2010 World Lacrosse Championship

2010 World Lacrosse Championship
Tournament details
Host country England
Venue(s)Armitage Center, Manchester
Dates15–24 July
Teams29
Final positions
Champions  United States (9th title)
Runners-up  Canada
Third place  Australia
Fourth place Japan
Tournament statistics
Games played101
Goals scored2,062 (20.42 per game)
Awards
MVP Paul Rabil

The 2010 World Lacrosse Championship was held between 15–24 July. This international men's field lacrosse tournament organized by the Federation of International Lacrosse took place in Manchester, United Kingdom. This was the third time that the tournament was played in Greater Manchester, after the 1978 and 1994 championships.

The United States captured their ninth gold medal, defeating Canada 12–10 in the championship game.[1] Paul Rabil of Team USA was named tournament MVP.[2] Australia earned its fourth-straight bronze medal by defeating Japan 16 –9.

A record 29 nations competed at the event, eight more than the 2006 WLC in London, Ontario. The 101 games were held at the Armitage Centre, Manchester University's sports grounds.[3][4]

For the first time, a FIL World Lacrosse Festival ran alongside the world championships from 17 to 22 July. 48 teams from around the world competed in 8 divisions from U16 to Grand Masters.[5]

Iroquois passport controversy

The Iroquois Nationals' participation in the championships was prevented in a dispute over their passports.[6] The team sought to travel on Haudenosaunee passports, but the United Kingdom government would not allow it because of increased passport security requirements.[7] The United States Department of State initially also refused to allow the passports, but later granted the team a one-time waiver to travel to the tournament. However, the U.K. would not issue the team visas.[8]

Initially, the Iroquois were hoping to be able to travel, and agreed to forfeit their first game against England. Because it was the opening game of the tournament, organizers arranged for the host team to play Germany in an exhibition match instead.[9] However, just before game time, the FIL decided to move Germany to the Blue Division and the Iroquois to the Plum Division, making the England-Germany match an official one.[10] The Iroquois team did not officially withdraw from the tournament, and would have been allowed to play its remaining games should it have resolved its passport difficulties in time.[11] On 18 July, the FIL announced that the competition schedule had progressed too far to allow Iroquois to compete in the tournament.[12] Each of the other three Plum Division teams were given 1–0 forfeit victories over the Iroquois team.

Pool play

For pool play, nations were separated into seven divisions according to strength, the top six teams were placed in the Blue Division, and the other teams were put in six divisions of four. Each of the thirty nations were eligible to win the championship. Each division played round-robin games for ranking to determine which tournament brackets they would be placed in.

Blue Division

The Blue Division originally consisted of the top six teams from the 2006 World Lacrosse Championship, but Germany was moved up to replace the missing Iroquois team. The first and second place teams from the Blue Division advanced to the tournament semifinals. The third and fourth place teams advanced to the quarterfinals. The fifth and sixth place teams were placed into the 5th through 8th place classification bracket.

Canada's 10–9 win over the United States marked the first time that the American team lost a preliminary round game in any world championship, and only its third loss overall.[13] Both teams ended up advancing to the semifinals.

Japan, Australia, and England all finished 2–3 in the Blue Division and 1–1 in head-to-head matches against each other. All three games between the teams were close, with two going into overtime. Japan and Australia advanced to the quarterfinals based on goal differential in those matches.

