Anonymous wrote:What's ironic is that it's probably an indy parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
You must be fun at parties. Let the kids play; just because they aren't Chaminade or Landon doesn't mean they aren't kids playing lacrosse having fun.
Your response has literally nothing to do with the premise of the original comment- go back and do a better job of trying to draw a different nexus next time.
Anonymous wrote:Robinson by 3. 8-5 type score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
You must be fun at parties. Let the kids play; just because they aren't Chaminade or Landon doesn't mean they aren't kids playing lacrosse having fun.
Your response has literally nothing to do with the premise of the original comment- go back and do a better job of trying to draw a different nexus next time.
My point is that crapping on two teams for being average in the grand scale of high school lacrosse is just unnecessary and the only point of doing so is to boost their own fragile ego. To say I avoided the premise of the argument is just as childish as the original argument itself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
You must be fun at parties. Let the kids play; just because they aren't Chaminade or Landon doesn't mean they aren't kids playing lacrosse having fun.
Your response has literally nothing to do with the premise of the original comment- go back and do a better job of trying to draw a different nexus next time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
You must be fun at parties. Let the kids play; just because they aren't Chaminade or Landon doesn't mean they aren't kids playing lacrosse having fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
One average high school lacrosse team playing an equally average team. Congrats for being so bold.
Anonymous wrote:Kudos to Madison and Robinson for scheduling each other early, not to mention Madison scheduling Langley and Yorktown. much better than scheduling pastry teams and running up the score.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are there any best known methods (set up, settings, etc) or ways to get the NFHS cameras to focus on face offs? Seems like 1/3 of FOs end up with the camera still focused on the location of a prior goal, or somewhere that isn't on the ball. I know the auto-feed is nice to have, but the frequency with which it has issues with lacrosse seems very high and I am hoping there's maybe some set up thing that can help.
It works well for football so schools won't touch the settings to make it any better for other sports.
But to give the system credit I'm sure it's hard to track a white ball, in a white stick, with white unis, on a poorly lit field.
Anonymous wrote:Are there any best known methods (set up, settings, etc) or ways to get the NFHS cameras to focus on face offs? Seems like 1/3 of FOs end up with the camera still focused on the location of a prior goal, or somewhere that isn't on the ball. I know the auto-feed is nice to have, but the frequency with which it has issues with lacrosse seems very high and I am hoping there's maybe some set up thing that can help.