Bloody Debut
Dan Dawson scored a goal, assisted on two and required 15 stitches to close a shin wound sustained in a crease scramble in his debut with Saskatchewan, a 16-10 home win over Vancouver on Saturday night.
“All I know is that, when I tried to get up, I saw a lot of blood,” Dawson told Kevin Mitchell of the Saskatoon Star Phoenix. “As I walked off, the trainer said, ‘We’re going to need some stitches.’ And she said, ‘You can see down to the bone.’”
Dawson, 36, fifth in the league in career points, was acquired from Rochester for a pair of draft picks five days earlier.
Robert Church and Matthew Dinsdale scored four goals each. Mark Matthews did not score a goal but he picked up nine assists and is first in the league scoring race with (23-50) 73 points. Church is second with (28-41) 69.
The NLL West and overall leaders improved to 10-2. The league’s No. 1 power play struck four five goals on seven chances. It’s efficiency rate through 12 games is a fabulous 75.9 percent.
Big Crowds
Can’t remember last time there were five-digit crowds for every game on the same night: Colorado 16,062, Saskatchewan 14,057, Toronto 10,679.
Good Deal
To get Stephen Keogh from Rochester in February 2017, Colorado relinquished a first-round 2018 draft pick and a 2019 second-rounder. It has turned out to be a good deal for the Mammoth. In Georgia on Friday, Keogh’s goal with 2:57 remaining tied the score 10-10 and the Syracuse grad’s third goal of the night with five seconds left gave the Mammoth an 11-10 victory. If Colorado retains second place in the overall standings at the end of its 18-game schedule, Rochester’s 2018 pick from Colorado will be 10th overall. Rochester selected Keogh second overall in 2011.
Poulin Sharp
Georgia rebounded to win 12-7 in Toronto on Saturday. Mike Poulin made up for his miscue on the Keogh goal the previous night by playing a starring role with 44 saves. Lyle Thompson scored three goals and Miles Thompson two. The brothers from the Onondaga Nation had a dynamic presence reminiscent of the way they played in helping the Swarm win the championship last spring.
Georgia has won the season series with Toronto, meaning the Swarm will own the standings tiebreaker should the two teams finish with identical records.
Offense Fails
After going up 5-3 in the second quarter at home, Toronto allowed six straight Georgia goals and went 32 minutes 30 seconds without a goal of its own in the loss to the Swarm. During that stretch of futility, Georgia’s Jordan Hall was assessed a major penalty and was ejected for a high hit on Damon Edwards. Toronto failed to score during the five-minute advantage.
“Our effort wasn’t where it needed to be,” head coach Matt Sawyer said. “It was disappointing to put in that kind of effort coming out of the bye [week] with the important that this game held. You’re not going to win any games with the kind of production we got out the front door.”
Toronto defenseman Brock Sorensen might face further discipline after being ejected for a dead ball hit that sent Ethan O’Connor crashing to the floor with 17 seconds remaining.
Georgia and Toronto have met eight times since Georgia’s inaugural 2016 season and the Swarm have won seven times.
One Assist for Evans
Shawn Evans, acquired last Wednesday along with a second-round draft pick from New England for Callum Crawford and a fourth-round pick, did not score a goal in his debut with Buffalo. He picked up one assist in the Bandit’s 8-7 road loss to Colorado. Evans has the eighth-best career points total in pro indoor lacrosse history with 1,062.
He Gets Around
Callum Crawford will make his debut with New England in Toronto on Sunday afternoon. It’s the eighth NLL team for the 33-year-old native of Ottawa. He previously played for Calgary, San Jose, Chicago, Edmonton, Minnesota, Colorado and Buffalo. Crawford’s points total of 829 puts him 15th on the all-time list.
WEEK 14
It’s a light schedule with only three games. Two of them loom large since in each case they will decide the season series.
Saturday
GEORGIA (5-6) at ROCHESTER (5-6) 7:30 p.m. ET
Georgia played twice last weekend. The Swarm lost 11-10 at home to Colorado and flew to Toronto where they defeated the Rock 12-7.
Rochester had last weekend off after winning three in a row.
This will be the third and final meeting. The first two were played in Georgia. The Swarm won 14-11 on Dec. 30 and the Knighthawks won 17-10 on Feb. 11. The season series rides on the outcome.
“Rochester is playing really well,” said Swarm coach Ed Comeau. “Their offense is scoring a ton of goals and their goaltending has been good. We’re going to watch some film on them. We played them earlier in the year and beat them and we played them a few weeks ago and they beat us. We’ll have to replicate the type of effort and execution we had (in Toronto on Saturday).”
Offense: Rochester has scored an average of 13.45 goals a game (3rd) to Georgia’s 11.91 (6th).
Defense: Rochester has allowed an average of 11.55 goals/game (3rd) to Georgia’s 12.82 (6th).
Georgia is 3-3 on the road and Rochester is 3-3 at home so where they are playing should have no bearing on the outcome.
CALGARY (4-6) at COLORADO (7-3) 9 p.m. ET
Calgary had last weekend off after losing 10-6 in Saskatoon.
Colorado played twice last weekend, winning 11-10 at Georgia and 8-7 at home over Buffalo.
This will be the third and final meeting. The first two were played in Calgary. The Mammoth won 11-7 on Dec. 29 and the Roughnecks won 13-9 on Feb. 10. The season series is at stake so the Mammoth would all but clinch second place with a win.
Offense: Colorado has scored 12.3 goals/game (5th) to Calgary’s 11.5 (7th).
Defense: Colorado has allowed 11.0 goals/game (2nd) to Calgary’s 12.0 (5th).
Calgary is 1-3 on the road and Colorado is 3-2 at home. That’s enough to make the Mammoth the favorite in this one.
Sunday
NEW ENGLAND (5-4) at TORONTO (5-5) 3 p.m. ET
New England had last weekend off after winning 12-11 in overtime at Vancouver on Feb. 24.
Toronto lost 12-7 at home to Georgia last Saturday.
This will be the second off three meetings. The Rock won 21-9 at home on Jan. 27. They’ll play in Connecticut on March 16.
Offense: Toronto has scored an average of 14 goals/game (2nd) to New England’s 11.33 (8th).
Defense: Toronto has allowed 11.9 goals/game (4th) to New England’s 14.4 (8th).
With New England 2-2 on the road and Toronto 3-3 at home, the venue won’t be a factor.
Special teams loom large. Toronto is the most penalized team and New England’s power-play efficiency rate is 50 per cent (4th).
Tom Schreiber remains out of Toronto’s lineup with partially torn posterior cruciate ligament.
BYES: Buffalo (6-5), Saskatchewan (10-2), Vancouver (1-11)