Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't say nice things on these threads, that's when they stall.
Ha ha ha.![]()
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Straight truth shuts it down too. Can’t really argue with it.
It’s long past time someone shut down the whining about “Capital poaches players from the programs that developed them”. That’s just such a ridiculous complaint. Players develope in a myriad of ways and the club doesn’t matter too much if the player is doing what they are supposed to, giving big effort, and practicing on their own. Extra lessons and experiences always help too - exposure to other players, other coaches, other teams. Once a player is aiming to be recruited is when the club name matters the most and that’s just to get a kid noticed/get college coaches on the sideline.
Anonymous wrote:You can't say nice things on these threads, that's when they stall.
Anonymous wrote:If the lacrosse pundits on this board are correct their feedback should be alarming to all lax club owners. The belief seems to be clubs have little to no impact on developing players and the strength of teams is simply luck of draw by year and location. This is not a ringing endorsement for parents to spend what amounts to $30-40K+ in lax club plus travel fees over many years of club lacrosse. And this doesn’t even take into consideration the time invested to get to practices and tournaments.
Anonymous wrote:Bill is not a great coach, he always inherits players so it looks like he is great, but he is not. He just hams it up with the parents and players and pretends to be everyone’s friend.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:If you want to be a good player, there is no doubt you have to be on one of the better programs. This gives the player the opportunity to play with and compete against other good players/teams.
However, travel lacrosse is just one piece of the puzzle. What I learned with my second daughter (more motivated than first), you really need to do way more outside of the club if the girl wants to be really good - Division I good. If that's not the girls goal, totally fine, playing only with her travel team will set her up to be a good high school player. However, if the girl has higher aspirations, you do need to consider strength training, agility training, extra lacrosse sessions with someone that knows what they're talking about, etc. Most travel teams practice once in the fall, maybe twice a week in the Spring then have lulls with no training.
I say this because many think once they are on a "travel" team (many of which are called travel but marginally better than rec. teams - sorry) they think they are on the road to college glory. If your daughter doesn't have a stick in her hand most days of the week, it's hard to compete against the "Blue Bloods" in Maryland and LI that see lacrosse as a way of life. Not trying to sound condescending, just based on daughters experiences and my own observations.
Anonymous wrote:Coaching matters. The particular year's/team's coach is more important than the club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bill is not a great coach, he always inherits players so it looks like he is great, but he is not. He just hams it up with the parents and players and pretends to be everyone’s friend.
Mannnnnn……. Shut da FUQ up
Who da FUQ is you?!?!!
Posting real tough in “DC Urban Mom” - would never have the cojones to say something like that to his face.
I’m sure you consistently perform your job year in and year out at the level nationally Bill and Capital do Mr/Ms Anonymous?
Put your name on your comment so folks can judge your ability to coach and get kids recruited - WTF is wrong with you…