The defending National Lacrosse League champions are still alive, having pulled off the stunner of the quarterfinals.
In a weekend that mostly saw expected results — including favorites Buffalo, Toronto and Calgary all moving on — Colorado toppled the West’s top seed in a performance that looked more like last year’s postseason run than the Mammoth’s inconsistent 2023.
Eli McLaughlin silenced the San Diego faithful with a go-ahead power play goal with 1.8 seconds on the clock, weaving through defenders to make it 13-12 and all but end the Seals’ hopes of the franchise’s first championship.
“I was supposed to pass it behind the net, but I just said, ‘I’m going to take this myself,’” McLaughlin said. “I missed two right before then, so I thought, ‘Third time’s the charm.’”
Dillon Ward, who finished with 52 saves, slowed down the frightening San Diego offensive unit in the first half to help his squad take a 7-3 lead into the break. But the Seals eventually broke through, scoring five times in the fourth quarter to tie the score at 11 and 12.
Colorado was given a stellar opportunity when San Diego’s Drew Belgrave was called for holding with 31 seconds remaining, and McLaughlin made the most of it.
“That’s playoff lacrosse,” Ward said. “We don’t have to be the better team; we just have to be the better team tonight. We came out here, executed our gameplan, weathered the storm at the end and Eli is as clutch as they come.”
BANDITS GET BRAGGING RIGHTS
The first-ever playoff matchup between Buffalo and this iteration of the Rochester Knighthawks wasn’t exactly an instant classic, instead representing how these two teams have gone in opposite directions in the second half of the season.
The Bandits went on a 12-1 run stretching about 15 minutes in the second half to secure a 20-8 blowout against their Western New York rivals. They’re headed to the East final for a third straight time, still with the goal of finally getting over the hump for the franchise’s first title since 2008.
Ian MacKay was one of five Bandits with at least five points, notching two goals and three assists in addition to 11 loose balls.
“I thought he was one of our best, if not best player,” Bandits head coach John Tavares said. “He played 200 feet, great defense. He played power play. Five on five. He was great for us.”
MacKay was joined on the scoresheet by Dhane Smith (three goals, seven assists), Josh Byrne (four goals, five assists), Chris Cloutier (three goals, four assists) and Kyle Buchanan (three goals, two assists). Smith had three points in Buffalo’s 4-0 run to close the first half, a spurt that put the team up for good.
Rochester was the talk of the league after starting the year 6-0, a stretch that included a win against Buffalo. But there were struggles as the season wound down, with the K-Hawks losing six of their final seven games.
“It’s a step in the right direction,” Knighthawks coach Mike Hasen said. “We competed all year to get this opportunity. It’s tough the way it ended here, but big picture, we’re taking the right steps.”