Showing posts with label St. Ignatius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Ignatius. 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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Friday, August 02, 2013

High School: LaxPower Final rankings – SI 12th in the nation

LaxPower's combined Coaches & Computer ranking year-end results are in. I've long believed that this combined ranking is the gold standard of ranking systems. St. Ignatius, with its 21-1 record, ranked 12th in the nation for 2013. Congratulations to the Wildcats!

Ranking 12th in the nation, out of 3,484 teams is exceptional. It also happens to be the highest ranking ever achieved by a Western High School Lacrosse team since LaxPower began keeping the combined rankings in 2005. Here is a compilation of the top Western Boys' High School lacrosse teams from 2005-2013:

Year Rank Team
2005 27th   La Costa Canyon CA
2006 37th   Monte Vista Danville CA
2007 27th   St. Ignatius CA
2008 13th   Kent Denver CO
2009 20th   Highland Park TX
2010 15th   La Costa Canyon CA
2011 21st   Regis Jesuit CO
2012 19th   Arapahoe CO
2013 12th   St. Ignatius CA

Factoids:
Only two schools have been the top Western team more than once: La Costa Canyon in 2005 and 2010, and St. Ignatius in 2007 and 2013. California has been home to the top Western team 5 times, Colorado three times, and Texas once. Even better, li'l ole NorCal, all by its lonesome, has as many top Western rankings as the whole State of Colorado!

I have been lucky enough to see six of the nine top teams play during the season in which they ranked Best in the West. I missed seeing Highland Park, Regis Jesuit and Arapahoe play during their top-ranked seasons.

Slowly but surely, the West is taking a prominent place in Boys' High School Lacrosse. And the trend looks like it will keep going. In the recently completed US Lacrosse U-15 National Championships, 3D Select (a mixed team from Colorado and California) won the National Championship for that age group!



Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Youth Lacrosse: St. Ignatius Lacrosse Skill Development Camp

St. Ignatius will hold its first-ever lacrosse camp from August 12th through 15th at SI's historic J. B. Murphy Field. The camp is intended for boys in 3rd through 8th grades with some experience in lacrosse, who want to improve their game – learning from players who know how the game should be played at all levels.

St. Ignatius Lacrosse Skill Development Camp

St. Ignatius is the West Coast's most lauded Lacrosse program. The Wildcats finished their 2013 season ranked #12 in the nation, with their sole loss - by a single goal - coming at the hands of Long Island's legendary lacrosse juggernaut, Chaminade, which finished #6 in the nation. 


Players can  register at: https://www.siprep.org/page.cfm?p=3951

Head Coach Chris Packard, who is running the camp, has a record of 101-8 over his five seasons at the helm of the SI Boys' Lacrosse program. Coach Packard was a Captain of the Cornell Lacrosse team and was named to the All-Ivy team. 

The nine instructors helping Coach Packard run the camp all played their HS lacrosse in California, with 8 of the 9 having attended SI! More than that, this group of Camp Coaches include a first alternate to the US World team, an MLL player, two Tewaaraton Watch List players, two college All-Americans, and four players who participated in the Under Armour National Showcase as Seniors or Underclassmen. The cumulative number of US Lacrosse High School All-American awards in this group is astonishing! 

FInally, if I'm doing my math right, the ratio of campers to instructors will be no higher than 7-1.

Here is the Camp flyer:

There are several good lacrosse camps for boys in Northern California, This is one of them, and by its location, its Head Coach, and the home-grown nature of its college players, it is unique. I know all but one of the coaches personally and vouch them to be worthy role models for up-and-coming laxers. 


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

College: NCAA DIII – Jack Bodine's season at Haverford


Jack Bodine


Jack Bodine, former St. Ignatius great, had a terrific Sophomore year at Haverford College. While the Fords finished 7-7.playing in the tough Centennial Conference, Jack had a magnificent year!

Here are a few stats:
• Started all 14 games
• Was second in goals, assists, and points on the team, with 21 goals and 10 assists for 31 points
• His shooting percentage was 38.2%, with 74.5% of his shots on cage
• one of his goals was a game winner for the Fords

Congrats on a great season, Jack!

High School: Congrats to Matt Emery – Named to Under Armour All-American team




Matt Emery was recently named to the Under Armour All-American South team. Congrats to this St. Ignatius Senior – and his family – for being named to participate in this prestigious, nationally televised, event. Matt will attend UVA in the Fall, joining his brother, Rob, who was also named an Under Armour All-American in his Senior year at St. Ignatius.

