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National Lacrosse League

From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids

National Lacrosse League
NLL logo
Sport Indoor lacrosse
Founded 1986
Inaugural season 1987
No. of teams 13
Country Flag of United States United States
Flag of Canada Canada
Current champions Colorado Mammoth
Official website NLL.com
For the National Lacrosse League of 1974-75, see National Lacrosse League (1974-75).

The National Lacrosse League (NLL) is the professional league of men's indoor lacrosse in North America. It currently has 13 teams; 10 in the United States and 3 in Canada, 2 of which are starting in 2007 in Chicago and New York. Unlike other lacrosse leagues, which play in the summer, the NLL plays its games in the winter. Each year, the playoff teams battle for the Champion's Cup.

Contents

[edit] History

MILL logo
MILL logo

The NLL was formed in 1997 from the Major Indoor Lacrosse League (MILL), with the decision to move from league ownership of all teams to individual team ownership. The MILL was created in 1986 as the Eagle Pro Box Lacrosse League. The first season started in January 1987 as the Eagle Pro Box Lacrosse League. It changed its name to Major Indoor Lacrosse League in May 1988, and then to the National Lacrosse League in 1998. Five of the MILL teams played in the NLL in the 1998 season. The National Lacrosse League recognizes the MILL history as its own. The 2006 season marked the 20th season of play in the Eagle Pro Box Lacrosse League/MILL/NLL.

[edit] Expansion

On February 16, 2006, the NLL announced a new franchise, which will play in Chicago, Illinois starting in the 2007 season. The team will play in the new 11,000-seat Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago. The team is owned by Kevin Loughery Jr., Don Sallee, the former NBA coach and player Kevin Loughery, and Concept Entertainment Group, LLC. On May 11, 2006, it was announced that the new team will be named the Chicago Shamrox.

On July 11, 2006, after months of speculation, the NLL announced that New York City has also been awarded a new franchise for the 2007 season. The new team will play at least four of its eight home games at Madison Square Garden. This will give New York State three entrants in the league, reflecting its status as one of lacrosse's primary bases (along with Maryland, which does not have an NLL team). Both the New York and Chicago expansion teams will play in the Eastern Division. The team name New York Titans was announced on September 13, 2006.

NLL commissioner Jim Jennings' master plan for expansion includes 24 teams and possibly a 20-game schedule within 5 years. He says that Montreal, Vancouver, and Winnipeg "are the front-runners for expansion in Canada." [1] A group of investors put down a deposit with the NLL in June 2006 to for a franchise to play in Seattle, Washington in 2008. The proposed arena for this possible team is KeyArena, which is the current home of the Seattle SuperSonics of the NBA. [2] Ownership groups from St. Louis, Cleveland, Boston, Dallas and Florida have also expressed interest in an expansion team. [3]

[edit] Media

In May 2001, Blast Lacrosse, a video game based on the NLL, was released. It was the first lacrosse video game ever and included all nine teams of their 14th season, including mascots.

On February 15, 2005, the NLL announced that Activision would produce a new video game. The game will probably be released for the 2007 season.

In 2007, the NLL will have a regularly scheduled "Game of the Week" on Versus, the network formerly known as OLN and home of the NHL, Tour De France, and PBR. Previously, the NLL has had its All-Star Games and Championship games on National TV, with NBC in 2005 and ESPN 2 in 2006.

[edit] Teams in the NLL

[edit] East Division

Team City/Area Arena
Buffalo Bandits Buffalo, New York HSBC Arena
Chicago Shamrox Hoffman Estates, Illinois (Chicago Area) Sears Centre
Minnesota Swarm Saint Paul, Minnesota Xcel Energy Center
New York Titans New York City /
Uniondale, New York (New York Area)
Madison Square Garden /
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
Philadelphia Wings Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Wachovia Center
Rochester Knighthawks Rochester, New York Blue Cross Arena
Toronto Rock Toronto, Ontario Air Canada Centre
Philadelphia Wings visiting the Minnesota Swarm at the Xcel Energy Center
Enlarge
Philadelphia Wings visiting the Minnesota Swarm at the Xcel Energy Center

[edit] West Division

Team City Arena
Arizona Sting Glendale, Arizona Jobing.com Arena
Calgary Roughnecks Calgary, Alberta Pengrowth Saddledome
Colorado Mammoth Denver, Colorado Pepsi Center
Edmonton Rush Edmonton, Alberta Rexall Place
Portland LumberJax Portland, Oregon Rose Garden Arena
San Jose Stealth San Jose, California HP Pavilion

[edit] Defunct teams

Team Years
Boston Blazers 1992–1997
Charlotte Cobras 1996
Detroit Turbos 1989–1994
Pittsburgh Bulls 1990–1993
Washington Wave 1987–1989

