Anonymous wrote:Is lacrosse way less competitive than soccer for boys? Or are the rosters a lot larger? Or maybe the skills needed for lacrosse just carry over from other sports more easily? It seems hard to believe kids can pick up a sport in HS and make the team when for soccer the boys practically need to be playing in national level leagues.
Anonymous wrote:Hit the wall
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No it is not impossible at all.
My kids is super coordinated. Very competitive spirit. Also super tiny when he started his growth spurt did not happen til 11th grade.
My son never picked up a lacrosse stick til 8th grade. Made varsity as a freshman. No club teams ever.
Public HS tryouts in MD. A strong team went to states many times etc..
Division 1 college.
My son hit the wall with that lax ball so often my poor neighbors must have had headaches from the sound of that lax ball hiting a piece of wood in my backyard.
Cool story but did not happen here in the DMV there has not been one local D1 commit in the last 10 years that did no club and came from a public HS. Also in those years many local D1 kids were recruited in 8th grade. There are not many d1 commits each year and it is a small world this story is highly suspect.
Well, that's true, probably. Has nothing to do with it being "impossible". Never mind the OP's trolling thread incubation of it being "impossible to make it at the high school level" and "how do you deal with it"?!?!?Anonymous wrote:Most D1 recruits did play since elementary school
Don't sweat this guy, ^^ his attention span is instagram max, and also where he gets his media and info. Lacrosse is not one of the few sports you have to be playing from the cradle. Certainly any decent athlete can apply. It's not a mistake that many of the guys getting plucked nowadays are 24/7/365 average sized private school kids who have the access, higher motivation and push to be "D1". They've created their own market, but it's not because they played in 4th grade.Anonymous wrote:
No it is not impossible at all.
My kids is super coordinated. Very competitive spirit. Also super tiny when he started his growth spurt did not happen til 11th grade.
My son never picked up a lacrosse stick til 8th grade. Made varsity as a freshman. No club teams ever.
Public HS tryouts in MD. A strong team went to states many times etc..
Division 1 college.
My son hit the wall with that lax ball so often my poor neighbors must have had headaches from the sound of that lax ball hiting a piece of wood in my backyard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No it is not impossible at all.
My kids is super coordinated. Very competitive spirit. Also super tiny when he started his growth spurt did not happen til 11th grade.
My son never picked up a lacrosse stick til 8th grade. Made varsity as a freshman. No club teams ever.
Public HS tryouts in MD. A strong team went to states many times etc..
Division 1 college.
My son hit the wall with that lax ball so often my poor neighbors must have had headaches from the sound of that lax ball hiting a piece of wood in my backyard.
Cool story but did not happen here in the DMV there has not been one local D1 commit in the last 10 years that did no club and came from a public HS. Also in those years many local D1 kids were recruited in 8th grade. There are not many d1 commits each year and it is a small world this story is highly suspect.
Anonymous wrote:
No it is not impossible at all.
My kids is super coordinated. Very competitive spirit. Also super tiny when he started his growth spurt did not happen til 11th grade.
My son never picked up a lacrosse stick til 8th grade. Made varsity as a freshman. No club teams ever.
Public HS tryouts in MD. A strong team went to states many times etc..
Division 1 college.
My son hit the wall with that lax ball so often my poor neighbors must have had headaches from the sound of that lax ball hiting a piece of wood in my backyard.
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t start playing from late elementary school, it’s impossible to make it at the high school level