2011 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship

50°4′8″N 14°28′47″E / 50.06889°N 14.47972°E / 50.06889; 14.47972

2011 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship
FIL Mistrovství světa v box lakrosu 2011
Tournament details
Host country Czech Republic
Venue(s)Eden Arena
Dates21–28 May
Teams8
Final positions
Champions  Canada (3rd title)
Runner-up  Iroquois
Third place  United States
Fourth place Czech Republic
Tournament statistics
Games played21
Goals scored513 (24.43 per game)
Scoring leader(s)United States Casey Powell
England Tom Johnson (31 pts)
MVPUnited States Casey Powell
← 2007
2015 →

The 2011 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship was the third World Indoor Lacrosse Championship, an international box lacrosse tournament organized by the Federation of International Lacrosse every four years.[1] It took place between 21 and 28 May 2011 in Prague, Czech Republic at the 4,900 seat Eden Arena, an Olympic-sized rink.[2][3] The Canadian team was the defending champion and for the third time defeated the Iroquois Nationals in the finals, 13–6.[4] The United States defeated the host Czech Republic 16–7 in the bronze medal game.[5]

Pool play edit

Eight participating teams were placed in two pools. After playing a round-robin, the first place team in each pool advanced to the semi-finals, the second and third placed teams advanced to the quarter-finals, and the fourth place teams advanced to the 7th place games.

Canada cruised through pool play with three easy victories. The Iroquois Nationals beat Ireland and the host Czech Republic by wide margins, but just edged the United States 11–10.[3]

Pool A edit

Team GP W L GF GA DIF Advanced to
  Canada 3 3 0 81 8 +73 Semi-finals
  England 3 2 1 49 43 +6 Quarter-finals
  Australia 3 1 2 22 53 -31 Quarter-finals
  Slovakia 3 0 3 15 63 -48 7th place games

All times are local (UTC+2).

21 May 2011
16:00
England   20–8
(6–0, 8–2, 0–1, 6–5)
  Australia Eden Arena, Prague
26 min Penalties 19 min
52 Shots 50
22 May 2011
10:00
Slovakia   1–27
(0–13, 1–4, 0–8, 0–2)
  Canada Eden Arena, Prague
6 min Penalties 4 min
21 Shots 52
23 May 2011
10:00
Slovakia   7–24
(0–6, 3–5, 2–8, 2–5)
  England Eden Arena, Prague
16 min Penalties 12 min
33 Shots 71
23 May 2011
16:00
Canada   26–2
(9–1, 8–0, 3–0, 6–1)
  Australia Eden Arena, Prague
10 min Penalties 18 min
46 Shots 38
24 May 2011
10:00
Australia   12–7
(4–0, 5–4, 0–2, 3–1)
  Slovakia Eden Arena, Prague
21 min Penalties 8 min
65 Shots 45
24 May 2011
16:00
Canada   28–5
(10–0, 6–1, 4–1, 8–3)
  England Eden Arena, Prague
16 min Penalties 16 min
45 Shots 45

Pool B edit

Team GP W L GF GA DIF Advanced to
  Iroquois 3 3 0 59 18 +41 Semi-finals
  United States 3 2 1 46 17 +29 Quarter-finals
  Czech Republic 3 1 2 28 44 -16 Quarter-finals
  Ireland 3 0 3 9 63 -54 7th place games

All times are local (UTC+2).

21 May 2011
10:00
Ireland   3–23
(1–8, 1–7, 1–5, 0–3)
  Iroquois Eden Arena, Prague
10 min Penalties 18 min
32 Shots 79
21 May 2011
19:30
United States   14–5
(2–1, 5–2, 2–0, 5–2)
  Czech Republic Eden Arena, Prague
6 min Penalties 6 min
60 Shots 45
22 May 2011
16:00
Ireland   1–22
(0–7, 1–12, 0–0, 0–3)
  United States Eden Arena, Prague
16 min Penalties 14 min
25 Shots 67
22 May 2011
19:00
Czech Republic   5–25
(1–6, 2–8, 2–7, 0–4)
  Iroquois Eden Arena, Prague
14 min Penalties 20 min
51 Shots 48
23 May 2011
19:00
Iroquois   11–10
(2–3, 2–4, 4–1, 3–2)
  United States Eden Arena, Prague
10 min Penalties 19 min
50 Shots 55
24 May 2011
19:00
Czech Republic   18–5
(2–1, 4–0, 9–2, 3–2)
  Ireland Eden Arena, Prague
16 min Penalties 29 min
84 Shots 40

Championship bracket edit

Goaltender Matt Vinc made 23 saves in the gold medal game, helping Canada to a 13-6 win and earning game MVP honors.[6][7]

All times are local (UTC+2).