Monday, May 13, 2013

College: California Players in the NCAA DI Tournament – Round of 16 review

Of the 29 California players on rosters of the 16 NCAA DI teams who made the tournament, here is a list of the players who saw the field in their games:

Lehigh Noah Molnar Senior M Corona Del Mar 3 GBs

Cornell Connor Hunt Sophomore LSM De La Salle 1 CTO
             Sean Doyle Frosh A Torrey Pines played

Loyola Blake Burkhardt Sophomore FO/M Corona Del Mar 6-13 FO 5GBs

Yale Michael Keasey Frosh M Corona Del Mar 1 Shot
         JW McGovern Frosh A St. Ignatius 1Shot, 1 G

Penn State Steven Bogart Junior D La Costa Canyon 3 GBs

Denver Eric Adamson Sophomore A Foothill-Santa Ana 1G 3A 2GBs
            Mike Riis Sophomore D La Costa Canyon played

Notre Dame Ryan Mix Junior A Corona Del Mar played


Here are some random factoids that I spotted:

• Of the 29 Californians in the Big Dance, 10 saw the field.

• By region of the State, 2 of 13 from NorCal saw the field, 3 of 10 from the San Diego Section played, and 5 of 6 from the Southern Section (Greater LA) played.

• By High School, Corona Del Mar had all 4 of its players in the Tournament see the field, and all those players are on teams moving on to the Elite Eight!

ยช Of the 11 Freshmen on rosters in the Round of 16, only 3 saw the field. All three of them are on teams that made the Elite Eight.

• Of the 8 teams moving on to the second round of the tournament, 6 teams have Californians on their rosters, totaling 19 players. Seven of those nineteen saw the field in the first round.


I'll update this list after the Elite Eight games are completed.









Thursday, May 02, 2013

High School: SI v Chaminade Video

Here is a beautiful, artistic, video of the SI v Chaminade game. It features lots of slow-motion footage and tells a great story. Worth watching this 5 minute piece of cinematic drama even if you aren't a lacrosse fan!

http://lacrosserecruits.com/news/featured/game-recap-video-st-ignatius-ca-at-chaminade-ny/

Thanks to the folks at Lacrosserecruit.com for producing it!

Friday, April 26, 2013

High School: Perennial Boys' Lacrosse Powers in California

Whether you call them "Perennial Powers" or "Programs," those few teams which, year-after-year, are vying for the top spot in California Boy's Lacrosse constitute less than a handful. In fact, there are only two! But, San Ramon Valley and De La Salle are very close!

In each of the last seven years, either St. Ignatius or La Costa Canyon has been top dog in the Golden State. I'll contend these two are the only California teams to deserve the label "Perennial Power." How do I come to this conclusion?

In a period when California has been inexorably (though irregularly) rising in LaxPower's National rankings, one or the other of these two programs has been top dog in the State, using LaxPower as the data source. Here's the matrix:

Top Programs in California's Recent Boy's Lacrosse History
Year
Top team
Nat’l Rank
Power Rating
#2 Team
Nat’l Rank
2013
SI
16th
99.28
DLS
32nd
2012
LCC
24th
99.20
SI
25th
2011
LCC
32nd
98.85
SI
33rd
2010
LCC
16th
99.40
SI
21st
2009
SI
26th
98.85
COR
30th
2008
SI
27th
98.85
LCC
71th
2007
SI
22nd
98.85
FH Santa Ana
76th

In summary: For 4 of the last seven years SI has been the top dog in the State. In the other three years, LLC has been the top team. In the four years in which SI was top dog, LCC, Coronado, DLS, and Foothill-Santa Ana were the Bridesmaids. In the three years for which LCC was King of the Hill, SI was ALWAYS second! So, no team has been more consistent than SI, and no team has more #1 finishes. Still, as they say in the Mutual Fund business, "Past Performance is no guarantee of future results."

Here are two other indicators of similarity. These two teams both faced – and lost by a goal to – top Long Island teams in their finest years. In 2010, LCC lost 7-6 to #9 in the nation St. Anthony's, one of two Catholic powers in NY. In 2013, SI lost 5-4 to national #2 ranked Chaminade – the other Catholic power in NY. In those years, both LCC and SI were ranked #16 in the nation. For LCC it was #16 out of 3,095 teams, while SI is #16 out of 3,112 teams.

For SI, there has been incredible coaching stability. In every one of the seven years covered in this analysis, Chris Packard has been either an Assistant Coach or Head Coach.It is a great treat to play for a "program." There are a number of other schools who have aspirations to become "programs." Time will tell, but great coaches have a way of setting up paths which, sooner or later, become programs.









