Native Sons (lacrosse)

Native Sons
Founded 2015
League Can-Am Senior B Lacrosse League
Based in Irving, New York
Arena Cattaraugus Community Center
Colours Gold & Black
President John Williams
Head coach Donnie Brooks
General Manager Shawn John
Website https://twitter.com/NativeSonsLax

The Native Sons Lacrosse Club are an American and Iroquois Senior "B" box lacrosse team from Irving, New York. The team play their home games at Cattaraugus Community Center and are affiliated with the Senaca Nation of Indians. Native Sons compete in the Can-Am League, sanctioned by First Nations Lacrosse Association.

Native Sons Junior affiliate are the Seneca WarChiefs of First Nations Junior B Lacrosse League.

History

Formed in 2015, Native Sons were welcomed to the league by losing four of their first five games. The remaining portion of their Can-Am season was another story as the Sons finished 11-5 (third place) in their first season. Native Sons swept the opening round series against Pinewoods Smoke then eliminating Newtown Golden Eagles in three-straight. Their season would come to an end in the finals losing to Onondaga Redhawks in five games.[1]

Year two saw the Native Sons finish just one point of the regular season championship with a record of 11-1-1. They would cruise through the opening two rounds eliminating Tonawanda Braves in two straight before eliminating Pinewoods Smoke in four games. The Can-Am finals would be a rematch against Onondaga, which Native Sons would avenge their loss of the previous season defeating the Redhawks in a four-game sweep. That earned the Native Sons a berth to the President's Cup.[2]

Native Sons would go 2-1 in Pool play and earn a spot in the President's Cup quarterfinals where they would defeat Calgary Mountaineers. A semifinal loss to St. Albert Miners would send the Sons to the Bronze Medal game where they were defeated by Brooklin Merchants.

Season-by-season

Season W L T Pts Result Playoff Result W L
2015 11 5 0 22 3rd of 9 Lost Finals vs Onondaga Redhawks 6 4
2016 11 1 1 23 2nd of 9 Won League 9 1

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.