STEALTH MOVES TO 6-0 WITH VICTORY OVER SWARM
The Washington Stealth (6-0) held on to beat the Minnesota Swarm (1-4)
by the final score of 12-9 to remain undefeated in league play. Forward
Jeff Zywicki, who was named Game MVP, led the team with eight points on
four goals and four assists; he was supported by Rhys Duch who tallied
a hat trick and four assists. Minnesota was led by forward Callum
Crawford with three goals and two assists.
Washington came out firing and scored two quick goals from forwards
Jeff Zywicki and Luke Wiles putting the Stealth up 2-0 early in the
first. Minnesota had trouble keeping up with the Stealth tempo, as the
Swarm offense rarely held the ball for much of the first quarter.
"In the previous games we were playing against fast, quick teams and
Minnesota was more of the bigger stronger type, they play less pressure
on defense," said Stealth forward Rhys Duch.
In a spectacular display of strength and agility, Washington transition
specialist Paul Rabil picked up a loose ball face and was immediately
tripled teamed by Minnesota defenders. He powered and swim dodged his
way through to clear the ball, drawing cheers from the crowd.
In what would have been a top play, with six seconds left in the first
quarter Stealth transition specialist Jason Bloom picks up a loose ball
on the face off and sneaks it past the Swarm goalkeeper Nick Patterson
right as the buzzer rang. However, it was called off by the officials.
This was the story for the Stealth during the first half; the Stealth
offense took numerous wide shots on the cage. The league's highest
scoring offense appeared to be out of sync during the first half.
Minnesota found some momentum in the second quarter, on a goal from
forward Callum Crawford who tied the game at 4-4 with five minutes
remaining in the half. Crawford racked up a hat trick before the end of
the half. The halftime score was 6-5 with the Stealth ahead by one.
"Its tough to play a sixty minute game when you're down to fourteen on
the bench, you got to regroup and hope it works, which it did for us in
this case," said Stealth forward Jeff Zywicki. The Stealth offense went
on to out shoot the Swarm 50 to 38.
The action in the second half began before the opening face off.
Washington defender Eric Martin and Minnesota defender Ryan Cousins
started a brutal brawl at the restraining line before the whistle. It
would be a harbinger for the half as intensity, cheap shots and
physicality would define the rest of the game.
"They started to play desperate; anyone can beat anyone in this league, so we played desperate too," said Duch.
Washington transition specialist Paul Rabil was given holding, fighting
and game misconduct penalties after a multiple player scrum. The Swarm
got a seven minute power play as a result. The Stealth defense gave a
strong performance allowing only one goal. The Stealth defense leads
the league with penalty kills; it entered the game with only three
goals allowed on 24 opportunities (.875).
"We had to battle through with only eight defenders and had to look to
offensive guys to play some defense," said Washington Head Coach Chris
Hall.
In the forth quarter the Stealth started a scoring spree getting two
goals from forward Rhys Duch and defender Mike Grimes in what would
turn out to be the biggest lead in the game. Minnesota was unable to
gain any momentum on their offense, their pick and rolls were
ineffective at breaking the short handed Washington defense.
Transition face off specialist Jamison Koesterer gave another amazing
game performance winning 21 out of 26 face offs. Also, both goalies
gave stellar performances in the cage. Swarm goalkeeper Nick Patterson
made 38 saves, while Stealth goalkeeper Matt Roik made 29 saves.
"Minnesota will be fighting for their lives next week. Our depth is
proving worthwhile, we got to rest, heal up and bounce back to play
them again," concluded Hall.
Date published : 09 Feb 2010 - 15:16:43