Archive for the ‘NLL Top 50’ Category


NLL Insider Top 50: The Final 4… JT, AI, DDD, & Popeye

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Today was originally gonna be the day we dropped the four top dawgs in the NLL Insider Top 50.

Change of plans.

With a flurry of questions both emailed to us and posted on the boards, we wanted to set the record straight before naming our last four.

So, after the jump, your questions are answered… READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Jeff Zywicki #5

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Last year the NLL ended up announcing the top three finalists for the MVP nod for the first time, with Athan Iannucci, John Tavares and Casey Powell being the trio that were up for the honour.

Although AI was practically everyone’s favorite, not having Jeff Zywicki in there was a bit of a crime considering the kinda year the UMass grad had in 2008 (and yeah, know it was based on votes, but it was still robbery).

In three short years in the NLL, Zywicki has already become one of the league’s top power forwards and is one of the league’s best off ball guys too. Few gut it out like Jeff and even fewer have the stats to go with it. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Casey Powell #6

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No one’s reputation has improved more than Casey Powell’s has over the last two winters.

After leaving the pro indoor game for a couple seasons, coincidentally coinciding with a head-shot courtesy of then Toronto Rock defender Pat Coyle, Powell was called every name in the book by box lacrosse purists.

They called him soft, weak, a wimp, a baby and worst of all, an American field laxer!! Yeah, they went there, and they did it time-and-time again, dragging Powell’s NLL rep through the thickest mud they could find. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Mark Steenhuis #7

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In a sport where American field studs are usually the ones pointed to as the NLL’s top overall athletes, it’s funny that the league’s best pure athlete is actually a short, scrappy Canadian that only picked up the game at the age of 18.

Had it not been for Billy Dee Smith’s sister, Vanessa, we might not even be talking about Buffalo’s Mr. Do Anything-and-Everything, Mark Steenhuis, as one of the NLL’s best current players.

Steenhuis started dating Billy Dee’s sister in high school and would later be introduced to lacrosse by him as well. After impressing some of the St. Catharines area’s most respected lacrosse minds in his first shift out, Steenhuis has since become one of the indoor game’s most dynamic and exciting players. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Gavin Prout #8

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With the Colorado Mammoth not exactly having a banner year last season, dropping three W’s from 2007’s impressive regular season and then getting dumped in the opening round of the playoffs, captain Gavin Prout’s 2008 seemed to go slightly unnoticed likely due to that fact.

Prout finished with 92 points, knotting him up with Lewis Ratcliff and John Grant for second behind Athan Iannucci in the scoring race.

His 67 helpers easily ranked him first in the NLL last winter and was the sixth highest single season total in league history. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Bob Watson #9

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Some had him as their MVP last year and pretty much everyone had him as the best tender in 08.

That of course being Toronto Rock starting keep, Bob Watson, who at the age of 38, had maybe his best ever season in the NLL.

Watson’s performance last winter was also a great example of why you can’t always just judge keepers in this sport based on their stats alone.

They’re nice to have, but what stat registered the amount of momentum shifting (or stalling) saves Watson routinely made last year when he was hung out to dry? READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Brodie Merrill #10

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The Brodie Merrill headshot to the left was lifted off of Inside Lacrosse’s January 2007 cover, when the mag anointed the Portland Lumberjax’s cornerstone as the best player on the planet.

Is Merrill the best in the game now two years after IL first made the claim?

It depends what your definition of “the best” is.

In a league that usually names the best offensive player their MVP (outside of Jim Veltman finally snapping that trend in 2004, Steve Dietrich in 2006), players that play the kinda game that Merrill does very rarely get the public recognition they deserve. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Ryan Cousins #11

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We were laughed at by readers last year when we continuously included Minnesota Swarm captain Ryan Cousins in our Top 20 Player Ranking, but after being named the NLL’s first back-to-back Defender of the Year last season, who’s laughing now?

Cousins might not be the most technically perfect pure D guy out there (although he’s up there and recovers better than most), but he brings more intangibles to his game than maybe any other defender available today and is one of the NLL’s most important non-offensive players in a league that often fails to recognize past its O Gods. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Lewis Ratcliff #12

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Previous to 2008, Lewis Ratcliff had beefed up his stats every year since entering the bigs in 2003 (45-71-86-91-104-92).

It was a steady progression until last season, when Ratcliff fell short of the ridiculous 104 points he posted in 2007. In his defense however, not only is 104 a tough nut to crack every winter, he wasn’t exactly finding himself in the healthiest of O situations either. 

Ratcliff played 12 games in 2008 for a Calgary team that was hampered by the loss of captain Tracey Kelusky and keeper Steve Dietrich, both sidelined with concussions, and an offense that struggled to find its groove with high profile healthy scratches sending fans into a rage mid-season. READ MORE »


NLL Insider Top 50: Geoff Snider #13

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Yeah Geoff Snider is the unofficial pro fight champ right now, but if that’s the only aspect of his game you see on the court, you’re missing out large on one of the NLL’s most high impact guys in the game right now.

He’s also by far the league’s most entertaining non-offensive guy too, getting fans outta their seats as many times during a game as John Grant or Dan Dawson do.

Snider is also probably the lone non-O player that team’s totally change the way they play in order to counter his presence. READ MORE »