[edit] Inactive teams

Team Years
Anaheim Storm 2002–2005
Vancouver Ravens 2001–2004

[edit] Franchise movement and name changes

  • Baltimore Thunder (1987–1999) → Pittsburgh CrosseFire (2000) → Washington Power (2001–2002) → Colorado Mammoth (2002–current)
  • New Jersey Saints (1987–1988) → New York Saints (1989–2003) → Inactive → New York Titans (2006-current)
  • New England Blazers (1989–1991) → Boston Blazers (1992–1997)
  • Ontario Raiders (1998) → Toronto Rock (1999–current)
  • Syracuse Smash (1998–2000) → Ottawa Rebel (2000–2003) → Inactive → Edmonton Rush (2005–current)
  • Albany Attack (1999–2003) → San Jose Stealth (2003–current)
  • Columbus Landsharks (2001–2003) → Arizona Sting (2003–current)
  • Montreal Express (2002) → Inactive → Minnesota Swarm (2004–current)
  • New Jersey Storm (2002–2003) → Anaheim Storm (2003–2005) → Inactive

[edit] MILL championship results

  • 1987 Baltimore Thunder 11–10 Washington Wave
  • 1988 New Jersey Saints 17–16 Washington Wave
  • 1989 Philadelphia Wings 11–10 New York Saints
  • 1990 Philadelphia Wings 17–7 New England Blazers
  • 1991 Detroit Turbos 14–12 Baltimore Thunder
  • 1992 Buffalo Bandits 11–10 Philadelphia Wings (OT)
  • 1993 Buffalo Bandits 13–12 Philadelphia Wings
  • 1994 Philadelphia Wings 26–15 Buffalo Bandits
  • 1995 Philadelphia Wings 15–14 Rochester Knighthawks (OT)
  • 1996 Buffalo Bandits 13–12 Philadelphia Wings
  • 1997 Rochester Knighthawks 15–12 Buffalo Bandits

[edit] NLL championship results

See also: Champion's Cup
  • 1998 Philadelphia Wings 2–0 Baltimore Thunder (Best of 3 Games Series)
  • 1999 Toronto Rock 13–10 Rochester Knighthawks
  • 2000 Toronto Rock 14–13 Rochester Knighthawks
  • 2001 Philadelphia Wings 9–8 Toronto Rock
  • 2002 Toronto Rock 13–12 Albany Attack
  • 2003 Toronto Rock 8–6 Rochester Knighthawks
  • 2004 Calgary Roughnecks 14–11 Buffalo Bandits
  • 2005 Toronto Rock 19–13 Arizona Sting
  • 2006 Colorado Mammoth 16–9 Buffalo Bandits

[edit] Awards

  • MVP Award
  • Rookie of the Year Award
  • Les Bartley Award
  • GM of the Year Award
  • Executive of the Year Award
  • Defenseman of the Year Award
  • Goaltender of the Year Award
  • Sportsmanship Award

[edit] Commissioners

Darrel Russell 1987–1997
John Livsey Jr 1997–2000
Jim Jennings 2000–

[edit] League offices

Prairie Village, Kansas 1987–1997
Buffalo, New York 1997–2000
Lyndhurst, New Jersey 2000–2001
New York, New York 2001–

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stevens, Neil. "NLL boss eyes more expansion", Victoria Times-Colonist, 2006-10-04. Retrieved on 2006-10-30.
  2. ^ Andriesen, David. "Pro lacrosse on the horizon?", Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 2006-11-08. Retrieved on 2006-11-08.
  3. ^ Inside Lacrosse Staff. "NLL to announce expansion plans Friday", Inside Lacrosse, 2006-06-22. Retrieved on 2006-11-10.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] Team links

National Lacrosse League
East Division: Buffalo Bandits | Chicago Shamrox | Minnesota Swarm | New York Titans | Philadelphia Wings | Rochester Knighthawks | Toronto Rock
West Division: Arizona Sting | Calgary Roughnecks | Colorado Mammoth | Edmonton Rush | Portland LumberJax | San Jose Stealth
NLL Awards: Champion's Cup | Most Valuable Player | Rookie of the Year | Defenseman of the Year | Goaltender of the Year | Sportsmanship Award | Les Bartley Award | GM of the Year | Executive of the Year
NLL Articles: All-Star Game | Players' Association | Family relations | Hall of Fame | Season reviews | Former teams
Related Articles: Box lacrosse | Lacrosse | Major League Lacrosse
Current arenas in the National Lacrosse League
Eastern Division Western Division
Air Canada Centre | Blue Cross Arena | HSBC Arena | Madison Square Garden1 | Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum2 | Sears Centre | Wachovia Center | Xcel Energy Center HP Pavilion | Jobing.com Arena | Pengrowth Saddledome | Pepsi Center | Rexall Place | Rose Garden Arena
1The New York Titans play four of their home games at Madison Square Garden.
2The New York Titans play four of their home games at Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum.

Citation Help

APA Style: Reference List

Encyclopedia Jr (2007). National lacrosse league. Retrieved May 27, 2012, from http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/n/a/t/national_lacrosse_league.

MLA Style: Works Cited Page

"National lacrosse league." Encyclopedia Jr. 2007. 27 May 2012 <http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/n/a/t/national_lacrosse_league>.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article national_lacrosse_league.


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