The Peterborough Examiner

Stealth coach Bat ley sees a need for speed

- STEVE EWEN POSTMEDIAN­ETWORK sewen@postmedia.com

VANCOUVER--The Vancouver Stealth open training camp Saturday morning, and it would be fitting for coach and Peter borough native Jamie Batley to begin proceeding­s by firing off a starter’s pistol.

The Stealth were quicker and more athletic in their first full season under Batley last year, and they ended up making the National Lacrosse League playoffs for the first time in four years based out of the Langley Events Centre, thanks to a 9-9 record.

If the off-season is any indication, Batley wants to put his foot down on the gas pedal even more. They drafted Ryan Four ni er. They traded for Tony Malcom. They brought Tyler Garrison back into the fold. Those guys are speedy, and in a brazen way.

“We’ re going to try to out-athlete people,” Stealth general manager Doug Locker said simply.

Lacrosse is cyclical. Everything is. There used to be a time where everyone played both ends of the floor in the box game. The field version of the sport then started to have influence, and specialist­s crept in. Your defensive guys would get possession in your zone, they’ d bring the ball to centre and there would be a wholesale line change with your offensive guys taking over. It’s morphed again since then. These days, NLL rosters usually list three positions for non-goalies: forward, transition and defence. Transition is shorthand for guys who come out the defence gate but have the green light to jump into the offence.

Teams can dress 17 runners a night in the NLL. It’s often six guys coming out the offence door, and 11 out the defence one. Batley, it would seem, will have more and more transition specialist­s in that second grouping.

The issue, of course, is that transition guys by pure definition are trying to push forward and get into the offence, and that could leave you susceptibl­e in your zone. Locker is quick to answer, though.

“You’re not a tranny guy for Batley unless you’re a good checker,” insisted Locker, who brought in Batley to replace Dan Perreault at the helm behind the bench midway through the 2016 campaign. “You’re not going to be able to be in that end of the floor for him unless you can check. It’s that simple.”

The Stealth did lose two stay-athome defender types when team captain Curtis Hod gs on ,35, retired and John Lintz, 31, announced he had to take the year off due to injury. He missed the final six games of 2017 on the disabled list.

Both will be assistants under Batley, with Lintz handling the defensive co-ordinator role after Clay Richardson resigned due to work commitment­s.

Fournier, 23, is expected to get one of their roster spots and play in a transition­al role. Vancouver landed him with the 12th overall selection in the entry draft, a pick they received as part of a deal that saw them also get righty forward Malcom, 24, from the Buffalo Bandits in exchange for lefty forward Jordan Durston, 23.

Garrison, 25, another transition specialist, should be in the mix for the L int z-led group. He tallied nine goals for Vancouver in 2014, but has battled injuries the past three campaigns, including missing all of last year.

Another notable name for the start of camp is goaltender Brodie MacDonald, 28. The Stealth acquired him Thursday from the Georgia Swarm in exchange for a conditiona­l fifth-round pick in the 2020 entry draft. MacDonald, who is listed at6-foot-7 and 260 pounds, is familiar to the LEC, since he’s a former standout with the Langley Thunder of the Western Lacrosse Associatio­n. He led the Thunder to WLA titles in 2011 and 2012.

The Stealth open the regular season on Dec .8, when the Colorado Mammoth visit the LE C. For more on the Stealth training camp at the LEC, check out stealthlax.com.

Stealth GM says he’s not worried about Burnaby Lake rs summer coaching woes

Vancouver Stealth general manager Doug Locker insists he’s not concerned about the messy split this summer between Peterborou­gh native Jim Milligan and the Burnaby Lakers.

Milligan is the Stealth’s offensive co-ordinator. He’s a longtime ally of Vancouver head coach and fellow Peterborou­gh native Jamie Batley. Milligan was head coach of the Burnaby Lakers this summer until he was fired with three games to go in the Western Lacrosse Associatio­n regular season, despite the fact Burnaby had a 9-5-1 record at the time.

There were rumours of a player revolt, although nothing was ever confirmed. Burnaby features several key members of the Stealth, most notably team captain Matt Beers and transition ace Justin Salt.

The Stealth open training camp on Saturday at the Langley Events Centre. They begin the National Lacrosse League regular season Dec. 8, when the Colorado Mammoth come to the Langley Events Centre.

“The summer game is the summer game and the winter game is the winter game and they’re two completely different animals in my opinion,” said Locker. “I don’t expect any issues to arise.

“Jim has been with the Stealth for a season and a half. Tome, that experience and that success will trump whatever happened this summer .”

Burnaby wound up winning the WLA regular season crown, via a 12-5-1 record, but lost out in seven games in the league semifinals to the fourth-place Victoria Shamrocks, who were 10-7-1 in league play. 00 a.m., LCVI vs. Centennial; CCI vs. East Northumber­land 00 p.m., Final 30 p.m., HCCSS vs. East Northumber­land; CCI vs. St. Theresa 30 p.m., Final

00 a.m., OCAA Women's Rugby Sevens, OCAA Championsh­ip Tournament, Fleming Sports Field Complex

00 a.m., Rally Sport, Peterborou­gh Motorsport­s Club presents the President's Prize Rally, Tim Hortons, Bobcaygeon

00 a.m., Loggerspor­ts, Fleming College Annual Tournament, Frost Campus (Lindsay)

00 p.m., OCAA Men's Rugby, OCAA Semifinal, Sheridan Bruins vs. Fleming Knights, Fleming Sports Field Complex

05 p.m., OHL Hockey, Barrie Colts vs. Peterborou­gh Petes, Memorial Centre

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada