Major General James G. Blunt

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The 2018 Ohio Machine season is the seventh season for the Ohio Machine of Major League Lacrosse. The reigning champion Machine come into the year looking to repeat as Steinfeld Cup Champions. They would be the first team since the Chesapeake Bayhawks in 2012 and 2013 to do so.

The Machine opened their title defense on April 29 with a historic output from Marcus Holman, who scored a league record 11 goals in a 25-13 victory over the New York Lizards.[1] The team took a hard fall, though, losing ten of their last 11 games and finishing with a league-worst 3-11 record.

Offseason

  • October 2, 2017 - The Machine agreed to trade attackman Steele Stanwick to the Chesapeake Bayhawks in return for a second round pick in the 2019 collegiate draft. The team also agreed to send faceoff specialist Kevin Reisman to the Florida Launch in exchange for a fourth round pick in the 2018 supplemental draft.[2]
  • October 8 - The Machine hosted the first Ohio Lacrosse Fall Classic at Fortress Obetz against the Ohio State Buckeyes men's lacrosse team.[3]
  • November 7 - Machine president Ryan Chenault confirms the team will extend head coach Bear Davis's contract through the 2020 season, after Davis led the franchise to its first MLL title in 2017.[4]

Regular season

Transactions

  • May 30 - The Machine agree to trade midfielder Mark Cockerton and a 2019 collegiate draft seventh round pick to the Boston Cannons in exchange for attackman Davey Emala.[5]
  • June 19 - The Machine send defenseman Matt McMahon to the Charlotte Hounds in exchange for defender Ben Randall.[6]
  • June 26 - The Machine send defenseman Jake Bernhardt to the New York Lizards in exchange for Ryan Walsh and a 2019 second round draft pick.[7]
  • June 27 - Connor Cannizzaro announces his retirement after being the team drafted him fifth in the 2017 collegiate draft.[8]

Schedule

Regular season

Date Opponent Stadium Result Attendance Record
April 29 New York Lizards Fortress Obetz W 25-13 3,347 1-0
May 5 Charlotte Hounds Fortress Obetz L 10-14 2,478 1-1
May 12 Dallas Rattlers Fortress Obetz W 14-12 2,068 2-1
May 26 at Charlotte Hounds American Legion Memorial Stadium L 12-14 1,267 2-2
June 2 at Chesapeake Bayhawks Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium L 8-13 3,154 2-3
June 7 at Denver Outlaws Sports Authority Field at Mile High L 6-17 6,388 2-4
June 9 Chesapeake Bayhawks Fortress Obetz L 12-15 2,865 2-5
June 16 at Dallas Rattlers The Ford Center at The Star L 16-17 3,011 2-6
June 23 Denver Outlaws Fortress Obetz L 13-17 2,226 2-7
June 30 at New York Lizards James M. Shuart Stadium L 14-15 5,057 2-8
July 7 at Florida Launch FAU Stadium W 13-11 2,127 3-8
July 21 Atlanta Blaze Fortress Obetz L 10-13 3,288 3-9
July 26 Florida Launch Fortress Obetz L 12-13 2,387 3-10
August 4 at Boston Cannons Harvard Stadium L 14-23 3,864 3-11

Standings

2018 Major League Lacrosse Standings
W L PCT GB GF 2ptGF GA 2ptGA
Dallas Rattlers 11 3 .786 - 201 8 175 2
Chesapeake Bayhawks 9 5 .643 2 176 11 174 7
Denver Outlaws 8 6 .571 3 225 5 183 14
New York Lizards 8 6 .571 3 211 5 214 5
Charlotte Hounds 7 7 .500 4 196 8 191 4
Atlanta Blaze 7 7 .500 4 187 10 184 7
Boston Cannons 5 9 .357 6 173 9 213 9
Florida Launch 5 9 .357 6 192 4 201 10
Ohio Machine 3 11 .214 8 173 6 199 8
Playoff Seed


References

  1. ^ "Holman sets goal record in 25-13 win". Archived from the original on 2018-05-01. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  2. ^ "The Ohio Machine announce two trades prior to the release of the 23-man protected roster". Archived from the original on 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  3. ^ "Inaugural Ohio Lacrosse Fall Classic a success". Archived from the original on 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  4. ^ "Bear Davis contract extension". Archived from the original on 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2017-12-13.
  5. ^ Machine acquire attackman Davey Emala in trade with Cannons
  6. ^ "Machine acquire Ben Randall in trade with Charlotte". Archived from the original on 2018-06-28. Retrieved 2018-06-27.
  7. ^ "Ohio sends Bernhardt to New York". Archived from the original on 2018-07-12. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
  8. ^ "Cannizzaro retires". Archived from the original on 2018-07-12. Retrieved 2018-07-11.

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