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1  Canada 5 5 0 86 28 +58 Advanced to
semifinals
2  United States 5 4 1 88 29 +59
3  Japan 5 2[a] 3 47 67 −20 Advanced to
quarterfinals
4  Australia 5 2[a] 3 51 63 −12
5  England 5 2[a] 3 44 59 −15 Advanced to
5th–8th place games
6 Germany 5 0 5 24 96 −72
Source:
Notes:
  1. ^ a b c Goal differential in matches between tied teams: Japan +1; Australia 0; England −1
15 July 2010
England  12–3 Germany
16 July 2010
Canada  17–4  Japan
United States  21–5  Australia
17 July 2010
Japan  15–9 Germany
Australia  10–8 (OT)  England
United States  9–10  Canada
18 July 2010
England  13–12 (OT)  Japan
Germany 4–22  United States
Canada  19–5  Australia
19 July 2010
Germany 4–23  Canada
Australia  9–11  Japan
United States  17–5  England
20 July 2010
Japan  5–19  United States
Australia  22–4 Germany
Canada  17–6  England
Key to colours in division tables
Six division winners and top two runners-up
advanced to the upper bracket
Four remaining runners-up and top four third-placed teams
advanced to the middle bracket
Two remaining third-placed teams and six last placed teams
advanced to the lower bracket

Orange Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1 Ireland 3 3 0 60 10 +50 Semifinals
2 Slovakia 3 2 1 21 33 −12 Quarterfinals
3  Switzerland 3 1 2 15 32 −17
4 South Korea 3 0 3 15 38 −23 5th–8th place
Source:
16 July 2010
Slovakia 10–4  Switzerland
Ireland 21–3 South Korea
17 July 2010
Switzerland 10–6 South Korea
Slovakia 4–23 Ireland
18 July 2010
South Korea 6–7 Slovakia
Switzerland 3–16 Ireland

Plum Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1  Spain 3 3 0 28 22 +6 Semifinals
2 Hong Kong 3 2 1 25 24 +1 Quarterfinals
3 Norway 3 1 2 17 21 −4
4  Haudenosaunee 3 0 3 0 3 −3 5th–8th place
Source:
16 July 2010
Haudenosaunee  0–1  Spain
Hong Kong 10–8 Norway
17 July 2010
Norway 8–11  Spain
Hong Kong 1–0  Haudenosaunee
18 July 2010
Norway 1–0  Haudenosaunee
Spain  16–14 Hong Kong
  • Iroquois forfeited their three games due to not being able to travel to the tournament.

Yellow Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1 Finland 3 3 0 37 18 +19 Semifinals
2 Poland 3 2 1 42 19 +23 Quarterfinals
3 Bermuda 3 1 2 18 35 −17
4 Denmark 3 0 3 15 40 −25 5th–8th place
Source:
16 July 2010
Bermuda 2–16 Poland
Finland 14–2 Denmark
17 July 2010
Poland 15–5 Denmark
Bermuda 5–11 Finland
18 July 2010
Poland 11–12 (OT) Finland
Denmark 8–11 Bermuda

Red Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1 Czech Republic 3 3 0 47 10 +37 Semifinals
2 Sweden 3 2 1 42 14 +28
3 Italy 3 1 2 18 36 −18 5th–8th place
4 Mexico 3 0 3 6 53 −47
Source:
16 July 2010
Italy 3–17 Czech Republic
Sweden 20–2 Mexico
17 July 2010
Sweden 16–3 Italy
Mexico 1–21 Czech Republic
18 July 2010
Mexico 3–12 Italy
Czech Republic 9–6 Sweden

Turquoise Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1  Scotland 3 3 0 57 14 +43 Semifinals
2 New Zealand 3 2 1 37 26 +11 Quarterfinals
3 Latvia 3 1 2 25 37 −12
4 France 3 0 3 11 53 −42 5th–8th place
Source:
16 July 2010
New Zealand 18–3 France
Scotland  20–4 Latvia
17 July 2010
New Zealand 8–18  Scotland
France 6–16 Latvia
18 July 2010
France 2–19  Scotland
Latvia 5–11 New Zealand

Grey Division

Pos Team Pld W L GF GA GD Qualification
1 Wales 3 3 0 49 12 +37 Semifinals
2 Netherlands 3 2 1 55 18 +37
3 Austria 3 1 2 21 41 −20 5th–8th place
4 Argentina 3 0 3 11 65 −54
Source:
16 July 2010
Argentina 5–16 Austria
Netherlands 9–10 Wales
17 July 2010
Argentina 3–29 Netherlands
Austria 0–19 Wales
18 July 2010
Wales 20–3 Argentina
Austria 5–17 Netherlands

Intermediate Round

Starting on 19 July, all teams except for the Blue Division moved to one of three intermediate brackets: either the upper, middle, or lower bracket.

