Vancouver Sun

Late arrival provides bright spot for Stealth

Un-retired netminder has helped keep team’s slim playoff hopes alive

- STEVE EWEN

If you go off Tyler Richards’ play with the Vancouver Stealth this season, absence may also make the reflexes sharper and the angle play more astute, as well as growing the heart fonder.

Richards has been one of the bright spots in Vancouver’s 4-11 National Lacrosse League campaign so far, and he hadn’t planned on playing a stitch. The 29-year-old netminder from Coquitlam retired from boxla last May, citing worries about concussion issues, but got the itch to play again when this season started and ended up rejoining the Langley-based Stealth five games into their schedule after being cleared by doctors.

Richards was critical last Saturday, stoning Calgary Roughnecks Wesley Berg and Tyler Digby in the waning seconds with Vancouver trying to kill a Cliff Smith major penalty in what wound up as a 13-12 Stealth victory at Langley Events Centre.

The victory kept Vancouver’s slim playoff hopes alive. They need to run the table in their remaining three games, starting with Satur- day’s visit from the Saskatchew­an Rush (12-4) to the LEC (7 p.m., TSN 1410AM), and they also need the Roughnecks (7-10) to fall at home to the Toronto Rock (5-11) in their final regular-season game on April 30.

If both the Stealth and Roughnecks finish at 7-11, Vancouver nabs the third and final playoff post out of the West based on a better divisional record.

Richards, it would seem, is going to be crucial to any such run.

“He’s really good at coming across (the crease) to make saves,” said Vancouver forward Joel McCready. “He’s really athletic. He’s taken time to work on his game even more this year and you can tell how badly he wants it. He’s hungry.”

Richards has a 12.76 goalsagain­st average and .764 save percentage in 10 appearance­s for the Stealth this season.

His career numbers, through 110 regular-season games, are 12.15 and a .771; his GAA and save percentage last year were 14.57 and .739 in 14 contests.

When Richards came back to the Stealth in February, he contended that he was a changed person, that he felt he had been “pretty selfish,” in his previous seven seasons with the club and “sometimes you need to step away to see things clearly.”

Stealth captain Curtis Hodgson, a longtime Stealth defender who also suited up in the summers with Richards on the Western Lacrosse Associatio­n’s New Westminste­r Salmonbell­ies, says that Richards “is in the best mindset I’ve ever seen him in.”

The Rush moved from Edmonton to Saskatoon in the off-season after capturing the league championsh­ip.

They present a challenge more than the sheer obvious on Saturday. They own Vancouver’s first-round pick in the 2016 NLL entry draft, thanks to a January 2015 trade that sent left-hander Corey Small to Vancouver, so they have added incentive in seeing the Stealth fall in the standings.

Vancouver is currently last in the nine-team loop. Making the playoffs remains a lofty goal for the Stealth. McCready maintains that to have a chance at it they can’t get caught up in the big picture.

“We can’t look too far ahead. We need to be focused for the first quarter against the Rush and then take it five minutes at a time from there,” he said.

Notes: The Vancouver Stealth announced Tuesday that owner Denise Watkins, along with Saskatchew­an Rush owner Bruce Urban, will donate $5,000 each to the Lacrosse on the Move Fund if the Stealth’s game with the Rush on Saturday at the Langley Events Centre sells out. Saturday is Vancouver’s final home regular-season game. They’re last in the nine-team NLL in attendance, averaging crowds of 3,677 so far this season at the LEC, which lists capacity at 5,276.

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN ?? Vancouver Stealth goalie Tyler Richards has been a crucial part of the team this year, despite their last-place standing.
GERRY KAHRMANN Vancouver Stealth goalie Tyler Richards has been a crucial part of the team this year, despite their last-place standing.

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