Saskatchewan Rush

The Saskatchewan Rush are a professional box lacrosse team based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. Formerly the Edmonton Rush, they are members of the Western Division of the National Lacrosse League (NLL) and play their home games on Co-op Field at SaskTel Centre. The Rush have won the Champion's Cup twice since their move to Saskatchewan: their first season in 2016, and again in 2018.

Saskatchewan Rush
SportBox Lacrosse
Founded2016
LeagueNational Lacrosse League
DivisionWest
Based inSaskatoon, Saskatchewan
ArenaSaskTel Centre
ColoursGreen, black, white
OwnerMike Priestner
Head coachJimmy Quinlan
General managerDerek Keenan
Championships(2) 2016, 2018
Division titles(5) 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020
Local mediaCKBL-FM
Websitesaskrush.com

History

The Edmonton Rush made their debut as an expansion team in the 2006 NLL season and twice reached the NLL final. After losing in 2012, they won the Champion's Cup in 2015.[1] However, the team struggled to draw fans, faced competition from the Edmonton Oil Kings junior hockey team for fans, and were denied the ability to promote the Rush branding within Rexall Place by the Edmonton Oilers.[1] Lacking any agreement with the City of Edmonton to play at its replacement, Rogers Place, owner Bruce Urban opted to relocate for the 2016 NLL season.[2]

In 2017, the team reached a five-year sponsorship deal with Saskatoon Co-op, under which the team's venue is referred to as Co-op Field at SaskTel Centre during Rush games.[3]

On May 10, 2021, the team announced that it had been sold to Mike Priestner, owner of the Saskatoon Blades of the Western Hockey League.[4]

Current roster

Active (21-man) roster Inactive roster Coaches
Goaltenders
  •  0 Canada Alex Buque
  • 46 Canada Laine Hruska
  • 61 Canada Eric Penney
Defensemen
  • 77 Canada Ryan Barnable
  •  2 Canada Matt Beers
  • 23 Canada Ryan Dilks
  • 70 Canada Holden Garlent
  •  3 Canada Bobby Kidd III
  • 13 Canada Connor McClelland
  •  6 Canada Isaac Ngyou
  •  4 Canada Kyle Rubisch (A)
  • 95 Canada Jerrett Smith
Forwards
  • 17 Canada Robert Church
  • 32 Canada Matthew Dinsdale
  • 25 Canada Ryan Keenan
  • 41 Canada Dan Lintner
  • 33 Canada Austin Madronic
  • 11 Canada Mike Mallory
  • 42 Canada Mark Matthews (A)
  •  9 Canada Clark Walter
Transition
  • 43 Canada Jake Boudreau
  • 22 Canada Wyatt Haux
  •  8 Canada Mike Messenger
  • 72 Canada Jeremy Searle
Head Coach
  • Jimmy Quinlan
Assistant Coaches
  • Cam Sedgwick - Offensive Coach
  • Jeremy Tallevi - Defensive Coach

Legend
  • * Suspended list
  • (C) Captain
  • (A) Alternate captain

Roster updated 2022-11-01
NLL Transactions

All-time record

Season Division W–L Finish Home Road GF GA Coach Playoffs Avg Attendance
2016Western13–51st7–26–3233190Derek KeenanWon NLL championship11,736
2017Western12–61st8–14–5231212Derek KeenanLost NLL Finals14,921
2018Western14–41st6–38–1254196Derek KeenanWon NLL championship14,639
2019Western11–71st7–24–5222202Derek KeenanLost Division Semi-finals13,459
2020Western7–3*1st2–35–011193Derek KeenanNo Playoffs Held12,007
2022 Western 8-10 4th 6-3 2-7 196 194 Jeff McComb / Derek Keenan, Jimmy Quinlan** Did Not Qualify 8,743
2023 Western 8-10 5th 5-4 3-6 204 212 Jimmy Quinlan Did Not Qualify 8,606
Total7 seasons73–45 41–1832–271,4511,299  12,016
Playoff Totals4 appearances9-4 6–23–2171146 2 championships13,425

*2020 season ended in March 2020 because of COVID-19
**Before the 2022 season Derek Keenan stepped down as head coach. New hire Jeff McComb would go on to be fired mid-season. General Manager Derek Keenan and Offensive Coach Jimmy Quinlan became associate head coaches.