7th place games edit

26 May 2011
10:00
Slovakia   5–10
(1–2, 0–2, 2–5, 2–1)
  Ireland Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
26 min Penalties 10 min
53 Shots 60
27 May 2011
10:00
Ireland   7–10
(2–0, 2–3, 0–3, 3–4)
  Slovakia Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
11 min Penalties 6 min
59 Shots 53

Ireland won 17–15 on aggregate.

Quarter-finals edit

26 May 2011
16:00
United States   28–2
(6–0, 9–1, 8–1, 5–0)
  Australia Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
8 min Penalties 17 min
71 Shots 30
26 May 2011
19:00
England   7–12
(2–1, 3–6, 1–2, 1–3)
  Czech Republic Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
11 min Penalties 22 min
60 Shots 70

5th place game edit

28 May 2011
10:00
Australia   8–23
(3–4, 2–4, 2–10, 1–5)
  England Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
22 min Penalties 10 min
62 Shots 77

Semi-finals edit

27 May 2011
16:00
Canada   15–10
(3–2, 2–3, 5–1, 5–4)
  United States Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
12 min Penalties 8 min
54 Shots 61
27 May 2011
19:00
Iroquois   19–6
(3–1, 8–2, 3–1, 5–2)
  Czech Republic Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
14 min Penalties 10 min
64 Shots 52

Bronze medal game edit

28 May 2011
16:00
United States   16–7
(3–2, 4–3, 5–1, 4–1)
  Czech Republic Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
35 min Penalties 48 min
71 Shots 49

Gold medal game edit

28 May 2011
19:00
Canada   13–6
(2–1, 7–1, 3–2, 1–2)
  Iroquois Eden Arena, Prague
Game reference
11 min Penalties 8 min
56 Shots 48

Ranking, leaders, and awards edit

 
Ginny Capicchioni

Final standings edit

    Canada
    Iroquois
    United States
4   Czech Republic
5   England
6   Australia
7   Ireland
8   Slovakia

Scoring leaders edit

Player G A Pts
  Casey Powell 16 15 31
  Tom Johnson 15 16 31
  Colin Doyle 14 16 30
  Dan Dawson 14 13 27
  Drew Westervelt 17 9 26
  James Delaney 16 10 26
  Shawn Cable 11 14 25
  Roger Vyse 15 9 24
  Chris Manwaring 17 6 23
  John Grant Jr. 11 12 23
Source: [8]

Goaltending leaders edit

Player GP SV GA Sv%
  Mike Cregan 5 80 9 90%
  Matt Vinc 5 77 17 82%
  Angus Goodleaf 5 65 14 82%
  Mike Thompson 5 75 21 78%
  Mathew Roik 5 122 37 77%
  Erik Miller 6 91 27 77%
Minimum 65 saves. Source: [9]

All World Team edit

Forwards

  Dan Dawson
  Casey Powell

Transition

  Cody Jamieson

Defense

  Sid Smith
  Kyle Rubisch

Goaltender

  Matt Vinc

Most Valuable Player

  Casey Powell

Source: [10]

References edit

  1. ^ McNamara, Andy (May 25, 2011). "Playoff Time at the World Indoor Lacrosse Championships". Lax All Stars. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Slavia Eden Arena". wilcprague2011.com. Archived from the original on 23 May 2011.
  3. ^ a b McKay, Andrew (May 24, 2011). "Canada dominates as World Indoor Lacrosse Championship finds its way". Yahoo Sports.
  4. ^ "Canada wins indoor lacrosse worlds". CBC Sports. The Canadian Press. May 28, 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  5. ^ McNamara, Andy (May 31, 2011). "Canada Strikes Gold, USA Settles For Bronze At World Indoor Lacrosse Championships". Lax All Stars. Retrieved 19 November 2017.
  6. ^ "Canada wins world indoor lacrosse championship". Globe and Mail. The Canadian Press. May 28, 2011. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  7. ^ "Canada - Iroquois Nationals 13:6". FIL. Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  8. ^ "Points". Federation of International Lacrosse. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  9. ^ "Goaltender stats". Federation of International Lacrosse. Retrieved 15 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Canada Wins Indoor Worlds". Federation of International Lacrosse. Retrieved 19 November 2017.

External links edit