Quirk said that although making the playoffs and winning a championship are always the team goals, they aren’t what the coaches and players talk about in the locker room. Especially at this point in the season, with their backs against the wall, Quirk said it is precisely winning those small moments and matchups that the coaching staff preaches to the players.
“We break it down very small: offense, defense. Limit turnovers on offense. Let’s get a shooting percentage of this. Faceoffs, let our unit strive to win the ground ball battle and get a percentage of this. Defensively, the same thing,” he said. “[We] really have focused on, ‘Guys, there’s 48 minutes in a game. Don’t even focus on that 48 minutes. Focus on the first one. Get to the first TV timeout, and we’ll regroup, whether we’re up or we’re down.’ It’s playing one-minute games for 48 minutes and resetting after each minute, whether we scored a one-pointer or two-pointer, or we’ve given up a goal, or we’ve missed a ground ball. It’s constantly telling the guys to reset every minute. You hear guys on the sideline yelling it. It’s become our mantra this season.”
Going into the final week of the 2022 season, the Cannons still have a chance to make the playoffs despite only having one victory to their name. It isn’t as simple as winning the final game of the year like in 2021; they will need some help from the Atlas winning in a blowout against the Chaos. Still, there’s a chance.
Even if the final week of the season does not break in favor of the Cannons, there is precedent in the PLL for the fortunes of teams to change very quickly.
In 2020, both the Atlas and Waterdogs won only a single game in group play and were eliminated in the first round of the Championship Series. In the following season, both teams tied for the best record in the regular season.
While the Chrome were the only team to miss the playoffs in 2021, the team bounced back in 2022. Through nine games, the team is in second place with six victories, one fewer than the combined total from all three previous years of existence.
Currier pointed to the college draft as a big opportunity for teams at the bottom of the standings to turn things around quickly.
“There are only eight teams, so all of the top college players have to find a spot somewhere,” Currier said. “You look at the Chrome, and they landed [Brendan] Nichtern and [Logan] Wisnauskas, some pretty good players coming out of college. They have a pretty big advantage playing all season, and then going right into a pro season.”
The draft isn’t the only way to add players, however, and Soudan said teams at the bottom of the standings have to be willing to reevaluate.
“You just have to embrace change,” he said. “There’s a lot of really good players if you’re willing to move on from guys that are not getting it done. Atlas had a big change of heart, and they restructured their whole thought process. And there’s the Waterdogs, from where they started their first year, they revamped their entire defense. They got better, younger. You’ve got some veterans, and then they got some young kids that work really well together, so it’s just kind of trying to find that match.”
The Cannons already shook up the roster prior to the team’s Week 8 game against the Waterdogs. The team released Christian Cuccinello, Shayne Jackson and Tyson Bell to the player pool while picking up Andrew Newbold, Chris Aslanian and Mark Cockerton.
In that game against the Waterdogs, those three additions combined for seven goals (three from Cockerton, two from Aslanian and one from Newbold) and two assists (both from Aslanian). Overall, Cockerton has scored five goals in two games, and Aslanian has registered at least one point in each game he’s played for the Cannons, for a total of three goals and four assists.
The changeup hasn’t resulted in any extra victories in the standings for the Cannons, but Quirk feels the lessons learned from this year can help the team build into the future like other last-place clubs before them have done.
Quirk, himself, has been in a similar position in professional lacrosse. In his first three years as the head coach of the Boston Cannons in Major League Lacrosse, his teams failed to make the playoffs, and one of those seasons the team finished in last place with a 3-11 record. By his fifth season, however, the team – featuring current Cannons players Marrocco, Goodrich, and Cockerton – won the league championship.
“You think about their journey, and that’s the thing we talk a lot about at training camp and when new guys join our team throughout the season. We talk about their journey and where they’ve been individually and where we’re going as a team, most importantly,” he said. “I mean, these guys have played in national title games. They’ve won national titles. They’ve played in Big Ten tournaments. They’ve been around it. When you start getting too giddy and focusing on that big prize, that’s when you lose touch with the journey, and that’s when things can go south.”
“All eight teams have that goal [to win the championship],” he added. “It’s the journey together to get there collectively that we’re really focused on.”