Upper bracket

The upper bracket included the six first-place finishers from each division as well as the top two second-place finishers. These teams were still eligible for the World Championship and could have finished anywhere from 1st to 16th in the tournament. By winning two games in the upper bracket, Scotland and Netherlands advanced to the quarterfinals.

 
July 19July 20
 
      
 
 
 
 
Czech Republic 14
 
 
 
Scotland 17
 
Scotland 15
 
 
 
Ireland 9
 
Ireland 12
 
 
Sweden 7
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Czech Republic 8
 
 
Sweden 15
 
July 19July 20
 
      
 
 
 
 
Finland 7
 
 
 
Wales 9
 
Wales 8
 
 
 
Netherlands 9
 
Netherlands 16
 
 
Spain 1
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Finland 21
 
 
Spain 4

Middle bracket

The middle bracket included the remaining four second-place finishers and the top four third-place finishers. These teams could have finished anywhere from 9th to 24th in the final rankings.

 
19 July20 July
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Switzerland 3
 
 
 
New Zealand 11
 
New Zealand 16
 
 
 
Latvia 3
 
Hong Kong 10
 
 
Latvia 12
 
Third place
 
 
20 July – 12:30
 
 
 Switzerland 11
 
 
Hong Kong 7
 
19 July20 July
 
      
 
 
 
 
Norway 4
 
 
 
Slovakia 14
 
Slovakia 6
 
 
 
Poland 11
 
Poland14
 
 
Bermuda 10
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Norway 4
 
 
Bermuda 8

Lower bracket

The lower bracket included the remaining two third-place finishers and the six fourth-place finishers. These teams could have finished no higher than 17th in the final rankings.

 
19 July20 July
 
      
 
 
 
 
Mexico 9
 
 
 
South Korea10
 
South Korea 8
 
 
 
Austria 13
 
France 4
 
 
Austria 15
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Mexico 6
 
 
France 10
 
19 July20 July
 
      
 
 
 
 
Denmark
 
 
 
Bye
 
Denmark 3
 
 
 
Italy 10
 
Italy 13
 
 
Argentina 9
 
Third place
 
 
 
 
 
Argentina
 
 
 

Play-in games

On 21 July, Finland beat Poland 13–7 to advance to the 9th–12th place bracket, sending Poland to the 13th–16th place bracket. Italy beat Switzerland 7–6 to advance to the 17th–20th place bracket, while Switzerland entered the 21st–24th place bracket.

Championship bracket

Quarterfinals
21 July
Semifinals
22 July
Gold medal game
24 July
 Canada15
 Australia 20 Australia6
 Scotland11 Canada10
 United States12
 United States20
 Japan 14 Japan5Bronze medal game
Netherlands8
 Australia16
 Japan9

Classification brackets

5th to 8th place

 
22 July5th place
 
      
 
 
 
 
England 23
 
 
 
Scotland 9
 
England 14
 
 
 
Germany 9
 
Germany 14
 
 
Netherlands 1
 
7th place
 
 
 
 
 
Scotland 11
 
 
Netherlands 10

9th to 12th place

 
22 July9th place
 
      
 
 
 
 
Wales 5
 
 
 
Sweden 9
 
Sweden 8
 
 
 
Ireland 15
 
Ireland 17
 
 
Finland 6
 
11th place
 
 
 
 
 
Wales 10
 
 
Finland 5

13th to 16th place

 
22 July13th place
 
      
 
 
 
 
 Spain 11
 
 
 
Poland 15
 
Poland 3
 
 
 
Czech Republic 21
 
New Zealand 8
 
 
Czech Republic 13
 
15th place
 
 
 
 
 
 Spain 5
 
 
New Zealand 23

17th to 20th place

 
22 July17th place
 
      
 
 
 
 
Latvia 7
 
 
 
