What a difference one year makes.
In 2022, the Cannons ended the Premier Lacrosse League season with nine straight losses, sealing their unceremonious position as the only PLL group outside of the playoffs.
They won’t miss out on the party this time. The Cannons became the second team to clinch a spot in the upcoming postseason on Sunday, knocking off the defending champion Waterdogs 12-8 at Johns Hopkins’ Homewood Field to move to 5-2.
“It’s awesome,” said Cannons coach Brian Holman, the heavy favorite to win the PLL’s Coach of the Year in his first season. “Another step in the journey of this organization, and another step for guys like Ryan [Drenner], who played on this team last year and have been with this organization for a couple of years and haven’t had a lot of success.”
Holman’s transformation of the Cannons is even more impressive considering the team’s lack of a first-round pick in the PLL College Draft and the absence of Lyle Thompson, who decided to step away from the PLL for a summer. Despite the roadblocks, Holman brought in talent through trades and free agency while simultaneously implementing needed structure.
That’s led to a seamless transition for free agent acquisition (and his son) Marcus Holman and an enormous step forward for second-year player Asher Nolting. Both notched four points against the Waterdogs.
“I give the group that we brought back from the old Cannons a ton of credit because they wanted to dig in their heels and really make this organization a successful one,” Brian Holman said. “I’m really proud of them and obviously really proud of the new guys we brought in. I think they really helped push that charge.”
Nolting kicked off a game-closing 6-1 run for the Cannons, with Cade van Raaphorst providing juice with a 107-mile-per-hour two-point bomb that proved to be the game-winner.
ARCHERS SURVIVE IN OT
One day prior to the Cannons clinching a spot in the postseason, the Archers punched their ticket with their sixth victory. Tom Schreiber scored in overtime, following a pick into a deep one-point shot to cement the Archers’ comeback against the Atlas, 14-13.
The Archers faced a three-goal deficit in the fourth quarter before Jared Connors hit a needed two-pointer with four minutes and change remaining.
Mac O’Keefe and Schreiber scored inside the final four minutes of regulation to claim a short-lived lead, as Xander Dickson forced the extra frame with 1:17 remaining. Schreiber’s game-closing tally marked his fourth point of the night, a team best. O’Keefe, Connor Fields and Matt Moore all had three points.
The Archers also got production from a pair of SSDMs, with Connor Maher and Latrell Harris each securing a pair of points.