Boston clinches playoff spot
The day’s first game was a tale of two halve as the Boston Outlaws (6-2, 4-1 East) clinched a playoff spot after erasing a 9-5 halftime deficit to emerge with a 12-10 victory over the Denver Outlaws (3-3, 2-1 West).
The Outlaws broke a 5-5 second quarter tie with a 4-0 scoring run that covered just over two minutes of game clock.
Carlos Ferrera sparked the push with a 2-point goal from the point while Graham Bundy and Ryan Terenko followed with goals of their own to send the Outlaws to the halftime locker room with a seemingly commanding four-goal lead.
Boston responded emphatically, scoring six consecutive goals in the third quarter before holding off several strong Denver pushes in the fourth.
Asher Nolting’s two third-quarter goals helped Boston get rolling, Marcus Holman finished the game with three goals and an assist and Matt Campbell hit the Cannons’ 15th 2-point goal this season, tying the league record.
Six different Boston players netted goals, Zac Tucci won 14 of 23 faceoffs and goalie Colin Kirst finished with12 saves.
The game’s highlight play was made by Boston’s Marcus Holman, who raced in from the wing, laid out and snapped a diving shot as he flew past goalie Owen McElroy in the second quarter.
“We came in at halftime and made a couple small adjustments but nothing crazy,” Cannons coach Brian Holman said. “We had three or four good chances in the first that we just missed on. It was about, stay the course. Play a full game. Nobody won a game at halftime ever, I think.”
Boston has been the PLL’s best 2-point shooting team all season but managed to score only one in this game — Campbell’s first-quarter tally. The Cannons were outshot 40-38 yet became the first PLL team to wrap up a postseason spot anyway thanks to that strong third quarter.
Denver made things interesting in the fourth with some solid attacking play. Notably, Bundy (one goal) had a pair of shots glance off the post and talented rookie Brennan O’Neill had to be tackled (by Marcus Holman) to prevent a point-blank shot attempt.
The Outlaws also missed the presence of defenseman Jesse Bernhardt, who left the game in the second quarter with a left shoulder injury and did not return.
Denver coach Tim Soudan did not have an update on Bernhardt’s condition immediately after the game.
“It changed the tone and kind of took some energy from everybody,” Soudan said. “In the second half, they moved the ball better than we rotated.”
O’Neill (12 goals on the season) finished with a goal and an assist but was shut out in the second half and swarmed as he attempted to free himself for a potential game-tying 2-point shot in the game’s final minute.
Said Denver’s Eric Law: “One goal in the second half is not going to win you many games.”