2001 NLL season explained

2001 NLL season
League:National Lacrosse League
Sport:Indoor lacrosse
Pixels:100px
No Of Teams:9
No Of Games:14
Duration:December 21, 2000 – April 27, 2001
Season:Regular season
Mvp:John Tavares (Buffalo Bandits)
Mvp Link:National Lacrosse League MVP Award
Top Scorer:John Tavares (Buffalo Bandits)
Top Scorer Link:2001 NLL season
League Champs:Toronto Rock
Second Place:Philadelphia Wings
Finals:Champion's Cup
Finals Link:Champion's Cup
Finals Champ:Philadelphia Wings
Finals Runner-Up:Toronto Rock
Finals Mvp:Dallas Eliuk (Philadelphia)
Finals Mvp Link:Champion's Cup#Most Valuable Players
Seasonslistnames:NLL
Prevseason Link:2000 NLL season
Prevseason Year:2000 season
Nextseason Link:2002 NLL season
Nextseason Year:2002 season
Tv:CNN Sports Illustrated[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]

The 2001 National Lacrosse League season is the 15th season in the NLL that began on December 21, 2000 and concluded with the championship game on April 27, 2001. The Philadelphia Wings won their 6th NLL championship, defeating the Toronto Rock 9-8 in Toronto. Philadelphia had now won twice as many championships as any other team in NLL history (the Buffalo Bandits had won three, and the Rock two). The Championship game was one of only two games (out of ten) the Rock lost at home during the 2001 season, and ended Toronto's bid for an unprecedented third straight Championship.

The NLL expanded its schedule from 12 games to 14 during this season.

The lowest-scoring game in NLL history happened during the 2001 season, as the Toronto Rock and Albany Attack combined for only 11 goals in a 7-4 Toronto win at the Air Canada Centre.

Team movement

For the 2001 season, one expansion team was added to the NLL, the Columbus Landsharks. In addition, the Syracuse Smash ended a dismal existence (dead last in the standings for three straight years) in Syracuse, moving to Ottawa, Ontario to become the Rebel. Unfortunately, the Rebel would finish in the basement three straight years as well. The Pittsburgh CrosseFire, formerly the Baltimore Thunder, moved again, this time to Washington, becoming the Washington Power.

In addition, the Toronto Rock moved from the aging Maple Leaf Gardens to the Air Canada Centre for the 2001 season. The first Rock game at the ACC was a 17-7 Toronto win over the Ottawa Rebel on the opening night of the season, December 21, 2000.[6]

Teams

2001 National Lacrosse League
Team City Arena Capacity
Albany AttackAlbany, New YorkPepsi Arena14,236
Buffalo BanditsBuffalo, New YorkHSBC Arena18,690
Columbus LandsharksColumbus, OhioNationwide Arena18,136
New York SaintsUniondale, New YorkNassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum16,297
Ottawa RebelOttawa, OntarioCorel Centre18,500
Philadelphia WingsPhiladelphia, PennsylvaniaFirst Union Center19,519
Rochester KnighthawksRochester, New YorkBlue Cross Arena10,662
Toronto RockToronto, OntarioAir Canada Centre18,800
Washington PowerWashington, District of ColumbiaMCI Center18,277

All Star Game

No All-Star game was held in 2001.

Awards

AwardWinnerTeam
MVP AwardJohn TavaresBuffalo
Rookie of the Year AwardTracey KeluskyColumbus
Coach of the YearTony ReschPhiladelphia
Executive of the Year AwardRuss ClinePhiladelphia
Goaltender of the Year AwardBob WatsonToronto
Championship Game MVPDallas EliukPhiladelphia

Weekly awards

Each week, a player is awarded "Player of the Week" honours.

Week Player of the Week
1 no award given
2 John Grant Jr.
3 John Tavares
4 Roy Colsey
5 Derek Malawsky
6 Steve Toll
7 Jake Bergey
8 Devin Dalep
9 Pat O'Toole
10 Gee Nash
11 Tracey Kelusky
12 Kim Squire
13 Kevin Finneran
14 Pat O'Toole
15 Matt Shearer
16 Roy Colsey
17 Dallas Eliuk

Monthly awards

Awards are also given out monthly for the best overall player and best rookie.

Month Overall Rookie
JanDerek Malawsky Tracey Kelusky
FebJohn Tavares Kris Bryde
MarTracey Kelusky

Statistics leaders

Bold numbers indicate new single-season records. Italics indicate tied single-season records.

StatPlayerTeamNumber
GoalsRoy ColseyNew York51
AssistsJohn TavaresBuffalo64
PointsJohn TavaresBuffalo115
Penalty MinutesPat CoyleToronto65
Loose BallsJim VeltmanToronto161
Save PctPat O'TooleRochester79.7

Attendance

Regular Season

Home Team Home Games Average Attendance Total Attendance[7]
Toronto Rock715,749110,240
Philadelphia Wings715,174106,215
Rochester Knighthawks79,14764,032
Ottawa Rebel 78,05856,409
Buffalo Bandits 78,04156,289
Columbus Landsharks76,55945,912
New York Saints 75,91841,426
Albany Attack74,25529,782
Washington Power73,34123,386
League638,471533,691

Playoffs

Home Team Home Games Average Attendance Total Attendance
Toronto Rock 216,92633,851
Philadelphia Wings110,259 10,259
League314,70344,110

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Fatsis. Stefan. March 9, 2001. Trainer to the Stars Plans Launch of Lacrosse League. The Wall Street Journal.
  2. News: December 8, 2014. Passion, energy was driving force of former commissioner Jim Jennings. Inside Lacrosse.
  3. News: Umstead. R. Thomas. September 23, 2001. CNN/SI Shifts Focus From News to Events.
  4. News: August 20, 2001. CNN/SI to televise NLL games. OurSports Central.
  5. News: September 15, 2001. NLL ONLY SHAKEN BY TRAGEDY IN NEW YORK. The Buffalo News.
  6. Web site: Toronto Rocks Ottawa in season opener, 17-7. Outsider's Guide to the NLL. Ben Knight. 2006-12-13. https://web.archive.org/web/20070818040422/http://www.lacrosse-network.com/outsidersguide/game0101otto.htm. 2007-08-18. dead.
  7. Web site: 2001 Season. nllstats.com. 16 June 2023.