2023 NLL Off-season Report, Part III

Welcome to part III of an ongoing series covering the off-season changes between the 2023 and 2024 NLL seasons. Part I was here, and Part II was here. I think we’re close enough to the beginning of actual training camps that unless there’s a flurry of movement, there won’t be a Part IV. Any further changes will be part of my season preview articles.

Trades

  • The Rock made two deals to improve their offense. Halifax sent Chris Boushy to the Rock for a first-round pick. This trade was announced less than ten minutes after I published my Off-Season Report, Part II. I like Boushy so as a Rock fan, I like this move. In a separate deal, the Rock re-acquired Dan Lintner and a 4th round pick for Jameson Dilks and a 2nd round pick. Dilks is from Hamilton so getting sent out west kind of sucks for him, but then again his brother Ryan is also from Hamilton and seems to have done well for himself out west. I initially thought that a silver lining for Jameson would be that he’d get to play with Ryan, but Ryan signed with the Warriors in the off-season so the Rush managed to replace one Dilks with another. Along with Boushy, Lintner gives the Rock another weapon on the right side, and some help on the right side was necessary with the retirement of Dan Dawson and the departure of Stephen Keogh.

Photo credit: Ryan Taplin

  • Albany trades a draft pick to the Riptide for Jordi Jones-Smith. Jones-Smith is listed as a transition player but his offensive numbers are pretty small for that position, having picked up a goal and three assists in 50 regular season games. Sounds more like a “stay-at-home defender” to me, but any defender that has played with the likes of Rubisch, Corbeil, Dilks, and Mydske (plus guys like Damon Edwards and Chad Cummings last year) probably learned a thing or two from some of the best.

Other

  • Last year’s Defender of the Year Latrell Harris will miss the entire regular season after hurting his knee in a PLL game, which required surgery to fix. That sucks.
  • Ryan Lee had surgery before the 2022 season, most of which he missed. He was able to return to help the Mammoth win a Championship and was able to play in 2023, but there have been some complications from that surgery which will require more surgery, so he will also miss all of the 2024 season. That sucks.
  • Stephen Keogh signed with Rochester. This sucks too, but only for Rock fans. Knighthawks fans are likely less disappointed.

The last couple of changes I will list here are each significant enough to warrant their own paragraphs rather than just bullet points.

Duch retires

First, another NLL legend has decided to hang ’em up as Rhys Duch announced his retirement. Duch was one of those “face of the franchise” type of players with the San Jose, Washington, and Vancouver Stealth teams and was either #1 or #2 in team scoring in every season he played for them. But when the team rebranded to the Vancouver Warriors, they decided to move on from Duch as well. He then played with Calgary, Halifax, Colorado, and Saskatchewan over the next four seasons and in Calgary in 2019, he managed to fulfil every athlete’s childhood dream by scoring the Championship-winning goal in overtime. He continued in Calgary in 2020 until the pandemic hit, but when the league returned in 2022, Duch had signed with the Thunderbirds, which is literally the furthest NLL city from his Victoria BC home.

But an injury caused him to play only two games in a Thunderbirds jersey and miss almost the entire 2022 season. He returned for 13 games (with Colorado and Sask) in 2023 but after scoring 30+ goals in nine straight seasons (and 40+ in four of them) to start his career, scoring 14 in 13 games was a bit of a drop. He retires at:

  • #12 in all-time NLL points
  • #15 in goals
  • #11 in assists
  • one of only thirteen players to hit 1000 career points

Congrats to Duch on a Hall of Fame career.

Schedule changes

The regular season schedule was announced, with a significant change: there are no more divisions, so all 15 teams are grouped together. The top 8 teams make the playoffs. This is how it was prior to the addition of divisions in the 2002 NLL season. Each team will play every other team at least once per season, which is fantastic, and every team visits every other city at least every other year. This is huge, for a few reasons. Here are just three of them:

  1. The crossover is gone, and there can be no complaining about teams making the playoffs undeservedly because they play in a “weaker” division.
  2. We could see former division rivals play each other in the Championship series. With the division format, it would be impossible for the Rock to play the Bandits in the finals, or the Rush to play the Roughnecks. Now it could happen.
  3. There are some teams that just don’t play each other very often for whatever reason. The Mammoth and Rock have both been in the NLL for 20 years and have played each other only 12 times. Similarly, the Bandits and the Rush (both Edmonton and Saskatchewan combined) have played 11 times in 17 seasons.

I’m sure that the question of “Why don’t we western teams get to see more of Jeff Teat” was involved in this decision.