Playoff results

Season Game Visiting Home
2016 West Division Finals Game 1 Saskatchewan 16 Calgary 10
West Division Finals Game 2 Calgary 9 Saskatchewan 12
NLL championship game 1 Saskatchewan 11 Buffalo 9
NLL championship game 2 Buffalo 10 Saskatchewan 11
2017 West Division Finals Game 1 Saskatchewan 18 Colorado 9
West Division Finals Game 2 Colorado 10 Saskatchewan 11
NLL Finals Game 1 Saskatchewan 14 Georgia 18
NLL Finals Game 2 Georgia 15 OT Saskatchewan 14
2018 West Division Finals Calgary 13 Saskatchewan 15
NLL Finals Game 1 Rochester 9 Saskatchewan 16
NLL Finals Game 2 Saskatchewan 8 Rochester 13
NLL Finals Game 3 Rochester 10 Saskatchewan 15
2019 West Division Semi-finals Colorado 11 OT Saskatchewan 10

Head coaching history

Note: This list does not include head coaches from the Edmonton Rush.

# Name Term Regular Season Playoffs
GC W L W% GC W L W%
1Derek Keenan2016-2020825725.6951394.692
2 Jeff McComb2022 14 4 10 .285 - - - -
3 Derek Keenan, Jimmy Quinlan 2022 4 4 0 1.000 - - - -
4 Jimmy Quinlan 2023- 18 8 10 .444 - - - -

Draft history

NLL entry draft

First-round selections

  • 2015: None
  • 2016: Ryan Keenan (1st overall), Michael Messenger (3rd overall)
  • 2017: None
  • 2018: Connor Robinson (5th overall)
  • 2019: Holden Garlent (4th overall), Justin Robinson (9th overall), Tanner Thomson (16th overall)
  • 2020: Marshall Powless (7th overall), Connor McClelland (12th overall)
  • 2021: Jake Boudreau (7th overall), Ryan Barnable (8th overall)
  • 2022: Austin Madronic (6th overall)

Broadcasting

The Rush reached deals with Saskatoon Media Group's CKBL-FM and SaskTel to broadcast its 2016 playoff games.[5] In the subsequent season, the team began to carry radio broadcasts of all games on its sister station CJMK-FM, with Tanner Fetch as play-by-play announcer. The team returned to CKBL-FM for 2018–19 with Dave Thomas as the radio voice of the Rush.[6][7][8][9][10]

As part of its exclusive broadcast rights to the league in the 2018–19 season, all Rush telecasts moved to the streaming service B/R Live,[11] with Ryan Flaherty on play-by-play, former Vancouver Stealth play-by-play announcer Jake Elliott on colour, and local radio personality Daniella Ponticelli as reporter.[12][13] As of the 2022 season, TSN carries all Rush games on either television or streaming as part of its national broadcast rights to the NLL.[14][15]

References

  1. Gregor, Jason (2015-07-21). "Urban explains why Rush are leaving Edmonton". Edmonton Journal. Archived from the original on 2015-07-22. Retrieved 2015-07-21.
  2. "NLL's Rush leaving Edmonton for Saskatoon". TSN.ca. 2015-07-21. Retrieved 2015-07-21.
  3. "Saskatchewan Rush ink five-year partnership with Co-op". Global News. 2017-09-29. Retrieved 2019-01-12.
  4. "Saskatchewan Rush lacrosse team bought by owners of Saskatoon Blades". CBC News. 2021-05-10. Retrieved 2021-05-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. "In Brief: Saturday's Saskatchewan Rush game on TV; Bowling Silver". Saskatoon Star-Phoenix. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
  6. "SaskatoonHomepage.ca - Rush Reports". www.saskatoonhomepage.ca. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  7. "Tanner Fetch ,Professional Sports Broadcaster for the National Lacrosse League, The Saskatchewan Rush, CBS Sports and 98 COOL FM". Linkedlin.
  8. nurun.com. "Waiting game for Casey Guerin". Peterborough Examiner. Retrieved 2016-06-07.
  9. "Saskatchewan Rush Partner With Saskatoon Media Group". nll.com.
  10. "Dave Thomas (@wwsportsdave) | Twitter". twitter.com.
  11. "National Lacrosse League Partners with Turner Sports' New Streaming Service "Bleacher Report Live" to Stream Live and On-Demand NLL Games". NLL. 27 March 2018. Retrieved 2019-01-07.
  12. "Sask Rush names play-by-play broadcasters". Clark's Crossing Gazette.
  13. "Welcome to the Team, Daniella!". Saskatchewan Rush Lacrosse. 18 October 2018.
  14. "National Lacrosse League secures Canadian rights deal with TSN". SportsPro. 2021-07-12. Retrieved 2021-12-03.
  15. "National Lacrosse League and TSN Announce Landmark Multi-Year Partnership For Canada - TSN.ca". TSN.ca. 2021-07-08. Retrieved 2022-01-31.
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