history. I am in the process of reaching out to speak directly to the Thompson brothers in hopes of providing a direct apology.”
Hill brings up an important point. Anyone working in this game has to understand the history and background of the sport and its ties to Native American history and spiritualism. If the league or its teams are looking to bring in someone without a background in lacrosse, a brief education is necessary.
Thorpe Headed to New York
On Monday, Regy Thorpe was named the head coach and general manager of the National Lacrosse League’s expansion franchise in New York.
He is currently the Syracuse women’s team’s associate head coach and head coach of the U.S. indoor team, but will retain the latter role while relinquishing the former as a full-time employee of the newest NLL franchise.
The NLL also announced that the team, which was awarded to GF Sports in December and will call Long Island’s Nassau Coliseum its home, would unveil its name and logo in February.
Week 6 Preview
SWARM AT ROCK
Friday, 7:30 p.m.
Offense: Similar to last year, Lyle Thompson has been a balanced scorer in 2019. He has 11 goals and 11 assists. Tom Schreiber is tied for fifth in the league in assists.
Defense: Rock defenseman Billy Hostrawser is second in the league in assists as a defenseman, trailing Calgary’s Chad Cummings. With four helpers in four games, he’s on pace to break his previous career high of 10.
ROUGHNECKS AT SEALS
Friday, 10 p.m.
Offense: Staats is on pace for 58 goals, 31 higher than last year’s top rookie goal scorer, Rochester’s Austin Shanks. Calgary’s Dane Dobbie moved into second in the league in points, passing Buffalo’s Josh Byrne, thanks to the Bandits’ off week.
Defense: The Seals have allowed 10 or fewer goals in both of their victories this season. Calgary is allowing 13 per game.
SWARM AT BLACK WOLVES
Saturday, 7 p.m.
Offense: New England’s O’Connor is now four goals past his total from 2018 and seven away from tying his previous career high set in 2017.
Defense: With his performance this week, Swarm goalie Mike Poulin hopped Calgary’s Christian del Bianco for tops in the league in save percentage.
WINGS AT BANDITS
Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
Offense: It’s time to accept Thomas Hoggarth’s offensive production isn’t a fluke. He leads the Bandits with 10 goals through three games. While Crowley is a great addition for the Wings, it’s neutralized by the loss of Brett Hickey for the season.
Defense: After giving up only four goals to Rochester last week, the Bandits defense and goalie Matt Vinc look nothing like the group that played the Wings in the season opener. Philadelphia is bottom in the league, allowing 13.5 goals per game.
KNIGHTHAWKS AT RUSH
Saturday, 8:30 p.m.
Offense: The Knighthawks are last in the league in goals per game, obviously dragged down by the four-goal performance against Buffalo. They’ll need to step up to hang with a Saskatchewan offense that trails only the Bandits with 13.66 goals per game.
Defense: Chris Corbeil snagged 14 loose balls this weekend against Vancouver.
SEALS AT WARRIORS
Saturday, 10 p.m.
Offense: Vancouver’s Jordan McBride has 12 points in three games, a five-point improvement on the three games he played last time he was in the league in 2014.
Defense: Matt Beers has 48 loose balls for the Warriors, tops among defensemen. Brodie Merrill is usually the loose ball magnet for San Diego, but Cam Holding had 10 loosies this week, one more than the Seals captain.
ROUGHNECKS AT MAMMOTH
Sunday, 3 p.m.
Offense: Benesch, the Mammoth’s leading scorer, ranks 33rd in the league, albeit it's two less games than some others.
Defense: Ward is unusually toward the bottom half of the league in goals against average and save percentage.