First Nations Lacrosse Association

First Nations Lacrosse Association
Sport Lacrosse
Jurisdiction Regional
Abbreviation FNLA
Founded 1983
Affiliation Federation of International Lacrosse
Affiliation date 1987
Headquarters Cornwall, Ontario
President Bob Burr
Men's coach Rich Kilgour (WILC 2015)[1]
Women's coach Regy Thorpe (U19 World Championship 2015)[2]
Official website
iroquoisnationals.org
Iroquois
Canada
United States

First Nations Lacrosse Association (formerly Iroquois Lacrosse Association) is the governing body of lacrosse in First Nations.

Leagues

Iroqouis Nationals

Iroquois Nationals are the national team representing the Haudenosaunee Confederacy. First recognized by the Federation of International Lacrosse as a full member nation in 1987, the Nationals competed in their first tournament at the 1990 FIL World Lacrosse Championships, finishing fifth.[4]

World championship results (men)

Year Competition (field) Result Notes
1990 World Lacrosse Championship 5th
1994 World Lacrosse Championship 5th
1998 World Lacrosse Championship 4th
2002 World Lacrosse Championship 4th
2006 World Lacrosse Championship 4th
2010 World Lacrosse Championship DNP Passport controversy[5]
2014 World Lacrosse Championship Bronze
Year Competition (box) Result Notes
2003 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship Silver Lost to Canada 21-4
2007 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship Silver Lost to Canada 15-14 (OT)
2011 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship Silver Lost to Canada 13-6
2015 World Indoor Lacrosse Championship Silver Lost to Canada 12-8

WILC 2015

The Iroquois Nationals played host to the 2015 FIL World Indoor Lacrosse Championships for the first time in the tournament’s history. The event took place on Haudenosaunee Territories at Tsha’Hon’nonyen’dakhwa’ Onondaga Nation Arena and the Carrier Dome near Syracuse, as well as the First Niagara Center in Buffalo September 18–27, 2015.[6]

References

  1. "Iroquois Nationals Name GM And Coaching Staff For 2015 Worlds". Iroquois Nationals. 23 December 2014.
  2. "Haudenosaunee Nation U19 Women's Lacrosse Roster Set". Federation of International Lacrosse. 24 April 2015.
  3. "About Can-Am". Can-Am Lacrosse. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  4. "World Event History". Federation of International Lacrosse. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  5. "Iroquois Defeated by Passport Dispute". New York Times. 16 July 2010.
  6. "WILC 2015 – Opening Day". Federation of International Lacrosse. 19 September 2015.

External links

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