The 2022-23 Schedule is Live! Schedule

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WK
1
Fri, Dec 2
FINAL
Philadelphia
8
Halifax
18
Sat, Dec 3
FINAL
Vancouver
8
Toronto
19
Sat, Dec 3
FINAL
San Diego
15
New York
14
Sat, Dec 3
FINAL
Albany
11
Buffalo
10
Sat, Dec 3
FINAL
Rochester
16
Georgia
11
Sat, Dec 3
FINAL
Colorado
6
Saskatchewan
18
WK
2
Fri, Dec 9
FINAL
Las Vegas
11
Panther City
13
Fri, Dec 9
FINAL/OT
Saskatchewan
12
San Diego
13
Sat, Dec 10
FINAL
Toronto
7
Rochester
11
Sat, Dec 10
FINAL
Vancouver
9
Calgary
11
WK
3
Fri, Dec 16
FINAL
Calgary
14
Vancouver
5
Fri, Dec 16
FINAL
Panther City
9
Las Vegas
3
Sat, Dec 17
FINAL
Buffalo
11
Toronto
8
Sat, Dec 17
FINAL
Rochester
14
Albany
13
Sat, Dec 17
FINAL
Philadelphia
13
Georgia
12
Sat, Dec 17
FINAL
Halifax
20
New York
11
Sat, Dec 17
FINAL
Colorado
12
Panther City
9
WK
5
Fri, Dec 30
FINAL
Halifax
13
Buffalo
18
Fri, Dec 30
FINAL
San Diego
17
Calgary
14
Sat, Dec 31
FINAL
Panther City
9
Saskatchewan
11
WK
6
Fri, Jan 6
FINAL
Philadelphia
14
Las Vegas
9
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Panther City
9
Rochester
17
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Halifax
14
Albany
11
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Buffalo
18
Georgia
9
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Toronto
15
New York
7
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Calgary
8
Colorado
9
Sat, Jan 7
FINAL
Vancouver
11
San Diego
16
WK
7
Fri, Jan 13
FINAL/OT
Albany
11
Halifax
10
Fri, Jan 13
FINAL/OT
Saskatchewan
10
Colorado
11
Sat, Jan 14
FINAL
Halifax
8
Toronto
17
Sat, Jan 14
FINAL
Panther City
12
Philadelphia
10
Sat, Jan 14
FINAL
Georgia
9
Buffalo
11
Sat, Jan 14
FINAL
San Diego
10
Calgary
14
Sat, Jan 14
FINAL
Las Vegas
16
Vancouver
19
Sun, Jan 15
FINAL
Rochester
11
New York
8
WK
8
Fri, Jan 20
FINAL
Buffalo
12
Rochester
15
Fri, Jan 20
FINAL
Vancouver
14
Las Vegas
15
Sat, Jan 21
FINAL
Toronto
14
Philadelphia
5
Sat, Jan 21
FINAL
New York
16
Albany
10
WK
9
Fri, Jan 27
FINAL
Rochester
7
Halifax
17
Fri, Jan 27
FINAL
Buffalo
13
Philadelphia
9
Sat, Jan 28
FINAL
Buffalo
16
New York
10
Sat, Jan 28
FINAL
Las Vegas
10
Saskatchewan
15
Sat, Jan 28
FINAL/OT
Toronto
11
Calgary
10
Sat, Jan 28
FINAL
San Diego
13
Colorado
9
Sat, Jan 28
FINAL
Panther City
20
Vancouver
7
WK
10
Fri, Feb 3
FINAL
Georgia
10
Colorado
13
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL/OT
Calgary
12
Halifax
11
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
New York
14
Toronto
22
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
Albany
5
Philadelphia
13
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
Rochester
10
Buffalo
13
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
Panther City
10
San Diego
12
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
Saskatchewan
14
Vancouver
8
Sat, Feb 4
FINAL
Colorado
8
Las Vegas
13
WK
11
Fri, Feb 10
FINAL
Toronto
11
Georgia
10
Fri, Feb 10
FINAL
Saskatchewan
6
Calgary
13
Sat, Feb 11
FINAL
Halifax
14
Rochester
16
Sat, Feb 11
FINAL
Albany
12
New York
14
Sat, Feb 11
FINAL
Vancouver
13
Panther City
14
Sat, Feb 11
FINAL
Colorado
9
Calgary
13
WK
12
Fri, Feb 17
FINAL
Calgary
14
Vancouver
9
Fri, Feb 17
FINAL
Saskatchewan
16
San Diego
