Scotland national indoor lacrosse team

The Scotland national indoor lacrosse team represents Scotland at box lacrosse. It is governed by Lacrosse Scotland.

Scotland Box Lacrosse
AssociationLacrosse Scotland
ConfederationELF (Europe)
Head coachMike Simpson
ArenaManhattan Works - Dundee
World Championship
Appearances2 (first in 2003)

Scotland national indoor lacrosse team history edit

The inaugural World Indoor Lacrosse Championship (WILC) was held in Hamilton, Kitchener, Mississauga, and Oshawa, Ontario, Canada in May 2003. National teams from Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, the Iroquois Nation, Scotland and the United States participated. The World Indoor Lacrosse Championship was sponsored by the International Lacrosse Federation through 2007. The team attended the second championship in 2007. The championship is now sponsored by World Lacrosse (formally the Federation of International Lacrosse). The Box (Indoor) lacrosse program within Scotland and the Scotland national indoor lacrosse team was reformed in 2018 after not attending the 2011 and 2015 World Indoor Lacrosse Championships.

The team as of 2021 is under the management of Brendan Cook (general manager), Mike Simpson (head coach), Bob Heyes (assistant coach) and Dylan Cowman (assistant coach) . Trials are currently underway for the European Indoor Lacrosse Championships 2021 in Hanover, Germany.

World Indoor Lacrosse Championships 2019 edit

The team as of 2018 was under the management of Brendan Cook (general manager), Brian Witmer (head coach) and Navi Mahal (assistant coach). The team attended the European Box lacrosse invitational (EBox) in 2018 and again in 2019. The team attended the World Indoor Lacrosse Championships 2019 in Langley, Canada and finished 16th out of 20 teams having been seeded at 16th. The national team roster is posted below.

Pos. No. Player Team Nationality
Goaltender 44 Dylan Cowman   Glasgow Clydesiders  
Goaltender 35 Chris Knowles   Scotland Grizzlies  
Goaltender 77 Craig McFeeters   Port Moody  
Defenseman 1 Nye Gordon   London Raptors  
Defenseman 28 Peter Shepherd   Scotland Grizzlies  
Defenseman 42 Sam Vickars   Glasgow Clydesiders  
Defenseman 8 John McIntyre   Strathclyde University  
Defenseman 91 John King   Edinburgh City  
Defenseman 2 Jorel Doherty   London Raptors  
Defenseman 23 Ben Robertson   Edinburgh City  
Defenseman 32 Colin Weir   Stirling Stags  
Transition 16 Iain Murray   London Raptors  
Transition 21 Matt Hill   Glasgow Clydesiders  
Transition 3 Colin Gill   Edinburgh City  
Attackman 93 Cole Paciejewski   RPR Mechanical/BX Pub Bandits  
Attackman 12 Tom Becque   Edinburgh City  
Attackman 10 Thomas Moffat   Langley Thunder  
Attackman 13 Tim Mottram   Leeds City  
Attackman 24 Iain Vickars   Hillcroft  
Attackman 17 Michael Barclay   Edinburgh City  
Attackman 11 Trevor Jackson   Glasgow Clydesiders  
Attackman 36 Martin Crawford   Edinburgh City  
Attackman 22 Johny Shaw   Glasgow City  

ILF World Indoor Championships history edit

2019 World Championship edit

2019 World Championship Group play
TEAM GP W L GF GA PTS
Czech Republic 4 4 0 68 21 8
Germany 4 3 1 67 29 6
Slovakia 4 2 2 51 56 4
Scotland 4 1 3 46 60 2
Mexico 4 0 4 26 92 0

Playoffs: Scotland vs Hong Kong (12–10 Win) Scotland vs Australia (5–29 Loss) Scotland vs Slovakia (12–14 Loss) Scotland vs Sweden (9–18 Loss)

16th Place overall finish

2007 World Championship edit

2007 World Championship
GROUP 'A' GP W L GF GA PTS
Canada 3 3 0 67 10 6
United States 3 2 1 44 27 4
Australia 3 1 2 27 51 2
Ireland 3 0 3 9 59 0
GROUP 'B' GP W L GF GA PTS
Iroquois Nationals 3 3 0 70 16 6
England 3 2 1 32 41 4
Scotland 3 1 2 22 43 2
Czech Republic 3 0 3 20 44 0

Quarter-finals: 18 May 2007 - England defeated Australia 15-11; USA defeated Scotland 17-9

Fifth Place Match: 19 May 2007 - Scotland defeated Australia 14-8


2003 World Championship edit

2003 World Championship
TEAM GP W L GF GA PTS
Canada 5 5 0 109 29 10
Iroquois Nationals 5 4 1 100 52 8
Scotland 5 3 2 63 69 6
United States 5 2 3 75 65 4
Australia 5 1 4 39 102 2
Czech Republic 5 0 5 29 98 0

Semi-finals: 22 May 2003 - Canada defeated USA 17-9; Iroquois Nationals defeated Scotland 22-8

Bronze Medal Match: 24 May 2003 - USA defeated Scotland 15-9

External links edit