Thursday, April 25, 2013

High School: Chaminade vs St. Ignatius delayed game reports

End of Q1 SI 1 Chaminade1
Cyrus Scott with 3 Saves
Joe Lang on a feed from Moore Harris for the SI goal

8:07 left in the 2nd quarter SI 1 Chaminade 3
Chaminade scores two quick ones off the FO

Still in Q2 Flyers pick up a loose ball and go for an unassisted goal. 4-1 Flyers

Flyers on EMO with Si in the Box for 2 minutes
SI time out with 1:52 left in the second quarter. Cyrus Scott great in the cage. Score still 4-1 Flyers.
SI facing a VERY stout defense – 13 unforced errors so far for the Wildcats.

Half Time: Score still Chaminade 4 SI 1
Observers say Cyrus Scott keeping SI in the game. Has at least 13 saves in the first half. SI playing lots of D. O needs to possess to give D a rest.

Start of Q3 David Fleming scores for SI Cham 4 SI 2. Seventeen minute scoring drought for the 'Cats has ended!

Flyers answer with a fast break goal. 5-2 Chaminade with 9 minutes to go in the 3rd.

Cyrus Scott keeping SI in the game. Two successive saves on the doorstep!
SI scores again on a rip by Matt Emery! Now 5-3 Chaminade.
David Fleming with his second goal! Now 5-4 Chaminade. 1:25 left in the 3rd.
Cyrus Scott with another BIG save to end the quarter. He's standing on his head! Chaminade 5 SI 4. Go 'Cats!
End of Q3: Chaminade 5 SI 4!

Q4 SI on defense:

Time out with 3:09 left in the game. Still Chaminade 5 SI 4.

SI in their huddle.

Now 31 seconds left. SI with the ball....

5 seconds left. Chaminade with the time out.

Final score Chaminade 5 SI 4. 

Box score from Long Island's Newsday:


GAME STATS
ChaminadeGoalsAssistsPointsSaves
 Burke0110
Carney Mahon0110
Dan Fowler0009
Jack Tigh1010
James Roberts1010
Ryan Lukacovic3140
Sean Cerrone0110
St.IgnatiusGoalsAssistsPointsSaves
 Emery1010
 Fleming2020
 Harris0110
 Lang1120
 Scott00016

Things to note in the Box Score: 1) Cyrus Scott with 16 saves, 2) the Flyers' Ryan Lukacovic was involved in 4 out of the Flyers 5 goals (3G,1A), 3) David Fleming stepped up, big-time, and 4) St. Ignatius had a respectable 50% of its goals assisted, while Chaminade had 80% of its goals come on assists.*
________________________________________________________________________________
* I have long believed that teams with high assist percentages win more often than those teams who don't. It has been an assertion of mine, with no proof. Recently, statisticians started mathematically modeling the components of success in lacrosse contests. Their work shows that the assist is the single most significant event in lacrosse games. More important than CTOs, more important than goals, more important than saves, and more important than ground balls. I believe the assist is the purposeful manifestation of a set of seemingly chaotic acts, i.e. off-ball movement, dodge-draw-dump, skip passes, give and goes, picks, screens, etc. All those activities seek, however imperfectly, to get a player into open, threatening space near the goal. That is, the assist is the result of continuous hard work by everyone on the offense. That motion, those activities, those coordinations without the ball, are the gist of getting a man freed up into threatening space. The assist is merely the natural last act in a long chain of actions. But it is a crucial last act!


I AM SO PROUD OF THE GUYS. They lose by one on the home field of the #2 team in the nation after traveling 3,000 miles to New York, jet-lagged, sleeping in unfamiliar surroundings, and all the other anomalies that impose a slight drain on players.

Great game by two fine teams. If Chaminade were to fly to SF, good as they are, I continue to believe the 'Cats win by two.




High School: Two pre-game articles on St. Ignatius vs Chaminade

Inside Lacrosse has written a short article on today's SI v Chaminade game. You can read it at:

http://insidelacrosse.com/news/2013/04/24/high-school-st-ignatius-prep-calif-travels-east-attempting-make-history

Lacrosse Recruits has another article today about the big East v West game. You can read it at:

http://lacrosserecruits.com/news/lacrosse/game-preview-st-ignatius-prep-ca-at-chaminade-ny/

By the way, the opening face takes place at 4:15PM EDT.

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

High School: St. Ignatius v Chaminade

St. Ignatius 2013
The big game is tomorrow. Two undefeated teams, one from Long Island - the mother of all hotbeds - and the other considered to be young guns from the West. Here are some sobering, but not depressing, facts: NO Western team has EVER defeated a top Long Island team or a top Maryland MIAA A team.