Bermuda 8
 
Bermuda 7
 
 
 
Slovakia 12
 
Slovakia 10
 
 
Italy 4
 
19th place
 
 
 
 
 
Latvia 8
 
 
Italy 13

21st to 24th place

 
22 July21st place
 
      
 
 
 
 
Austria 10
 
 
 
Norway 4
 
Austria 9
 
 
 
Hong Kong 8
 
Hong Kong 15
 
 
 Switzerland 8
 
23rd place
 
 
 
 
 
Norway 0
 
 
 Switzerland 2

25th to 28th place

 
22 July25th place
 
      
 
 
 
 
South Korea 16
 
 
 
Argentina 5
 
South Korea 12
 
 
 
Denmark 10
 
France 7
 
 
Denmark 9
 
27th place
 
 
 
 
 
Argentina 8
 
 
France 10

Final standings

Rank Team Record
 United States 6–1
 Canada 6–1
 Australia 4–4
4  Japan 3–5
5  England 4–3
6 Germany 1–6
7  Scotland 6–2
8 Netherlands 5–3
9 Ireland 6–1
10 Sweden 4–3
11 Wales 5–2
12 Finland 5–3
13 Czech Republic 5–2
14 Poland 5–3
15 New Zealand 5–2
16 Spain 3–4
17 Slovakia 5–2
18 Bermuda 3–4
19 Italy 5–3
20 Latvia 2–5
21 Austria 5–2
22 Hong Kong 3–4
23  Switzerland 3–5
24 Norway 1–6
25 South Korea 3–4
26 Denmark 1–5
27 France 2–5
28 Argentina 0–6
29 Mexico 0–5
 Haudenosaunee 0–3

Awards

All World Team

The Federation of International Lacrosse named an All World Team at the conclusion of the championship, along with four other individual awards.[14]

Goalkeeper

Chris Sanderson

Defence

Brodie Merrill
Ryan McClay
Kyle Sweeney

Midfield

Paul Rabil
Max Seibald
Leigh Perham

Attack

John Grant, Jr.
Brendan Mundorf
Mike Leveille

Best Positional Players

Chris Sanderson - Goalkeeper
Brodie Merrill - Defence
Paul Rabil - Midfield
John Grant, Jr. - Attack

Tournament MVP

Paul Rabil - Midfield

See also

References

  1. ^ Burns, Sean (23 July 2010). "FIL World Championships: USA-Canada gold medal in-game blog". Inside Lacrosse. Retrieved 12 November 2017.
  2. ^ "FIL World Championships: USA Takes Gold With 12–10 Win Over Canada". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 17 September 2010. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  3. ^ "How Manchester took sport of lacrosse to its heart". BBC – Manchester. 12 July 2010. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  4. ^ "Lacrosse World Championships 2010". Activity Workshop. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  5. ^ "FIL Festival Team Roster". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 19 November 2010.
  6. ^ Marshall, Tabitha (15 August 2013). "The Iroquois Nationals and the 2010 World Lacrosse Championships". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  7. ^ Kaplan, Thomas (16 July 2010). "Iroquois Defeated by Passport Dispute". New York Times. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  8. ^ Gross, Samanatha (14 July 2010). "UK won't let Iroquois lacrosse team go to tourney". San Diego Union-Tribune. AP. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
  9. ^ Goulding, Neil (15 July 2010). "England get revenge over Germany for World Cup defeat". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
  10. ^ Goulding, Neil (15 July 2010). "Iroquois forced to forfeit opening match against England". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 18 July 2010.
  11. ^ Goulding, Neil. "Germany promoted to the Blue Division with Iroquois still missing". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011.
  12. ^ "Official statement on behalf of organizers" (Press release). 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 2 September 2011.
  13. ^ DaSilva, Matt (17 July 2010). "Canada does it again, downs Team USA". Lacrosse Magazine. Archived from the original on 25 July 2011.
  14. ^ "Award Winners". 2010 WLC. Archived from the original on 18 October 2010.