Showing posts with label Ivy League. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ivy League. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

End of the road

Readers: Thanks for reading my comments about NorCal Boys and Mens Lacrosse over the last decade. Ten years is a long time on a narrow topic like NorCal Lacrosse. Including my posts on the wonderful NorCalLaxForum and here on the NorCal Lacrosse Blog, I've written nearly 4,000 posts and you, dear readers, have produced nearly one million page views. I no longer have anything to say. Time to call it a day!

I had never seen a Lacrosse game in 2002 when my then eight-year-old Son, while waiting for a Little League Baseball practice to begin, saw three Piedmont HS laxers throwing it around at Linda Beach Field in Piedmont. He asked me, "What game are those boys playing, Da?" I was able to respond, "They're playing Lacrosse, Son." He thought for a couple of seconds and said to me, "That's the game I want to play."

I bought two sticks and a three-pack of balls and we started throwing it around. We played catch an hour a day, seven days a week! I bought and read six lacrosse  books trying to answer questions the boy had. I read voraciously, because I didn't know anyone who had played Lacrosse. Somehow, I learned about an upcoming STX Lacrosse camp and we signed him up. I didn't know STX from STP, but the day came and his Mother and I took him over to Witter Field at Piedmont High and sent him to the registration booth. There,  in bold letters, a sign said, "You must be at least 9 years old to register." He read it. He understood it. He swallowed hard, handed them the check his Mother had written and said, "My name is JW McGovern, and here's my money." The lady at check-in took his money and handed him a Pinnie. At that camp, the legendary Gary Gait oversaw the camp for STX, Duke All-American Matt Ogelsby was the Camp Director, and some nineteen year-old college players from the Ivy League ran station drills to teach the boys the game of Lacrosse.

Three hours into the camp, Matt walked up to JW and asked, "How old are you, Son?"

"I'm nine, Coach," JW responded. You see, he was hooked on the game. He still is. That was the first, and only, time he has EVER lied. Yep, EVER.  Learning the game we all love was really important to that eight-year-old boy.

The boy at 9 years old

One thing led to another and he played NCJLA lacrosse at Lamorinda for five years and a final year with So. Marin, played on 4 youth travel teams (2 U13 and 2 U15 teams) when the NCJLA was the only travel team sponsor, played for Mario Enea's Braveheart (the first commercial travel team in NorCal). Played Boxla at the Bladium for four years. Youth Lacrosse was consuming to him - and to us.

But, it didn't end there. High School applications were around the corner. He considered a number of private and parochial High Schools. In the end, it came down to De Lasalle (DLS) and Saint Ignatius (SI). On a tour of SI, his mother, walking in the Halls of that venerable institution,  happened to look up and saw, on the wall, a class photo from long ago. In that class photo, she saw her Father, as a young man, staring down at her. Her Dad, who had passed a decade before, and both of her Uncles, had attended SI. She took it as a sign – and that was that. SI it was!

SI was wonderful. The years flew by, the boy had world-class coaching and, because of that, kept getting better. Many awards and honors later, he enrolled at Yale after being recruited by the Bulldogs and several other Ivy League Schools. Coach Chris Packard of SI and Braden Edwards of the Outlaws were able to recommend him when college coaches called to ask about his character. Those recommendations are a critical part of the recruiting process. I'm very grateful to all the coaches who helped him along the way. In particular, Coach Packard, who stayed in touch with the boy and his college coaches throughout his Freshman year, helping both the boy and his college coach understand each other. I have never met anyone, in any field, who feels more strongly the call of duty to help his charges – even long after they leave his grasp – than Coach Chris Packard.  We are honored to know him.

JW ended up being a starter on the EMO unit for the Elis much of this past season and had his fair share of goals and assists for the 2013 Yale team, which made the NCAA tournament and ended up being the #7 ranked team in the nation. The only Lacrosse wish I've ever had for him was that he be a contributor to the success of his team. Last season he was. Moreover, he loves Yale – and he still loves lacrosse!

