The National Lacrosse League is set to return for its 37th season tonight, with five games on the docket for opening weekend. It all begins with Saskatchewan at Halifax at 7 p.m. Eastern.
In preparation for the upcoming campaign, here are 11 reasons to tune in to the action inside the box this winter.
1. The new unified standings.
The NLL revamped its league format for 2023-24, doing away with East and West to create one unified league. Now, each team plays every other team once, in addition to four “flex” games that preserve established rivalries and fan interest.
The adjustment gets us closer to the real top eight teams making the postseason and allows fans to see teams they rarely matched up against in years past. It also opens the door to a potential rivalry matchup in the championship game. Imagine Toronto and Buffalo or Calgary and Colorado duking it out with hardware on the line.
2. The Bandits’ attempt to start a dynasty.
After falling in the NLL Finals two straight seasons, Buffalo finally got over the hump for its first championship since 2008. The Bandits are dealing with injuries on the back end but have largely run it back with the same roster, led by the likes of Dhane Smith, Josh Byrne, Matt Vinc, Steve Priolo and Ian MacKay. Now that the weight is lifted, can the Bandits further add to their trophy case?
3. It’s still easy to watch on ESPN and TSN, no matter where you are.
In the United States, every NLL game is available to stream through ESPN+, with 10 additional games airing on linear networks. The American TV slate begins Dec. 2 when Philadelphia and New York battle on ESPN2.
4. A golden era of Americans in the NLL.
Three Americans surpassed 100 points last season — Tom Schreiber, Connor Fields and Joe Resetarits — with Schreiber leading the bunch with 116. Jack Hannah was named a finalist for Rookie of the Year after a stellar debut with the Las Vegas Desert Dogs, and four of the top five faceoff specialists are from the States.
While some American stars stepped away from the NLL this winter, field fans will recognize names like Blaze Riorden, Trevor Baptiste, Danny Logan, TD Ierlan, Ryan Terefenko, Joe Nardella, Connor Kelly, Liam Byrnes and Colin, Cole and Connor Kirst.
5. History chasing.
Dhane Smith’s single-season record of 137 points was under siege last season by a pair of players, including Smith himself. The Bandit great finished just a point short of matching his all-time best, with New York’s Jeff Teat close behind him at 132. They’re expected to go toe-to-toe atop the scoring chart again this year, but don’t doubt Mitch Jones joining in on the fun. His points-per-game pace following a trade to Philadelphia would have equaled 136 across an 18-game season.