DC_Breeze

DC Breeze

The DC Breeze is an open professional ultimate team based in the District of Columbia, competing in the East Division of the American Ultimate Disc League.[1][2] The team first played in the 2013 season. The Breeze play at Carlini Field (Catholic University).[3]

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History

2013

In the Breeze's inaugural season the team played its home games at Anacostia High School in East DC.[4] They went 4–12 in the regular season and did not qualify for the playoffs.[5] The Breeze finished fifth in the East Division.

2014

The Breeze moved to the University of Maryland Field Hockey and Lacrosse Complex for their second season after playing their 2014 home opener at George Mason High School in Falls Church, Virginia.[3] The opener was the professional debut for highly touted University of Pittsburgh graduates Alex Thorne and Tyler DeGirolamo, and was a nail biter to the end as the Breeze fell one goal short of heavily favored AUDL defending champions Toronto Rush, 20–19.[6] To date this is still the only Breeze game played in Virginia. The team went 10–4 in the regular season, finishing in third place in the East Division and making its first playoff appearance, where the team lost to the Rush again.[7] 2014 also marks the first season that Alex "Dutchy" Ghesquiere served as head coach.[8]

2015

The Breeze moved to Gallaudet University in 2015, and were again coached by Alex Ghesquiere.[9] League expansion to Pittsburgh and Raleigh took regional talent away from the Breeze, and the team went 7–7 in the regular season, failing to qualify for the playoffs.[10]

2016

The Breeze again played home games at Gallaudet University, and were again coached by Alex Ghesquiere.[3] They got back to winning ways, going 10–4 in the regular season for a second-place finish and earning a home playoff game for the first time.[11] The team won its home playoff game vs the New York Empire for its first ever postseason victory, but then lost the East Division final to the Toronto Rush.[12]

2017

The Breeze made a coaching change in 2017, hiring Darryl Stanley as head coach while Ghesquiere moved into an oversight role as Technical Director after leading the team from the sideline the previous three years.[13] The team again went 10–4 and finished in second place, and once again won a home playoff game, this time against the Montréal Royal. And for the second consecutive season, the Breeze lost to Toronto in the Division Final.

2018

Head Coach Darryl Stanley returned to lead the Breeze again in 2018, serving the first of a two-year contract extension. He guided the team to an 8–5–1 record, a second-place finish in the AUDL East, and the team's fourth playoff appearance in the last five years. The season ended July 21 with a rain-soaked playoff loss, 19–15 to the New York Empire.[14] However, this was the year of Matthew "Rowan" McDonnell on the field. McDonnell served as a team captain while collecting 38 goals, 47 assists and 11 blocks. The goal and assist totals both led the team, and he won the league's 2018 AUDL MVP Award.[15]

2019

Reigning AUDL MVP Matthew "Rowan" McDonnell returned as captain of the Breeze in 2019, and Head Coach Darryl Stanley also returned to lead the team from the sidelines for the third consecutive season. The duo guided the team to a 7–5 record, a third place finish in the AUDL East, and the team's fifth playoff appearance in the last six years. The season ended July 20 with another heartbreaking playoff loss, this time 22–21 to the Toronto Rush in a game played in New York.[16] The season was once again highlighted by McDonnell's performance on the field. He followed up his MVP 2018 season with 67 goals, 51 assists and 5 blocks in a campaign that earned him both All-AUDL 1st Team[17] and MVP Finalist[18] honors. The 2019 Breeze roster also produced two All-AUDL Rookie 2nd Team members in AJ Merriman and Garrett Braun.[19]

2020

The Breeze were prepared to compete in the newly formed Atlantic Division[20] and had constructed one of the most talented rosters in team history before the season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[21]

2021

On March 5, 2021, the AUDL announced games would return after the loss of the 2020 season.[22] Instead of starting in early April, as had been the historical standard, it was announced the schedule would run from early June through mid-August before playoffs and ultimately, AUDL Championship Weekend in September. The New York Empire and upstart Boston Glory were shifted from the East Division into a newly-formed eight-team Atlantic Division, as the league contended with COVID-19-related difficulties with the Canadian border, leading to the creation of the Canada Cup.[23] Prior to the AUDL's announcement, the Breeze also announced that Rowan McDonnell signed a two-year contract to keep him in Washington, DC through the 2022 season.[24] McDonnell spent most of 2021 nursing a nagging hamstring injury and saw his role evolve from a true handler and downfield threat into more of a reliable veteran role player. After playing in three games for the Breeze between 2017–2018, rising star Jonny Malks returned for the 2021 season and immediately became a force on the Breeze O-Line. Malks was picked as the unanimous mid-season MVP and helped lead the team to a 10–2 season, its fifth consecutive playoff appearance and sixth in the last seven seasons. 2021 was also a breakout season for 20-year-old AJ Merriman, who racked up 19 assists, 15 goals, and 20 blocks on his way to being named the AUDL Defensive Player of the Year.[25] Due to the unique nature of the Atlantic Division in 2021, four teams qualified for the playoffs, and the winners of each first-round game advanced to Championship Weekend, which was held in Washington, DC for the first time. The Breeze saw their Championship Weekend hopes dashed once again, falling to the eventual AUDL Champion Raleigh Flyers by a score of 16–19 at Carlini Field in Washington, DC on September 3, 2021.