The last time I got my hopes up was in 2011, when Peter Worstell's San Ramon Valley Wolves travelled to Garden City (Coach Worstell's home town) and took on the then #5 ranked Garden City boys. Garden City prevailed, 14-7. Devin Dwyer, Garden City's X Attack, shredded SRV's defense, which was a VERY good Western defense. Devin Dwyer is now a highly rated Freshman at Harvard. His knowledge of the game's angles provided a lesson in Applied Geometry to the Wolves. Moreover, SRV had at least four players, I'd say 5, who were HIGHLY sought after by the top DI teams in the country: one to current #3 UNC, two to current #10 Penn State, and one to current #13 Syracuse.   No one in the West had ever had a stud like Michael Tagliaferri. He was one of four members of the World Champion 2012 US U-19 team who were, when selected, still in High School. The other three U-19 prodigies? All from the East Coast!

Here's the thing: A Western victory is gonna happen sometime. When that occurss, it will shake the Lacrosse world. Heck, it may be that some VERY GOOD East Coast teams will then have to come to visit the West Coast, to take on our boys – on our turf! Right now, we genuflect to the East. We are the ones who have to travel 3,000 miles, sleep in strange beds, forego home cooking, and generally get discomfited by the journey. I think that's worth at least two goals, but NO ONE on Long Island will be thinking of travel-distance adjusted scores. You've gotta be MUCH than an Eastern Power to beat them on their home turf.

Do I hope that SI will prevail against Chaminade? Hell yes! Do I think the odds are with us? No. Reason and hope aren't the best of bedfellows. I've lived in hope before. Still, this is a very good SI team, taking on the #2 team in the country. The Wildcats have their assets. SI has a VERY good coaching staff, a stout, smart, skilled defense, and, perhaps, the best overall offense the West has produced. I believe they can play with – and defeat – the vast majority of Long Island and Maryland teams. Can they beat a stacked Chaminade team with more than twice as many NCAA DI recruits as the Wildcats? The answer will only be known on the field and when the game ends, the Chaminade scoreboard will reveal the final score. Should SI prevail, get a picture of the scoreboard! That image would symbolize – forever – a shift in the tectonic plates of the Lacrosse world.

I will be rooting for the 'Cats – and hoping for the 'Cats – and even praying for the 'Cats to play their best. I refuse to be disappointed if they don't prevail and I will be VERY PROUD OF THEM if they do! If I could tell them one thing, it would be to remember that they are NOT playing for NorCal, they are NOT playing for California, they are NOT playing for the WEST. They ARE playing for their teammates, their coaches and their school. They are 34 strong and they are... RELENTLESS! AMDG, boys.


Saturday, April 06, 2013

High School: Day 3 results at the Langkammerer

SI         10
Brophy   2

St. Margaret's Episcopal 18
Bellarmine                      12

Sacred Heart Prep   10
Marin Catholic        13

Lincoln              5
Redwood         10

High School: Langkammerer Day 2 results

Bellarmine 11
Redwood    4

Brophy (AZ) 8
SHP              7 (OT)

St. Ignatius       18
Lincoln (OR)     4

St. Margaret's    11
Marin Catholic   5

Saturday, March 30, 2013

College: Yale gets 7-6 OT road win vs #11/13 Penn, McGovern with 1G 2A in defensive struggle

Yale's JW McGovern


Yale travelled to Franklin Field in Philly today, taking on the #11/13 Penn Quakers. Goals were hard to  come by today and, in a defensive struggle, Yale prevailed in OT, 7-6. Three of Yale's seven goals came on Man Up, while Penn had 2 of its 6 goals on EMO. Only eight goals combined were scored all even!

NorCal's JW McGovern, former SI 2x AA, had 1G 2A today, all coming on man-up situations. He paired up with Brandon Mangan, Yale's Junior Tewaaraton Candidate, on all three points, feeding 2 and receiving 1 from the Bulldog Junior.

Here's the game write-up from Philadelphia:


No. 13 Penn Rallies But Falls to Yale in Overtime

PHILADELPHIA - University of Pennsylvania fought back from a two-goal deficit two different times on Saturday, but it was washed away in a second as Yale scored in overtime to defeat the 13th-ranked Quakers, 7-6, at Franklin Field.

With the loss, Penn fell to 5-3 overall, 1-2 in Ivy League play. Yale, which had been a hard-luck team with Ivy losses to frontrunners Cornell and Princeton, improved to 4-3 overall and 1-2 in Ivy play.

