Anonymous wrote:PP. Has an interesting point
I'm familiar with the Washington lacrosse community and the Baltimore lacrosse community. IMHO the problems in the lax culture are some of the DC parents and their extra-special boys.
Anonymous wrote:Young men get into college December of their senior year. Lacrosse verbal committing as freshmen or sophomores is a self esteem building exercise for white upper lass emotional invalid kids and their status mongering parents. It is impressive to apply and get into a great university, but don't confuse that with this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.
I like STA, its coaching staff, and the school's approach. And although STA does not have the volume of Division I commits of the other IAC schools, they have a good record of sending kids to Ivies. However, it is silly and just counterfactual to suggest that only STA has scholar athletes or Ivy League commits. Every other IAC school has players on Ivy rosters. Don't embarrass St. Albans by denigrating other league schools (and on something so obviously and provably false).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.
There are sometimes lots of non-sports reasons for these commit arrangements. The kid is also a legacy and that is a pretty powerful input along with being a strong student of course to make it happen. He didn't even play as a sophomore.
In most worlds, but not in the DMV it appears, a young man getting into a top college like Yale would be the subject of much applause and kudos. Instead, the miserable poster above tries to undermine the kid's accomplishment by throwing the legacy card and saying he didn't play as a sophomore. Amazingly petty and wholly unnecessary in my view. The fact is that Yale and the other Ivy League lax programs have +/- 10 spots in every class that are open for commitments. To get a spot in the recruiting class at Yale, the player needs to be one of the top players in the country and a very accomplished student. The legacy status does not factor into the mix based upon my experience. If the player could get in on his grades and his legacy status, the coach would not need to use a "spot" for him and he could just walk on. Not the case here. Yale made a commitment to this young man because the program wants him as a player and a student.
Seriously folks, try to fight the urge to make yourselves feel better about the lacrosse recruiting process by urinating on someone else's good fortune. The process is hard and taxing on the athlete and his/her family. Knowing that there are critics looking to minimize the accomplishment is one reason why lacrosse gets a bad reputation for the quality of the parents involved. It just doesn't have to be that way. Every kid from the DMV that gets a chance to play D1 lacrosse is opening doors (hopefully) for other players to get a look. Celebrate the successes and keep the vitriolic BS to yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.
There are sometimes lots of non-sports reasons for these commit arrangements. The kid is also a legacy and that is a pretty powerful input along with being a strong student of course to make it happen. He didn't even play as a sophomore.
Anonymous wrote:Pretty sure Landon has server farm robots auto reply algorithms running to contest anything that reads they don't have the bestest lacrosse prep school in the galaxy. There just isn't any way humans could cover all this.
Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.
Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.
Anonymous wrote:I just read that St. Albans just had a rising junior commit to Yale. Looks like STA till can produce strong players who have the grades to get into top notch schools. Not sure I can say the same about the rest of the teams in the IAC.