Let鈥檚 get to the point here.
There have been plenty of distractions in the 2013 Mann Cup, from beating of the drums, loud music, battle of fans, charges of racism and now illegal goalie equipment.
But the No. 1 story here, on the floor, five games into the 91原创 Senior A lacrosse championship, is Cody Jamieson is eating Matt Vinc鈥檚 lunch.
The Six Nations Chiefs star has a death grip on the most valuable player award which will be handed out at the end of this best-of-seven series, which the Chiefs lead 3-2.
Forget all the other bull-poop people are hyping (Twitter right now is an embarrassment) regarding this special event.
Jamieson is THE story, coming off a 10-point (officially they had him down for nine, but officials missed his seventh assist) in Wednesday鈥檚 11-7 victory over the Victoria Shamrocks.
Yet, he was a mere blip in any coverage because of what Chiefs coach Rich Kilgour referred to as 鈥渟henanigans鈥 when the Shamrocks asked for not one, but two illegal goalie equipment checks.
Personally, I believe the Chiefs dropped the ball not making sure the pads of Brendan Miller and Evan Kirk were legal. They could have been measured beforehand, as was the case with Victoria netminders Vinc and Matt Flindell, and for that very reason the comments being made on Twitter are stupidity at its finest.
Get over it, it happened in Game 4 of the Shamrocks series vs. Burnaby when Vinc and Flindell were both booted for the same infraction.
Yes, it鈥檚 considered taboo to make that call but, when you get right down to it, a lot of coaches would go down that avenue to gain some type of advantage. Sure, they won鈥檛 admit it publicly, but win at all costs is nothing new to sports, lacrosse included.
I鈥檓 not condoning what Shamrocks coach Bob Heyes did when he went to the well in desperate fashion.
I鈥檓 more flustered with the fact that Jamieson鈥檚 efforts are being ignored.
Ten goals and 12 assists in five games is easily the best performance we鈥檝e seen so far in this series and it shouldn鈥檛 be a surprise as many call the Chiefs鈥 star the best player in the game today.
鈥淢ost certainly, if we win this series, he鈥檚 been our most dominant player, without question,鈥 said Chiefs veteran Colin Doyle. 鈥淗e takes games over when he needs to.
鈥淭onight we needed him to and he did,鈥 Doyle added after the 11-7 Wednesday win. 鈥淲hat separates him from a lot of guys is, when the going gets tough he seems to get better.
鈥淲hen the game is on the line, he wants the ball. He doesn鈥檛 necessarily have to score, but he鈥檒l make a play with it 鈥 draw a penalty or dish it.鈥
The funny part is, I asked Jamieson before this series started if he thought he had a way to beat Vinc - his Rochester Knighthawks teammate in the National Lacrosse League - and his response on the eve of Game 1 was he had no idea and that maybe something would come to him overnight.
鈥淚 think he has some tricks up his sleeve, he just didn鈥檛 want to delve into it,鈥 Doyle said of his Chiefs teammate.
鈥淢att鈥檚 a great goalie. It鈥檚 not easy to beat Matt. He鈥檚 a heck of a goalie. You need time, space and sometimes a little luck,鈥 said Doyle, who came in to play goal on Wednesday when Miller and Kirk were tossed.
The latter 鈥 that being luck - has nothing to do with it.
Jamieson has simply been better than Vinc in this showdown, WAY better the last two games in which he鈥檚 recorded 12 points (should be 13).
Yet, Doyle was named the game star on Wednesday after he volunteered to play goal with Kirk and Miller both banished.
鈥淲hen was the last time a goalie was named player of the game with a .500 save percentage? I guess the bar wasn鈥檛 set that high,鈥 Doyle said with a laugh.
Meanwhile, the Shamrocks aren鈥檛 chuckling.
They face elimination Friday night and their body language is suggesting they are done.
What will their minds tell them in Game 6?
Their thoughts better include a way to stop Jamieson.