11
Sat, Feb 18
FINAL
Georgia
7
Toronto
16
Sat, Feb 18
FINAL
Las Vegas
12
Albany
10
Sat, Feb 18
FINAL/OT
Philadelphia
12
Buffalo
13
Sat, Feb 18
FINAL
Colorado
7
Panther City
13
Sun, Feb 19
FINAL
New York
12
Halifax
13
WK
13
Fri, Feb 24
FINAL
Panther City
12
Colorado
14
Fri, Feb 24
FINAL
Calgary
9
Las Vegas
11
Sat, Feb 25
FINAL/OT
New York
10
Rochester
11
Sat, Feb 25
FINAL
Albany
4
Georgia
20
Sat, Feb 25
FINAL
Vancouver
16
Saskatchewan
12
WK
14
Fri, Mar 3
FINAL
Buffalo
10
Halifax
9
Sat, Mar 4
FINAL
New York
12
Philadelphia
19
Sat, Mar 4
FINAL
Las Vegas
12
San Diego
15
Sat, Mar 4
FINAL
Rochester
8
Toronto
9
Sat, Mar 4
FINAL/OT
Georgia
9
Albany
8
Sat, Mar 4
FINAL
Saskatchewan
10
Panther City
16
Mon, Mar 6
FINAL
Toronto
10
Philadelphia
11
WK
15
Fri, Mar 10
FINAL/OT
Halifax
9
Buffalo
10
Fri, Mar 10
FINAL
Calgary
16
Colorado
10
Sat, Mar 11
FINAL
Albany
6
Toronto
12
Sat, Mar 11
FINAL
Philadelphia
10
New York
13
Sat, Mar 11
FINAL
San Diego
12
Saskatchewan
11
Sat, Mar 11
FINAL
Vancouver
14
Las Vegas
5
Sun, Mar 12
FINAL
Rochester
19
Georgia
18
WK
16
Fri, Mar 17
FINAL
Saskatchewan
6
Calgary
11
Fri, Mar 17
FINAL
San Diego
16
Vancouver
9
Sat, Mar 18
FINAL
Georgia
13
Philadelphia
12
Sat, Mar 18
FINAL
Toronto
12
Halifax
14
Sat, Mar 18
FINAL
Albany
10
New York
13
Sat, Mar 18
FINAL
Colorado
13
Buffalo
8
Sat, Mar 18
FINAL
Las Vegas
8
Panther City
11
Sun, Mar 19
FINAL/OT
Philadelphia
9
Rochester
8
WK
17
Fri, Mar 24
20:30:00
San Diego
Panther City
Sat, Mar 25
19:00:00
Toronto
Albany
Sat, Mar 25
19:00:00
Halifax
Philadelphia
Sat, Mar 25
19:30:00
Georgia
New York
Sat, Mar 25
21:30:00
Calgary
Saskatchewan
Sat, Mar 25
22:00:00
Buffalo
San Diego
Sat, Mar 25
22:00:00
Colorado
Vancouver
Sat, Mar 25
22:30:00
Rochester
Las Vegas
WK
18
Fri, Mar 31
19:00:00
New York
Georgia
Fri, Mar 31
21:00:00
Las Vegas
Colorado
Fri, Mar 31
22:00:00
Calgary
San Diego
Sat, Apr 1
19:00:00
Buffalo
Toronto
Sat, Apr 1
20:00:00
Albany
Panther City
Sat, Apr 1
21:30:00
Vancouver
Saskatchewan
Sun, Apr 2
13:00:00
Georgia
Halifax
Sun, Apr 2
18:00:00
Rochester
Philadelphia
WK
19
Sat, Apr 8
19:00:00
Albany
Rochester
Sat, Apr 8
19:00:00
Saskatchewan
Georgia
Sat, Apr 8
21:00:00
Panther City
Calgary
Sat, Apr 8
21:00:00
Vancouver
Colorado
Sat, Apr 8
22:30:00
San Diego
Las Vegas
WK
20
Fri, Apr 14
21:00:00
Las Vegas
Calgary
Fri, Apr 14
21:00:00
San Diego
Colorado
Sat, Apr 15
19:00:00
Philadelphia
Toronto
Sat, Apr 15
19:00:00
Georgia
Albany
Sat, Apr 15
19:30:00
New York
Buffalo
Sat, Apr 15
21:30:00
Halifax
Saskatchewan
Sat, Apr 15
22:00:00
Panther City
Vancouver
WK
21
Fri, Apr 21
20:30:00
Calgary
Panther City
Sat, Apr 22
18:00:00
New York
Halifax
Sat, Apr 22
19:00:00
Georgia
Rochester
Sat, Apr 22
20:00:00
Toronto
Buffalo
Sat, Apr 22
21:30:00
Colorado
Saskatchewan
Sat, Apr 22
22:00:00
Las Vegas
San Diego
Sun, Apr 23
15:00:00
Philadelphia
Albany
WK
22
Sat, Apr 29
19:00:00
Philadelphia
Rochester
Sat, Apr 29
19:00:00
Buffalo
Albany
Sat, Apr 29
19:00:00
Halifax
Georgia
Sat, Apr 29
22:00:00
Colorado
San Diego
Sat, Apr 29
22:00:00
New York
Vancouver
Sat, Apr 29
22:30:00
Saskatchewan
Las Vegas
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Reclaim Glory: Rock At Knighthawks Tonight For Game 1

