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Pittsburgh CrosseFire

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Pittsburgh CrosseFire
SportBox lacrosse
First season2000
LeagueNational Lacrosse League
Team historyBaltimore Thunder (1987–1999)
Based inPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
ArenaPittsburgh Civic Arena
ColorsRed, Yellow, Black
   
FormerlyBaltimore Thunder
LaterWashington Power (2001–2002)
Colorado Mammoth (2003–Present)

ThePittsburgh CrosseFire was an American professional box lacrosse team and a member of theNational Lacrosse League during the2000 NLL season. It was based inPittsburgh,Pennsylvania.

History

[edit]

Relocation from Baltimore

[edit]

The franchise started out as theBaltimore Thunder in 1987. Following the 1999 season, team owner Dennis Townsend expressed disappoint in Baltimore's lack of support for the team, despite the team featuring five-timeMVPGary Gait and reigningRookie of the YearJesse Hubbard. After reportedly losing $2 million during his two-year ownership, Townsend moved the team to Pittsburgh in July 1999.[1]

2000 season

[edit]

Despite retaining the core of the Thunder team that had reached the postseason in the previous two seasons, the CrosseFire struggled early in the season. After a 2-3 start, the CrossFire acquired Gait's twin brotherPaul in a mid-season trade from theSyracuse Smash. The team finished the season with a 6-6 record, losing their final game in double overtime to the winless Smash to finish one game out of a playoff spot.

Gary Gait finished with 83 points, tied withJohn Tavares for most in the league and was named First Team All-Pro, but missed out on winning his sixth straight MVP Award. Paul Gait would earn 2nd Team All-Pro honors.[2]

The Pittsburgh CrosseFire average 4,916 fans per game during the 2000 season, the second-lowest in the league and significantly less than the 7,057 averaged by the Thunder in their final season in Baltimore.

Sale and relocation

[edit]

In April 2000, one month after the team's inaugural season, Dennis Townsend closed the team's Pittsburgh offices and announced the team was for sale. The CrossFire would be sold to DC-based attorney Steve Comiskey, who relocated the team to Washington,[3] becoming theWashington Power.

All time Record

[edit]
SeasonW-LFinishHomeRoadGFGACoachPlayoffs
20006–66th4–22–4184164John TuckerMissed playoffs
Total6–64–22–4184164
GameDateOpponentLocationScoreOTAttendanceRecord
1January 8, 2000@New York SaintsW 23–121–0
2January 14, 2000@Albany AttackL 19–211–1
3January 15, 2000@Rochester KnighthawksL 14–181–2
4January 22, 2000Philadelphia Wings (1987–2014)Mellon ArenaW 16–154,5212–2
5January 28, 2000Toronto RockMellon ArenaL 9–113,2172–3
6February 12, 2000Buffalo BanditsMellon ArenaW 17–145,2183–3
7February 25, 2000New York SaintsMellon ArenaW 20–155,0744–3
8February 26, 2000@Philadelphia Wings (1987–2014)W 14–85–3
9March 10, 2000Rochester KnighthawksMellon ArenaL 12–175,3255–4
10March 25, 2000Syracuse SmashMellon ArenaW 21–96,1406–4
11March 31, 2000@Toronto RockL 10–146–5
12April 8, 2000@Syracuse SmashL 9–102OT6–6

[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hensley, Jamison. “Thunder makes move to Pittsburgh official”. The Sun (Baltimore, MD). July 17, 1999
  2. ^"Pittsburgh CrosseFire". Archived fromthe original on 2025-02-02.
  3. ^ASSOCIATED PRESS. “Morning Briefing: Crossfire relocates in D.C.; Ewing Seattle-bound”. The Post-Gazette (Pittsburgh, PA). September 21, 2000
  4. ^2000 season - 48 games, 3 playoff games
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