This weekend’s Premier Lacrosse League action was all about throwbacks — and punching tickets to the playoffs.
After the Archers and Cannons secured spots in the postseason last week, four more teams joined the party after Week 8 — the Chaos, Redwoods, Waterdogs and Whipsnakes. For three of those teams, their fate was sealed thanks to the Archers’ 13-5 win against the Chrome. The Woods, meanwhile, had to take matters into their own hands.
As part of a wild overtime period that lasted almost six minutes, Charlie Bertrand canned a game-winner to snap a three-game losing streak. Bertrand collected a give-and-go pass from recently acquired Romar Dennis, roll dodged to his left and let one rip to earn a 16-15 win against the Cannons.
“I was just so happy for our guys,” Redwoods coach Nat St. Laurent told ESPN postgame. “They battled all game, and we’ve been laser focused all week. We needed that win. It was a good old-school, Redwoods tough DNA game.”
Marcus Holman scored twice in the final minutes of regulation for the Cannons to force overtime in a game that featured technical difficulties, heads flying off sticks and shorties being forced to play with poles. But the Redwoods prevailed, backed by five points from Rob Pannell and a hat trick from Wes Berg. At 4-4, the squad is still in the running for a solid seed.
THE LAST TWO BATTLING
One spot remains in the postseason, with the Atlas owning a slight inside track on the Chrome. Neither helped their chances this weekend.
In Trevor Baptiste’s return to Denver, the Atlas dropped to 2-6 largely because of Ethan Walker. Another former Pioneer, Walker notched three goals and three assists for the Waterdogs in the defending champions’ 14-11 victory.
Half of Walker’s points came in a high-flying fourth quarter which featured a combined eight goals. The Waterdogs entered the final frame up one before a 5-1 run put them in comfortable position.
The Pioneer success was a theme, as Walker was helped by two goals from Jack Hannah, while the Atlas were beneficiaries of a four-point night from Eric Law and a Baptiste performance that included three goals, 21 ground balls and 23 faceoff wins.
The Atlas also worked in Myles Jones, who they landed from the Redwoods in exchange for Dennis, and it resulted in a goal fitting for a Bull.
The Archers took care of business against the Chrome, marking a seventh straight defeat for Tim Soudan’s group. The Chrome’s offensive woes continued. They were held to seven or fewer goals for a third time in four outings and to five goals for a second straight week.
The Archers, meanwhile, never trailed after orchestrating a 5-0 run in the second quarter. Tom Schreiber, who led the team with six points, put an exclamation mark on the spurt with his second two-pointer of the year.