And here's why it's over for me. This past summer the boy was a coach at Chris Packard's first-ever St. Ignatius Lacrosse Camp. JW was a nineteen year old college student, teaching eight-year-old boys how to play the game. It was a mirror image, time-warped from eleven years ago, when he was the eight-year-old being taught by nineteen year-old Ivy League players. The great circle of lacrosse life had been completed! He, who has been given so much – by so many others – was now giving back. It was a magical moment, and I'm greedy enough to want to see more of them. He's got three more years of college ball, and I can't think of anything I'd rather do than sit in the stands on a sunny Spring day and watch him play, while daydreaming about some future moment when a young player comes up to my Son and says... "Thanks for everything, Coach!"

The Boy at 20

I hope, and pray, that your experiences as a parent, a player, a coach, or a fan, will be/have been as positive and powerful as mine. Thanks for the memories – to all of you – players, parents, coaches, and fans alike. It's been a pleasure to write for you about the game we all love.





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Tuesday, June 18, 2013

College: DI Lacrosse: The three S's – One set for coaches, one set for players

The three S's are pretty widely known among NCAA coaches when assessing lacrosse recruits. As the saying goes: "Speed, Size, Skills, you gotta have at least two." Skills here refers not just to stick stills, but to Lacrosse IQ. These three S's are immutable for coaches. That is to say, if you are tiny, you must be very quick and have an off-the-charts lacrosse IQ. Case Matheis at Duke is a perfect example.

But, after you are recruited, another set of three S's becomes REALLY CRUCIAL. The above set of three S's is for coaches The following set of S's is for athletes. These three S's are immutable, too! Studies, Sports, Social life: Pick 2, but you can't have all 3. Here are the in-season time requirements for  the typical Ivy League Lacrosse player:

Hours in a week: 168

Practice, lifting, time to/from practice:
20 hours per week

Team meetings: 6 hours per week
Game time and travel time: 10 hours per week
Total: 16 hours per week

Study: 35 hours per week

Classes: 15 hours per week

Travel to/from/between classes: 3 hours per day
Total: 15 hours per week

Sleep:
7 hours per night:
49 hours per week (you can't afford more than 7 hours a night in-season)

Eating and travel time to food:
11 hours per week

Laundry, showering, dressing, shaving and other ablutions
7 hours per week

That's your 168 hours, with no social life.

If you want a social life, the hours have to be stolen from somewhere. Eating, sleeping, studying, attending classes – pick your poison!

The life of a DI athlete can be very rewarding, but only if you are obsessive about time management. If you aren't.... well, you can drop the sport, you can drop out, you can drop on the depth chart, you can drop your social life, or you can flunk out. Those are your choices.


Sunday, May 26, 2013

College: The Lacrosse Pipeline to Wall Street

The pipeline from NCAA Lacrosse to Wall Street is widely suspected, but not often documented. Here are two articles that document the strength of the connection – and reasons for the connection – between these two, highly competitive, activities:

Here are two quotes from the Bloomberg article:

• Before Dom Starsia talks about national titles, he unfolds a two-foot-wide spreadsheet that gives University of Virginia recruits a look at life after lacrosse. VLAN, or the Virginia Lacrosse Alumni Network, is a 300-person database of former male and female players who work in finance and other fields and are willing to help cub Cavaliers get there, too. “Banker, equity guy, trader, analyst -- I don’t even know what those jobs are,” says Starsia, whose teams have produced four national championships and 13 Final Fours over his 21 seasons in Charlottesville. “But I do know it’s an impressive list.” 

• Appelt, 44, a 1991 Virginia graduate, said he wants to bolster his business by helping athletes whose package of time management, competitiveness and ability to cope with failure make them ideal candidates for success in the financial-services industry.

Similar Lacrosse Networks are in place at Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Cornell, Johns Hopkins, Duke and a number of other strong academic schools. 

