2026 NLL Player Rankings: 30/60/90 Club

Keegan Bal & Curtis Dickson, Vancouver Warriors (Photo: Jeff Crawford)

After the first several weeks of the 2025-26 National Lacrosse League season are complete, The Lax Mag publishes a weekly NLL Player Ranking, examining the league’s Top 30 players from Week 1 right up until the end of the regular season.

TLM’s Top 30 NLL Player Rankings have nothing to do with reputations, career resumes, success in past seasons, whether we know a player personally, recognizing deserving players who’ve previously been passed over, player popularity, the size of their social media following, whether you slide into their DMs, or who others around the league tell us should get hype.

Our rankings, which only take into consideration only a player’s performance for the current regular season, will be calculated using both our star-rating system after each game, but also a player’s season-long statistical position (based on per-game averages) across the league. Only players who have played two-thirds of their team’s games or more will qualify.

Click here for an even more in-depth breakdown of our scoring system.Earlier this season, we examined which players were seeing the most significant increases and decreases statistically in a variety of offensive and defensive stats versus a season ago.

Jeff Teat, Ottawa Black Bears (Photo: Candice Ward)

As we do every season, in this week’s NLL Player Rankings post, we take a closer look at the NLL’s 30/60/90 Club, which is when a player scores at least 30 goals, 60 assists and 90 loose balls in a single regular season.

Sound easy? It isn’t.

Not only do you need to be a pretty elite point producer to gain entry into this exclusive offense-only club (over the previous four seasons, only 3-5% of players have registered a 90-point season), but the high-level loosies also highlight the forwards that are grinding when the ball is not in their pocket.

Prior to this season, only 18 players in NLL history have ever recorded that stat line in one year.

Season: G/A/LB (GP)

Wes Berg

2023: 39/70/100 (18)
2024: 41/67/96 (18)

Colin Doyle

2005: 42/69/94 (16)

Shawn Evans

2015: 47/83/96 (18)
2016: 50/68/116 (17)
2017: 38/65/90 (17)

Connor Fields

2023: 52/60/142 (17)
2024: 56/64/159 (18)
2025: 46/77/148 (18)

Gary Gait (Photo: Larry Palumbo)

Gary Gait

2002: 50/62/120 (16)

Paul Gait

2002: 54/60/107 (16)

Cody Jamieson

2016: 35/64/102 (18)

Mitch Jones

2023: 44/82/119 (19)
2024: 36/75/110 (18)
2025: 31/79/100 (18)

Andrew Kew & Will Malcom, Colorado Mammoth (Photo: Isaiah J. Downing)

Andrew Kew

2023: 43/63/91 (16)

Will Malcom

2023: 35/61/114 (18)
2024: 37/67/94 (18)

Clarke Petterson

2024: 40/64/91 (18)
2025: 30/70/115 (18)

Joe Resetarits

2018: 37/63/92 (18)

Josh Sanderson

2005: 31/71/112 (16)

Tom Schreiber, Toronto Rock (Photo: Kevin Sousa)

Tom Schreiber

2023: 48/68/110 (18)

Dhane Smith

2016: 72/65/111(18)
2018: 37/68/95 (18)
2022: 41/94/93 (18)
2023: 36/96/99 (18)
2024: 33/101/119 (18)
2025: 32/102/116 (18)

John Tavares

2001: 51/64/159 (14)

Jeff Teat

2022: 37/71/111 (16)
2023: 56/80/105 (18)
2024: 58/72/111 (18)

Lyle Thompson

2017: 45/71/126 (18)
2019: 43/62/94 (18)
2023: 46/60/113 (18)

Connor Fields, Rochester Knighthawks (Photo: Jonathan Tenca)

With two weeks of regular season lacrosse left, three players are already there…

Keegan Bal: 37/72/92 (16…)

Jeff Teat: 40/66/108 (16…)

Connor Fields: 39/65/106 (15…)

As outlined earlier, Teat and Fields are long-time club members, both having achieved 30/60/90 seasons three times in recent years. Bal, who came close in 2022 (44/55/93), got there this past weekend. Fields, who has now hit a 30/60/90 slash in four consecutive seasons, is only the second player to ever do that. Dhane Smith, who could still get there this year, is the only other.

Rob Hellyer, Ottawa Black Bears (Photo: David Pickering)

Below are the handful of other players this year that should/might get to 30/60/90 status this season…

Rob Hellyer: 30/61/86 (16…)

Jonathan Donville: 23/61/82 (15…)

Dhane Smith: 35/70/76 (16…)

Alex Simmons: 38/58/78 (16…)

Mitch Jones: 31/58/71 (15…)

Ryan Keenan: 34/50/79 (16…)

There’s a few others that will easily crack two of three categories but will need an all-time finish to find their third number.

Another player worth mentioning is Andrew Kew, who as has been mentioned many times, missed four games for Colorado earlier this season, but is still absolutely killing it statistically. Kew, who currently leads the league in straight goals, has averages that would have put him in 30/60/90 territory. Below are his projected goals, assists and loose balls based on his current per-game averages…

Andrew Kew: 68/59/69

Well, his loosies are still a bit behind, but look at those projected goals and assists. Only one player in NLL history has ever recorded a 60-goal and 60-assist season, and again, that’s Dhane Smith, who went 72 & 65 during his historic 2016 season.

NLL TOP 30: WEEK 20

TW. (LW) Player, Team (Pos.)

1. (1) Brett Dobson, Georgia (G)
2. (3) Jeff Teat, Ottawa (F)
3. (2) Keegan Bal, Vancouver (F)
4. (4) Dhane Smith, Buffalo (F)
5. (5) Andrew Kew, Colorado (F)
6. (8) Callum Jones, Ottawa (D)
7. (9) Connor Fields, Rochester (F)
8. (7) Zach Currier, San Diego (F)
9. (6) Christian Del Bianco, Vancouver (G)
10. (10) Josh Byrne, Buffalo (F)
11. (13) Alex Simmons, Oshawa (F)
12. (12) Ryan Lanchbury, Rochester (F)
13. (14) Tanner Cook, Calgary (F)
14. (11) Mitch Jones, Las Vegas (F)
15. (15) Mike Messenger, Saskatchewan (T)
16. (17) Jonathan Donville, Las Vegas (F)
17. (18) Jordan MacIntosh, Georgia (T)
18. (16) Jack Hannah, Colorado (F)
19. (19) Rob Hellyer, Ottawa (F)
20. (21) Dillon Ward, Colorado (G)
21. (20) Ryan Keenan, Saskatchewan (F)
22. (26) Tyler Pace, Calgary (F)
23. (24) Will Malcom, Colorado (F)
24. (23) CJ Kirst, Toronto (F)
25. (22) Jake Boudreau, Saskatchewan (T)
26. (27) Connor Kirst, Las Vegas (T)
27. (28) Clarke Petterson, Halifax (F)
28. (NR) Mitch de Snoo, Buffalo (D)
29. (NR) Graeme Hossack, Halifax (D)
30. (NR) Robert Hope, Colorado (D)

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2026 NLL Player Rankings: Who Teams Rely on the Most