2022

Prior to the 2022 season, the Breeze announced the re-signing of multiple players who had not played for the club for many years, including Tyler Monroe, Christian Boxley, David Cranston, Troy Holland, Alan Kolick, and Delrico Johnson. The team also re-signed 2021 AUDL Defensive Player of the Year AJ Merriman to a three-year contract. With the return of Head Coach Darryl Stanley and the addition of decorated coach Alex Crew as Assistant Coach, the Breeze had arguably positioned themselves better than ever before to contend for the East Division title and a Championship Weekend appearance. Despite a few closer-than-comfortable results throughout the regular season, including two one-goal victories in the closing seconds against the Philadelphia Phoenix, the Breeze once again finished with a regular season record of 10–2, dropping both matchups to the New York Empire. With divisions back to “normal,” the playoff format was reestablished to have the #2 seed in each division host the #3 seed and the winner match up with the #1 seed the week following. Despite two incredibly close contests during the regular season, the Breeze dispatched a fiery Phoenix squad with relative ease to set the stage for the East Division Championship in New York against the Empire. The game started in familiar fashion with the two teams trading scores before the Empire pulled ahead in the third quarter and led by as many as five goals. However, with the clock winding down at the close of the third quarter, Moussa Dia came up with a block and sprinted to the endzone where Jasper Tom was able to connect with him for the goal as the buzzer sounded to pull within two goals. The o-line then started the fourth quarter with a hold to pull within one, and the d-line notched a break to tie the game with less than three minutes left on he clock. The teams then traded scores before the Empire received the pull with 17 seconds on the clock, marched down the field, and came down with the buzzer-beating goal to hand the Breeze another defeat and deny them the opportunity to qalify for Championship Weekend once again. The Empire went on to win the Championship, and thus, the Breeze ultimately fell to the eventual AUDL Champion in the quarterfinal round for the second year in a row.

Year-by-year

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Full Schedule

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All-time record by opponent

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Rosters

More information 2024 Roster, 2023 Roster ...

References

  1. "Breeze | AUDL". AUDL. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  2. "Breeze To Play At Catholic University". AUDL. 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  3. Sludge (2013-01-16). "Sludge Output: DC Pro Ultimate Schedule 2013". Sludge Output. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  4. "2013 Schedule/Results – DC Breeze". DC Breeze. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  5. "2014 Schedule/Results – DC Breeze". DC Breeze. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  6. "Alex "Dutchy" Ghesquiere To Coach AUDL's DC Breeze | Ultiworld". Ultiworld. 2014-01-07. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  7. Yates, Clinton (2015-04-09). "D.C. Breeze wants to draw young professional crowd with move to Gallaudet". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  8. "2015 Schedule/Results – DC Breeze". DC Breeze. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  9. "Breeze to host first-ever home playoff game Saturday". WTOP. 2016-07-14. Retrieved 2018-03-17.
  10. "2016 Schedule/Results – DC Breeze". DC Breeze. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  11. "2018 Coaching Staff – DC Breeze". DC Breeze. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  12. "Breeze Fall To Empire In Playoffs". AUDL. 2018-07-23. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  13. "2018 AUDL MVP: Rowan McDonnell". AUDL. 2018-10-24. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  14. "Recap: Rush Cut Breeze Season Short". AUDL. 2019-07-24. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  15. "2019 All-AUDL First Team". AUDL. 2019-09-09. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  16. "2019 AUDL MVP Finalists". AUDL. 2019-09-18. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  17. "2019 All-AUDL Rookie Teams". AUDL. 2019-09-26. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  18. "2020 AUDL Divisional Realignment". AUDL. 2019-12-04. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
  19. "AUDL Cancels 2020 Season". AUDL. 2020-06-24. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
  20. "AUDL Exec. Council Approves Return to Play for 2021". AUDL. 2021-03-05. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  21. "AUDL Announces Inaugural Canada Cup". AUDL. 2021-06-08. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  22. "AUDL Merriman Earns Defensive Player of the Year". AUDL. 2021-10-05. Retrieved 2022-09-07.

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