The Rochester Knighthawks welcome the NLL’s top-seeded team in the Toronto Rock to Blue Cross Arena for Game 1 of the East Division Finals on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ET. Watch live on TSN4 & TSN GO (Canada) and ESPN3 (U.S.) along with MSG (DIRECTV 634 & Verizon FiOS 577), NESNplus (DIRECTV 628-1 & Dish 5434), Altitude (DIRECTV 681 & Dish 413) & ASN (Asia). Viewers outside North America and Asia can watch by clicking here.

Last Friday, the three-time defending champion Knighthawks defeated the Buffalo Bandits 14-11 at home to secure their spot in the next round of the NLL Playoffs against the Rock.

“It was one of those typical Buffalo-Rochester battles right from the get-go,” said Knighthawks head coach Mike Hasen. “When they did get close, our guys stepped up and had an answer right away to widen that gap a little bit. The final five minutes, our defense stepped up and shut them down which was great to see.”

Rochester goes from hosting one rival to the next with Toronto headed to town. The Knighthawks know that they’ll have the “7th Man” and the Sea of Teal behind them the entire game.

“The plan was to take care of business,” said Knighthawks defenseman Mike Kirk about the East Semi win. “Celebrate quickly and turn all of our focus on to Toronto. That’s what we’ve done this past week and try to get ready. They’re a veteran team. They’ve won a lot of big games so we have our hands full coming up this weekend with them.”

“For us, it’s the best place to play,” Hasen said. “The fans are there loud and proud for us. It’s also a comfort level. To have two weeks where we’re back home playing two tough games, hopefully it’ll help us out a little bit here.”

