Sports season
The 2020 National Lacrosse League season , formally known as the 2019–2020 season, was the 34th in the history of the NLL. The season began on November 29, 2019 and was scheduled to end with the NLL final in late spring of 2020.[ 2] [ 3] However due to the COVID-19 pandemic , the season was suspended on March 12, 2020.[ 4] On April 8, the league made a further public statement announcing the cancellation of the remaining games of the 2020 season and that they would be exploring options for playoffs once it was safe to resume play.[ 5] [ 6]
This season was the inaugural season for the expansion Knighthawks [ 7] and Riptide .[ 8] [ 9] The former Rochester Knighthawks under owner Curt Styres relocated to Halifax for this season while Pegula Sports and Entertainment took over the Knighthawks moniker with a new expansion team.[ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
With the addition of two teams, the NLL was realigned into a three division league. The five west division teams remained the same but the six east division and two expansion teams were distributed into a north and a new east division. The top-two teams in each division would qualify for the playoffs plus and additional two wild card teams.[ 13]
Teams
North Division
East Division
West Division
2020 National Lacrosse League
Division
Team
City
Arena
Capacity
North
Buffalo Bandits
Buffalo , New York
KeyBank Center
19,070
Halifax Thunderbirds
Halifax , Nova Scotia
Scotiabank Centre
10,500
Rochester Knighthawks
Rochester , New York
Blue Cross Arena
10,662
Toronto Rock
Toronto , Ontario
Scotiabank Arena
18,800
East
Georgia Swarm
Duluth , Georgia
Infinite Energy Arena
10,500
New England Black Wolves
Uncasville , Connecticut
Mohegan Sun Arena
7,074
New York Riptide
Uniondale , New York
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum
13,917
Philadelphia Wings
Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
Wells Fargo Center
19,306
West
Calgary Roughnecks
Calgary , Alberta
Scotiabank Saddledome
19,289
Colorado Mammoth
Denver , Colorado
Pepsi Center
18,007
San Diego Seals
San Diego , California
Pechanga Arena
12,920
Saskatchewan Rush
Saskatoon , Saskatchewan
SaskTel Centre
15,195
Vancouver Warriors
Vancouver , British Columbia
Rogers Arena
18,910
Regular season
Reference: [ 14]
x : Clinched playoff berth; c : Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y : Clinched division; z : Clinched best regular season record; GP : Games PlayedW : Wins; L : Losses; GB : Games back ; PCT : Win percentage; Home : Record at Home; Road : Record on the Road; GF : Goals scored; GA : Goals allowedDifferential : Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP : Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP : Average number of goals allowed per game
Awards
Annual awards
References: Winners[ 15]
Award
Winner
Other Finalists
Most Valuable Player
Shayne Jackson , Georgia Swarm
Callum Crawford , New England Black WolvesRob Hellyer , Toronto Rock
Goaltender of the Year
Doug Jamieson, New England Black Wolves
Zach Higgins , Philadelphia WingsDillon Ward , Colorado Mammoth
Defensive Player of the Year
Graeme Hossack , Halifax Thunderbirds
Robert Hope, Colorado MammothKyle Rubisch , Saskatchewan Rush
Transition Player of the Year
Challen Rogers, Toronto Rock
Zach Currier , Calgary Roughnecks Kiel Matisz, Philadelphia Wings
Rookie of the Year
Tyson Gibson, New York Riptide
Connor Fields, San Diego Seals Andrew Kew, New England Black Wolves
Sportsmanship Award
Lyle Thompson , Georgia Swarm
Kyle Buchanan, San Diego Seals Curtis Knight, Rochester Knighthawks
GM of the Year
Paul Day, Philadelphia Wings
Jamie Dawick, Toronto Rock Rich Lisk, New England Black Wolves
Les Bartley Award
Paul Day, Philadelphia Wings
Mike Accursi, Halifax Thunderbirds Glenn Clark, New England Black Wolves
Executive of the Year Award
John Catalano, Halifax Thunderbirds
Matt Hutchings, Colorado Mammoth Rich Lisk, New England Black Wolves
Teammate of the Year Award
Dan Dawson, Toronto Rock (tie) Mike Poulin, Georgia Swarm
John Ranagan, New England Black Wolves
Tom Borrelli Award
Craig Rybczynski
Jake Elliott Teddy Jenner
Stadiums and locations
Attendance
Home Team
Home Games
Average Attendance
Total Attendance[ 16]
Calgary Roughnecks
5
12,677
63,387
Buffalo Bandits
6
12,089
72,537
Saskatchewan Rush
5
12,007
60,039
Colorado Mammoth
6
11,586
69,521
Toronto Rock
6
8,339
50,037
Philadelphia Wings
6
8,054
48,325
Halifax Thunderbirds
7
7,642
53,496
Georgia Swarm
6
7,613
45,681
Vancouver Warriors
6
6,769
40,616
New England Black Wolves
7
5,132
35,928
Rochester Knighthawks
5
5,050
25,252
San Diego Seals
6
4,829
28,977
New York Riptide
6
4,157
24,942
League
77
8,035
618,738
See also
References
^ Hepburn, Tmera (December 12, 2019). "Lacrosse Fans Can Now Watch a 'Game Of The Week' For Free – Here's How" . Cord Cutters News .
^ a b "NLL Announces brands and identities for its two newest teams" . NLL.com . February 17, 2019. Retrieved August 24, 2019 .
^ "2019-20 National Lacrosse League Schedule Released" . National Lacrosse League . Retrieved December 27, 2019 .
^ "NLL Statement on game play (March 12, 2020)" . NLL.com . March 12, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020 .
^ "National Lacrosse League cancels remainder of season due to COVID-19" . Sportsnet .
^ "National Lacrosse League announces cancellation of remaining regular season games" . NLL.com . April 8, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020 .
^ "Knighthawks Unveil New Logo Ahead of Expansion Season" . Spectrum News . May 30, 2019. Retrieved December 19, 2019 .
^ "N.Y. National Lacrosse League team named "Riptide" " . Long Island Herald . February 18, 2019. Retrieved October 18, 2019 .
^ "Welcome to the NLL Halifax Thunderbirds and New York Riptide" . Inside Lacrosse . February 18, 2019. Retrieved October 18, 2019 .
^ "NLL Announces the Rochester Knighthawks are Moving to Halifax for 2019-20 Season" . Inside Lacrosse . September 13, 2019. Retrieved October 18, 2019 .
^ Johnson, Melanie (September 13, 2018). "Knighthawks owner leaving, Pegulas taking over franchise" . Spectrum News . Retrieved December 19, 2019 .
^ Parsons, Jack (December 6, 2019). "Halifax Thunderbirds to play first regular season game this weekend" . Halifax Today . Retrieved December 19, 2019 .
^ Ferger, Michael (9 September 2019). "NLL Announces Division Realignment for 2019/2020 Season" . Vancouver Warriors . Retrieved 20 May 2024 .
^ "2020 National Lacrosse League Standings" . Pointstreak Stats .
^ "NLL announces 2019-20 NLL award winners" . NLL.com . June 30, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020 .
^ "2022 Season" . nllstats.com . Retrieved 16 June 2023 .
Eagle Pro Box Lacrosse League Major Indoor Lacrosse League National Lacrosse League