2002 World Lacrosse Championship

The 2002 World Lacrosse Championship were held between 7–15 July 2002. The event was the ninth international men's lacrosse championship, and took place in Perth, Western Australia under the auspices of the International Lacrosse Federation.[1][2] This was the second time that the tournament was held in Perth, following the 1990 tournament. Fifteen teams competed in the event in three divisions.[3]

2002 World Lacrosse Championship
Tournament details
Host country Australia
Venue(s)Perth
Dates7–15 July
Teams15
Final positions
Champions  United States (8th title)
Runner-up  Canada
Third place  Australia
Fourth place Iroquois
Tournament statistics
Games played48
Goals scored1,068 (22.25 per game)
MVPDoug Shanahan
← 1998
2006 →

The United States successfully defended their title for the sixth consecutive time, defeating Canada 18–15 in the final.[4] Australia beat the Iroquois team 12–11 for third place.

Pool Play edit

For the pool play phase of the tournament, the teams were divided into three divisions – five in the top Blue Division, six in the Red Division, and four in the Green Division. The top three finishers in the Blue Division advanced directly to the semi-finals, while the fourth place team played the winner of the Red Division for the final semi-final spot. Green Division participants were not eligible to win the championship.

Blue Division edit

Key to colours in group tables
Advanced to semi-finals
Advanced to Play-In game
Team Played Won Lost GF GA
  United States 4 4 0 79 25 +54
  Canada 4 3 1 56 43 +13
  Australia 4 2 2 57 49 +8
  Iroquois 4 1 3 36 70 –34
  England 4 0 4 29 70 –41
7 July 2002
United States   22–6   Iroquois Report
Canada   13–9   England Report
8 July 2002
Iroquois   17–9   England Report
Australia   7–22   United States Report
9 July 2002
Canada   20–8   Iroquois Report
England   8–19   Australia Report
10 July 2002
United States   14–9   Canada Report
Australia   19–5   Iroquois Report
11 July 2002
Canada   14–12   Australia Report
United States   21–3   England Report

Red Division edit

Team Played Won Lost GF GA GD
  Japan 5 5 0 77 30 +47
  Germany 5 4 1 56 45 +11
  Scotland 5 3 2 50 45 +5
  Sweden 5 2 3 36 56 –20
  Czech Republic 5 1 4 41 49 –8
  Wales 5 0 5 37 72 –35
7 July 2002
Scotland   14–7   Wales Report
Japan   19–4   Sweden Report
Germany   11–7   Czech Republic Report
8 July 2002
Japan   11–5   Germany Report
Czech Republic   8–9   Scotland Report
Wales   8–10   Sweden Report
9 July 2002
Germany   11–8   Wales Report
Scotland   10–5   Sweden Report
Czech Republic   5–16   Japan Report
10 July 2002
Japan   10–8   Scotland Report
Czech Republic   16–5   Wales Report
Germany   14–10   Sweden Report
11 July 2002
Sweden   7–5   Czech Republic Report
Germany   15–9   Scotland Report
Japan   21–8   Wales Report

Green Division edit

Team Played Won Lost GF GA GD
  Ireland 5 5 0 80 12 +68
  South Korea 5 3 2 70 38 +32
  Hong Kong 5 1 4 21 64 –43
  New Zealand 5 1 4 22 79 –57
7 July 2002
Ireland   16–1   Hong Kong Report
South Korea   23–2   New Zealand Report
8 July 2002
Ireland   14–5   South Korea Report
Hong Kong   8–9   New Zealand Report
9 July 2002
Ireland   19–3   New Zealand Report
Hong Kong   3–19   South Korea Report
10 July 2002
South Korea   20–3   New Zealand Report
Ireland   15–0   Hong Kong Report
11 July 2002
Ireland   16–3   South Korea Report
Hong Kong   9–5   New Zealand Report

Championship Round edit

Blue Division fourth-place finisher Iroquois Nationals and Red Division winner Japan played a 1-game playoff to determine who would be the fourth and final semi-finalist in the championship bracket.

12 July 2002
Iroquois   19–14 (OT)   Japan Report
 
Semi-finalsFinal
 
      
 
14 July
 
 
  United States 18
 
15 July
 
  Iroquois 8
 
  United States 18
 
14 July
 
  Canada 15
 
  Canada 15
 
 
  Australia 14
 
Third place
 
 
15 July
 
 
  Iroquois 11
 
 
  Australia 12

Tournament MVP Doug Shanahan dominated face-offs to give the USA a distinct advantage and an early lead. However, Canada came back to get to 7-6 on a Paul Gait goal in the second quarter and then finished strong before halftime to lead 9-7. The US team pulled ahead in the third quarter by three goals. Canada rallied again to tie the score before the US answered with three of their own to preserve a 18-15 victory.[5]

Consolation Round edit

5th-8th Place edit

 
Play-in5th place
 
      
 
14 July
 
 
  England 16
 
15 July
 
  Scotland 7
 
  England 12
 
14 July
 
  Japan 13
 
  Japan 8
 
 
  Germany 7
 
7th place
 
 
15 July
 
 
  Scotland 12 (OT)
 
 
  Germany 11

9th-12th Place edit

Although Ireland won the Green Division, runner-up South Korea progressed to the 9th-12th place bracket because Ireland was not yet a member of the International Lacrosse Federation.

12 July 2002
Wales   19–10   South Korea Report
14 July 2002
Czech Republic   13–7   Wales Report
15 July 2002
Wales   12–16   South Korea Report
Sweden   8–6   Czech Republic Report

Final standings edit

Rank Team Record
    United States 6–0
    Canada 4–2
    Australia 3–3
4   Iroquois 2–5
5   Japan 7–1
6   England 1–5
7   Scotland 4–3
8   Germany 4–3
9   Sweden 3–3
10   Czech Republic 2–5
11   South Korea 4–3
12   Wales 1–7
13   Ireland 5–0
14   New Zealand 1–4
15   Hong Kong 1–4

Source:[4]

Awards edit

Best and Fairest Player: Doug Shanahan, United States. Best Goalkeeper: Trevor Tierney, United States. Best Defender: Ryan McClay, United States. Best Midfielder: Doug Shanahan, United States. Best Attackman: John Grant Jr., Canada.

All-World Team: John Grant Jr., A, Canada; Darren Lowe, A, United States; Neal Powless, A, Iroquois; Peter Inge, M, Australia; Gavin Prout, M, Canada; Doug Shanahan, M, United States; Ryan McClay, D, United States; Ryan Mollett, D, United States; Steve Toll, D, Canada; Trevor Tierney, G, United States.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "International Lacrosse Events History" (PDF). Federation of International Lacrosse.
  2. ^ "ALL-TIME FIL WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS". US Lacrosse.
  3. ^ "Lacrosse World Championships 2002". activityworkshop.net. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Men's World Championship History". www.worldlacrosse2014.com. US Lacrosse. Archived from the original on 26 July 2019. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  5. ^ "Lacrosse World Cup 2002 - Reports Final Day". activityworkshop.net. Retrieved 3 August 2019.

External links edit