Hey Bench Warmers, have I got an epic for you this week!
I've gotten requests for this game in the past and here it is, donated by JSap many years ago, this is the
1989 Major Indoor Lacrosse League championship game. This game is between the defending
MILL Champions, the
New York Saints and the
Philadelphia Wings from the
Spectrum.
Larry Rosen and
Penn U coach
Tony Seaman are your broadcast team. The entire game, pre game and post game celebrations are featured in this video.
The 1989 MILL Finals is arguably the most important game in pro box lacrosse history for a number of reasons:
1. It was the first year the MILL hooked up with
Coors Light, their biggest major sponsor to date and a well attended championship game that went down to the wire was exactly what the league needed at that moment after 2 lacklustre championship games in the previous 2 years.
2.
The league had expanded by 2 teams in 1989 and needed a showpiece game to sell the game to these markets and future expansion cities.
3. The 2 previous startup leagues, the
USFL and the
WBL, (
Women's pro
Basketball League,) died after 3 seasons and getting to that 4th season would go a long way towards turning the corner for the league's longer term survival.
4. This game would be used by the MILL to sell everything from highlight tapes, the game itself in expansion markets, advertisers and
TV networks in hopes of landing a TV deal.
This was the
Wings' first shot at an indoor lacrosse championship since the
Original Wings lost in the
1974 NLL Finals. It wouldn't be even close to the last as they would win 5 more MILL/NLL championships with their last to date coming in
2001.
The Saints had a number of veteran players from the
1988 championship season on their roster including former
Wing Vinnie Pfeifer who started in goal in this game.
Larry Quinn, then considered the greatest goaltender in lacrosse history, played the second half for the
Saints. Don
Borges and
John Driscoll were the main scorers for them in this game.
The Wings boasted a lineup that fans of
the team still consider one of their greatest ever.
John Tucker,
Tony Resch,
Paul French, LOUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU Delligatti,
Brad Kotz,
Scott Gabrielsen,
Coach Dave Evans and of course
Kevin Bilger. This lineup would by and large be intact when they won it all again the next year in
1990.
Fast facts:
The Saints never led at any
point in the 2 playoff games they played in that year. Their only lead was an overtime winning goal, (in
DOUBLE OT,) that knocked the Turbos out in the semi-final game. Yet their +/- in the playoffs was dead even.
This was the first year that the MILL instituted the policy of teams with the higher attendance hosting playoff games. The Saints finished ahead of the
Detroit Turbos in the semi-final game but the game was played in
Detroit. The MILL would use this policy for the vast majority of their history.
Coach
Evans wore a
Guns N Roses button on his suit lapel for most of the season as
Welcome to the Jungle became their theme song during this period. The MILL would catch on to this and use the song in their advertisements for the next 3 years.
This is not the turf board the Original Wings used in the 70s. It is a new carpet.
Notice that there is no boards underneath it.
Yes, it's DIRECTLY OVER THE
ICE and the moisture is everywhere. It made for hazardous footing as did the many strips of the carpet.
They never could agree on the name of the
Championship Trophy. Rosen refers to it as the
North American Cup on some occasions and the
North AmeriCUP on others.
Future MILL announcers would do the same thing for years to come.
This was around the time the practice of the PA Announcer calling play by play at all times was in vogue and it is a practice many teams still use in the NLL today.
The Major Indoor Soccer League did this as well and personally I've never liked that.
Players made $
200 per game for 6 game seasons + playoffs back then. A huge paycut compared to the original NLL.
The MILL always claimed this game was a sellout but it was actually just over 16,
000, (over
1000 fans short of a sell out at the Spectrum.) That said, this was a record crowd for the league at that time.
Sit back and enjoy the MILL's first great championship game!
- published: 10 Dec 2013
- views: 2488