The Cannons, the final champions in the history of Major League Lacrosse, will get an opportunity to earn a second straight title. But the road will not be easy.
Cannons LC survived a win-or-go-home matchup Saturday night against the Chrome, getting six points from Paul Rabil in a 13-10 triumph to punch a ticket to the Premier Lacrosse League playoffs. Rabil helped lock up the result with a massive power-play two-point goal with eight minutes left that pushed the Cannons’ lead to 12-8 in Albany.
“It’s tough to manage those fourth quarters,” Rabil said on the broadcast immediately after the game. “We’ve been behind, and we’ve said it all season, trying to climb back. We were tested tonight because we had the lead, so you play a different brand of ball.”
The Cannons’ talent hasn’t been questioned often this year, but the results hadn’t been there. They entered Saturday’s contest, a battle between the PLL’s seventh- and eighth-seeded teams, 2-6 with four one-goal losses.
Lyle Thompson talked about the team having a playoff mindset halfway through the season, and they absolutely needed that approach in this week’s win-and-in situation. Shayne Jackson had four points, and Thompson and Stephen Rehfuss each added three. But it was Rabil who starred, continuing his bounce back season.
“I’m just really proud of Paul for how he has come back mentally from last season,” Cannons coach Sean Quirk said. “Everyone knows that he struggled in the Championship Series last year. He’s just been a constant leader and professional on this team. I’m really proud of him.”
The Chrome defeat brought an end to two storied careers. Goalie John Galloway and long-stick midfielder Joel White, who played together at Syracuse, with the Rochester Rattlers and now with the Chrome, announced before this weekend’s game their plan to retire from pro lacrosse together.
They spoke to the media together after 15 years of hard work at each other’s side.
“To be able to do this with my best friend is an absolute pleasure,” White said. “On the field, all that stuff, we’re obviously going to miss that, just the competitive athletes in us. But it’s all the intangibles.”
Both reached the height of their crafts during their professional careers. Galloway was twice named Major League Lacrosse’s Goalie of the Year, while White was the MLL’s 2016 Defensive Player of the Year. They also won gold together with the U.S. men’s national team in Netanya, Israel.
“It’s incredible how good of friends they are,” said Chrome coach Tim Soudan, who also coached the pair in Rochester. “A lot of guys are really close friends, but they’re tight like I’ve never seen. The relationship, the quality of players that they both are, and the ability to play together so long and hold that level of play is pretty incredible at the professional level.”
The Cannons advance to play the second-seeded Atlas in the quarterfinals, a battle of franchises tied together by the Rabil trade this past offseason.
THE TOP ‘DOGS
In just one season, Andy Copelan has built the expansion Waterdogs into a top-seeded playoff team.
The PLL’s first-ever expansion club was put into a tough position last summer, given little time to gel thanks to the short, tournament style the league imposed during the pandemic. Copelan retooled in the summer, adding big names like goalie Dillon Ward and attackman Ryan Brown, and it has paid off.
Mikie Schlosser, another offseason addition, scored a fourth-quarter hat trick to help the Waterdogs prevail 10-9 against the Atlas in a battle for the league’s top seed and a bye into the semifinals.
Schlosser scored the eventual game winner with under four minutes left, surviving contact to cut back to the goal and let off a nasty backhand shot.
Kieran McArdle had four points on a goal and three assists, Zach Currier added two and Brown scored a goal to become the first player in PLL history with multiple 20-goal seasons. Ward made 17 saves in the cage.
Ben Randall and Liam Byrnes, two more additions for Waterdogs 2.0, combined for nine caused turnovers and six ground balls.
“We had a really impressive offseason, honestly, with the steps we made there and to see those materialize and for us to secure the one seed at the end of the day, it was a really gratifying feeling,” Copelan said. “It’ll be nice to have three weeks off. We have to use our time wisely and make sure we’re staying connected and staying fresh for the semifinals up in Philly.”