A big part of the Knighthawks’ victory over the Bandits was the ability of the defense to get into shooting and passing lanes to slow down a red-hot offense. That will need to continue against the Rock on Saturday night for a Rochester victory.

“That’s our plan,” Kirk said. “Our plan is to get in as many lanes as possible, knock down as many shots as possible. Let ‘Vno’ (Matt Vinc) see the ball. But I think last game, our offense took over and we fed off that. They were able to get some timely goals for us, and after Buffalo scored first, we were able to settle in. That’s what we’re going to have to do this weekend against Toronto. They’ve a very dangerous offense now with Colin [Doyle] back and [Rob] Hellyer back. [Brett] Hickey can’t miss. They’ve got a very veteran group up there, so we’re going to have to do our best these next two games to get in front of as many shots as we can.”

“They’re veteran guys that understand what it takes,” Hasen said about the Toronto offense. “They’re just going to make it a lot tougher on us to do what we do. Every time they’ve got guys on the offensive side of the ball, they’re dynamite. They push the ball well in transition… We’ll have our hands full to say the least. We’ve just got to be prepared and ready to go for a full 60.”

A strong start can make all the difference especially in the playoffs and twice as much so when a team is at home.

“You want to get the first one in,” Hasen said. “You want to try and ride that momentum, ride the wave of your fans… When our fans are cheering loud for us, we feed off that. We get them in the game nice and early and keep them there, we’ll see where it goes from there.”

While four teams saddled up for the single-elimination round last weekend, the Rock took to the sidelines and keenly awaited the result of the East Semifinal game.

The opponent was decided and the match was set. The final obstacle standing the way of the Rock’s first Champion’s Cup Finals berth since 2011 is perhaps their most challenging adversary. Rochester snagged two of three games against Toronto this season, an effort not matched by any other team.

“They’re good because they are well-coached, they have a veteran group,” said Rock head coach John Lovell. “They have one of the best goaltenders in the league. There are not too many areas of their game that’s weak and they don’t do anything to beat themselves.”

Toronto met Rochester in their season opener and came away with a hard-fought 13-12 victory. The win started what eventually became a 3-0 run to start the 2015 campaign, a big surprise to many considering the harsh luck of losing Colin Doyle and Garrett Billings to injury. With a dab of poetic justice, Rochester stopped Toronto’s run, handing them their only loss over the first nine weeks of the NLL season. In the teams’ final meeting in Week 14, Rochester manned up on defense and earned a 11-7 decision.

“We had three good games with them this year, they won two of them,” said Lovell, who as the Rock’s coach will have his second crack at a playoff run. “We beat them in their building and we played another good game in their building.”

“In our building, we chased them a little bit. They are not a team you can chase, you have to go with them blow-for-blow,” he said.

Nevertheless, Toronto now boasts a completely healthy lineup heading into Saturday night’s matchup. Colin Doyle (rotator cuff) and Rob Hellyer (upper-body) each made their long-awaited returns to the Rock lineup against the New England Blackwolves two weeks ago. The two combined for a very modest nine points, but a level fairness must be acknowledged. The two also combined for 21 man-games missed.

“Colin has been a great player in the league for many years, there’s no question about his leadership,” said Lovell. “It was good to get a game under his belt against New England.”

“Rob Hellyer was having an outstanding season before he went down, he’s 100 percent healthy now and he’s ready to go,” said Lovell.

Not to be forgotten is Toronto’s finely tuned-defense and transition, a successful system completed by committee. Perhaps the Rock’s most sparkling standout however is veteran Brodie Merrill (151 loose balls), who is sure to enter the 2015 playoffs with added motivation. The 11-year veteran has yet to hoist the Champion’s Cup.

“This is where we want to be and it’s a great opportunity for us,” Merrill said. “We worked pretty hard to be in this position.”

By Jeremy Pike (@KnighthawksBeat) & Justin Millerson (@RockBeatToronto) for NLL.com. Photo by Micheline Veluvolu.

NLL