Isn't a "Laxbro" just a surfer-dude (wanna-be) who plays with a stick instead of a board? |
Since you made it personal. F@#$ you. Get a life. I'm done wasting my time trying to find something valuable on this website amongst all the crap. |
Getting irate at an anonymous poster on an anonymous board makes you look like an even bigger idiot. |
"Bro" is just another term affluent white kids appropriated from the black vernacular. Kind of like "You go girl" for white women. And let's not forget the terrorist fist bump. |
Do the MoCo schools have any lax subcultures? I see quite a bit of boys wearing LAX clothing/hats, etc. around the Whitman, BCC, and Wootten hangouts. |
Lax is in pretty much all suburban public schools at this point; from what I can tell the "culture" is not as intense though. |
Oh yes it is. |
Can either or both of you elaborate? |
Lax is a meathead sport that matters to nobody outside of a few tiny pockets of wannabe elitists sprinkled around the mid Atlantic and New England. After high school, even those wannabes lose interest. |
i Perhaps. But when they start spawning, the wannabes' interest in the sport is reignited, and they become the ultimate loud, ultra-competitive, and whiny stage parents, ensuring that the species will survive for yet another generation . . . |
Yikes! Happy Holidays everyone |
Abusive loudmouth parents are not limited to lacrosse. The passion for lacrosse is similar to that of hockey. Its fans don't lose interest and remain involved well beyond their high school years. Look at all the master/grandmaster leagues sprouting. Because lacrosse is a predominantly white middle class sport, it is a safe and easy target for the media. Some call it a meathead sport while others say it's a sport for future wall streeters. All gross inaccurate generalizations. |
"white middle class sport"? |
Is the issue with the "white" or "middle class" part of the claim? |
I work on wall street. Nobody gives a sh#t about lacrosse nor are we impressed with anyone who used to play lacrosse. It is a niche sport at best. I think it is a lot of fun, but realistically as a men's sport, it's a cut above badminton or fencing to the vast majority of the world.
Advice to "elitist wannabees"-- invest in golf lessons for your kids. Unless your son is a pro prospect (by pro, I mean baseball, football, or basketball), competence on the golf course is the only athletic endeavor that matters to anyone beyond the age of 22. |