The story via examples:
Bloomberg News article

And here's one from academia, citing cultural similarity between recruiter and candidate as the reason for the pipeline. Minor familiarity with statistics is helpful for this article.

Hiring as Cultural Matching






Tuesday, October 02, 2012

NCAA rule changes for 2013 and their impact

Every year, the NCAA makes rules changes  – some years fewer, some year more. Those rules have a way of flowing down to High School and Youth Lacrosse. The MLL has its rules, but in our sport, the NCAA is "King of the Hill." This year, the NCAA made, in my opinion, dramatic changes to the rules of the game. Below, I list the key changes the NCAA has made and provide the perspective of an NCAA DI player whose Fall practices and Fall Ball activities provide a "real world" commentary on the NCAA's changes.

NCAA Rules changes discussed herein:
• eliminate the horn on dead ball out-of-bounds situations
• Institute a 30 second shot clock after a stall warning has been issued
•  extend the length of the substitution box
• change the shape of "shooting strings" within NCAA legal heads

First, here's an article featuring the opinions on the rules changes:

http://insidelacrosse.com/news/2012/09/24/rule-changes-approved-panel

I asked an NCAA DI player who is working with these rules in Fall Ball what his opinions of the following rule changes are:

• No dead ball horn
• Longer substitution box
• 30 seconds to shoot after stall warning
• Defenders 5 yards off the ball carrier. Is this true?
• Stringing changes

He responded as follows:

The no dead ball horn makes the game a track race. In practice, we are getting up and down the field with almost no breaks in the scrimmage. The longer substitution box doesn't play a huge role, except in the clearing game the middies try to get little advantages to maybe get a fast break or get open. The stringing rule has had no effect whatsoever and is a pretty pointless change as far as I'm concerned. I'm a fan of the 30 second shot clock: it's really plenty of time to get a quality shot, and it doesn't restrict the offensive strategy by being forced to keep it in the box. 

2013 will see big changes in the pace of the game. Looking forward to the season!

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

Ivy League signs first-ever TV deal for Lax with NBC

NBC and the Ivy League have reached an agreement whereby NBC will televise a good number of the Conference's Football, Basketball, and Lacrosse games. I believe the Ivy League becomes be the first DI conference to reach agreement with a national broadcasting entity for Men's lacrosse. You can read about the contract at:
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/pretzel/Ivy-League-strikes-major-national-television-deal-with-NBC-Sports-Network.html

NBC previously held Ivy League broadcast rights for Football and Basketball. The new contract adds a Spring sport to the agreement. It should be of interest to all Lacrosse fans that NBC elected Lacrosse to be the Spring season, not Baseball or another Spring sport. I have argued earlier that Lacrosse would be the most likely Spring sport to become a "revenue" sport. I believe the NBC contract is evidence of that view. You can read my earlier analysis at:
http://norcallacrosse.blogspot.com/2012/04/provocative-question-will-lacrosse-ever.html

Congratulations to the Ivy League for reaching this deal with NBC – and congratulations to NBC for having the perspicacity to enter into a conference wide lacrosse broadcasting deal. I think we'll see more of these deals within the next few months.






Tuesday, November 01, 2011

The Ivy League: Destination resort for NorCal laxers?

If one were to look at all the conferences in NCAA DI lacrosse, searching for THE conference with the most NorCal players, it wouldn't take much time to figure out that the Ivy League is the destination resort of choice for NorCal's top players. Right now, looking at current Ivy players and Ivy commits, every lacrosse playing Ivy has at least one NorCal standout. Think of that! Of all the Ancient Eight, seven play Men's lacrosse. And every one of them has at least one player or commit from NorCal. Perennial power Cornell has three: Roy Lang, the SI 1st team NCAA All-American, Ross Rudow, the powerfully-built SRV middie, and Connor Hunt, the terrifying Close D from DLS. That's pretty impressive. A perennial Semi-finalist in the NCAA has 3 NorCal guys (with another one coming). And it's not going to be much different at other Ivies.  Go NorCal!!!