
Teat Leads Canada Past U.S. in Sixes Showcase at Atlas Cup
SPARKS, Md. — Canada makes sixes looks easy, but Jeff Teat insists it’s as much a work in progress north of the border as it is here at USA Lacrosse.
“We’re trying to figure it out as much as anybody else,” said Teat, who scored six goals in a 23-18 victory over the United States to cap day two of the Atlas Cup in front of a sellout crowd at Tierney Field. “We have a great player pool with a lot of veterans in the mix and a group of younger guys. We’re trying to test out different things and see what works.”
What worked Saturday was letting Teat work his magic. The 2024 PLL MVP and 2025 PLL championship MVP inflicted all his damage in the first half. When he wasn’t scoring, the gravitational pull he had as a ball carrier opened premium scoring opportunities for others.
The result? Canada shot 62 percent from the field, efficiency the U.S. could not match.
“We grew up playing box lacrosse,” Teat said. “There’s a lot of that in this game.”
Canada’s advantage in sixes — the fast-paced 6v6 discipline that will be contested in the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics — was not nearly as pronounced as it was when the Canadians defeated the Americans 23-9 in The World Games 2022 championship final.
Consider the first half. Canada put three more shots on target and got two more saves to build a 13-8 lead. Five possessions amounting to roughly two-and-a-half minutes of lacrosse. That was the difference.
The United States was no slouch, offensively. Matt Brandau, the lone USA player from those 2022 games competing here at the Atlas Cup, and Coulter Mackesy were surgical with their shooting. Each scored four goals and reminded us of the offensive firepower the Ivy League has produced in recent years. And Mic Kelly (two goals) looks like a natural fit for the discipline.
But the Americans could never bring the deficit down to fewer than four goals. Squandered chances like a careless turnover on an extra-man possession and USA nemesis Dillon Ward’s rebuttal of a Ryan Drenner dunk on the doorstep loomed larger because Canada seldom failed to convert on its end.
The U.S. had a chance to cut Canada’s lead to three with less than two minutes remaining, but Ryan Terefenko was handcuffed trying to feed Brandau in transition and Willem Firth scored going the other way to ice the game. Each team scored twice more in the final 53 seconds, but by then Canada had it well in hand.
Firth finished with two goals and five assists and Tre Leclaire scored four goals, but Teat’s first-half sock trip (plus an assist) earned him the Capelli Sport Player of the Game honor.
“When you can dodge, shoot from 8 to 10 yards and are also one of the best off-ball players in the world — yeah, it's a good combination,” said USA’s Connor Shellenberger, who is Teat’s teammate with the New York Atlas. “I like playing with him a lot more than I like playing against him. It's a lot more fun being on the other side.”
Shellenberger, this year’s PLL MVP, had a goal and four assists in the loss.
“It's a great opportunity for us to get better. These competitions are even better because you can kind of see where we're at compared to everyone else,” he said. “Hopefully we'll keep building chemistry, keep learning the [sixes] game. It’s new for everybody. The more reps we get and the more we’re around it, the better we’ll be.”
HAUDENOSAUNEE PULL AWAY FROM PUERTO RICO
Five was the magic number for the Haudenosaunee Nationals on Saturday.
After running out of steam in their Atlas Cup debut Friday against Canada, the Haudenosaunee started the second and third quarters with five unanswered goals and ended the game on a five-goal run to defeat Puerto Rico 25-13.
Koleton Marquis, Jake Piseno, Obrigh Tallchief and Stone Jacobs scored four goals each. Marquis added a team-high five assists to earn the Capelli Sport Player of the Game honor.
Goalie Jack VanValkenberg got hot in the second half and finished with 18 saves.
The Haudenosaunee (1-1) close out the Atlas Cup against the United States on Sunday.
THREE STARS
Koleton Marquis, Haudenosaunee: A highly ranked recruit in the high school class of 2023, Marquis played sparingly as a freshman at Johns Hopkins, did not play at all after transferring to UAlbany in 2024 and finally got untracked this year with 25 goals as a starting attackman with the Great Danes. His international lacrosse future sure looked bright Saturday, as he had four goals and five assists in the Haudenosaunee’s 25-13 victory over Puerto Rico.
Jeff Teat, Canada: All of Teat’s six goals and his one assist came in the first half, as Canada defeated the United States 23-18. Teat cooled in the second half but finished 6-for-8 (75 percent) from the field.
Coulter Mackesy, United States: A late addition to the U.S. sixes roster due to injuries, Mackesy did his best to leave an impression on coaches with his pinpoint accuracy and shot velocity. He scored four goals on 4-for-5 shooting, adding an assist and a pair of ground balls.
Schedule/Scores
Friday, Sept. 26
Women: Canada 22, Puerto Rico 8
Box Score | Replay
Men: Canada 24, Haudenosaunee 16
Box Score | Replay
Men: United States 23, Puerto Rico 13
Box Score | Replay
Women: United States 18, Haudenosaunee 5
Box Score | Replay
Saturday, Sept. 27
Men: Haudenosaunee 25, Puerto Rico 13
Box Score | Replay
Women: Canada 13, Haudenosaunee 6
Box Score | Replay
Women: United States 24, Puerto Rico 9
Box Score | Replay
Men: Canada 23, United States 18
Box Score | Replay
Sunday, Sept. 28
Women: Haudenosaunee vs. Puerto Rico
9 a.m. EDT | Watch
Women: Canada vs. United States
10:30 a.m. EDT | Watch
Men: Canada vs. Puerto Rico
12 p.m. EDT | Watch
Men: Haudenosaunee vs. United State
1:30 p.m. EDT | Watch
Matt DaSilva
Matt DaSilva is the editor in chief of USA Lacrosse Magazine. He played LSM at Sachem (N.Y.) and for the club team at Delaware. Somewhere on the dark web resides a GIF of him getting beat for the game-winning goal in the 2002 NCLL final.

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