Penn won the faceoff to start overtime, Danny Feeney again besting Yale's Dylan Levings. However, the Quakers' possession went by the boards as Drew Belinsky's quick-stick shot was stopped by Yale goalkeeper Eric Natale. The Bulldogs brought the ball down, and Brandon Mangan completed a superb game by coming around to the left post from behind and finding an open Kirby Zdrill in front. Zdrill quick-sticked the shot past Brian Feeney to end it.

It was a day where offense was hard to come by, especially of the 6-on-6 variety.

It did not appear that would be the case early. Penn jumped out to a 2-0 lead just three minutes into the game, first Zack Losco scoring unassisted and then Will Davy rebounding and finishing a shot less than a minute later.

As it turned out, that was pretty much Penn's offense in the quarter. Yale outshot the Quakers 13-5 in the period, 23-7 in the half, and if the Bulldogs had put the ball on target more this game could have been a lot different. Instead, the first goal did not come until just 4:33 remained in the half, Mangan finally scoring in a man-up situation off a John-William McGovern feed. The penalty was a non-releasable, and Yale took advantage to score again, Mangan and McGovern reversing roles the second time.

Colin Flaherty gave Yale its first lead with 3:08 left in the half on an unassisted goal. In the third quarter, nearly 10 minutes went by before anyone scored, again Mangan from McGovern on the extra man to give the Bulldogs a 4-3 advantage.

Penn ended a scoreless drought of 38 minutes and 40 seconds when Losco finished a Tim Schwalje feed in a man-up situation, then Schwalje evened the score off a feed from Nick Doktor with 2:27 left in the third quarter.

Yale responded. Mangan finished a Zdrill feed with 1:36 left in the third, then opened the fourth-quarter scoring with an unassisted tally, his fourth of the game. That made the score 6-4.

Penn made it 6-5 when Belinsky rocketed a feed from Schwalje past Natale, and then the Quakers drew level again on a crazy sequence that saw Yale called for two one-minute penalties (one non-releasable), get the ball back, but then be offsides on offense after breaking Penn's pressure defense. Given a second chance, Penn made no mistake -- Schwalje found Isaac Bock, and he finished to tie it. That set the stage for overtime.

Yale outshot Penn 40-27 for the game, and the face-off battle was fairly even as Yale won it 9-8. Feeney ended the game with nine saves in the Penn cage, while Natale had 10 stops for Yale.
Nice day, JW!

High School: 4 more days 'til the Langkammerer

In front of St. Ignatius
Gettin' ready for the Langkammerer! As you can see, SI takes seriously its responsibility for putting on a first-class event.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

High School: 2013 Jerry Langkammerer Invitational

Jerry Langkammerer Invitational Trophy

The 7th annual Jerry Langkammerer Invitational will take place at St. Ignatius' J. B. Murphy Field on April 4th, 5th, and 6th, 2013. Eight terrific teams, from three states, and from both NorCal and SoCal will participate. The Langkammerer is, without question, the best in-season Lacrosse tournament in the Western United States.

Here is the list of participating teams:
School                                               State    Rank in State    LaxPower Power ranking
Bellarmine College Prep                     CA            30                  93.76
Brophy College Prep                          AZ              1                  97.32
Marin Catholic                                    CA              2                  99.14
Lincoln HS                                         OR             20                 91.96
Redwood HS                                      CA              7                  98.69
Sacred Heart Prep                               CA             46                 92.39
St. Ignatius College Prep                    CA              1                   99.18
St. Margaret's Epsicopal School         CA             56                  91.98


My schedule will not allow me to attend the Langkammerer this year. It will be the first one I've ever missed. Feeling very depressed about that!

Here's the schedule for the Langkammerer:
       



Thursday Apr 4


Friday Apr 5


Saturday Apr 6


















12:00 turf
Brophy vs 
Bellarmine

12:00 turf
SI vs Lincoln

11:00 tuf
Lincoln vs Redwood









12:15 grass
Marin Catholic vs Lincoln

12:15 grass
SHP vs Brophy

11:15 grass
Bellarmine vs St. Margs


















2:00 Turf
St. Margarets vs SHP

2:00 
St. Margs vs Marin Catholic

1:00 turf
SI vs Brophy



turf





330 Turf
SI vs Redwood

330 turf
Redwood vs Bellarmine

1:15 grass
SHP vs Marin Catholic 


The usual caveats apply: Times and fields can change. Check in with coaches daily for any changes to the schedule.