Anonymous wrote:Pretty classless of St. John's. Obviously bringing in Giblin means the end of Horsey at some point. St. John's has been interested in Giblin for a long time, so the marriage is not a shock. Although Horsey has not done much at St. John's, it's pretty lame to show him the door after just a couple of seasons.
Anonymous wrote:maryland's #1 recruit this year who was also the #1 recruit in the country at his position didn't go to maryland, and instead quit lacrosse to enroll at another university. he didn't enjoy playing anymore and was burned out.
the two trends that won't end yet are parents getting more and more excited and involved in the recruiting process and kids getting worried about or younger and younger.
Anonymous wrote:You're right. Men's tennis is the worst. Women's tennis on mute is ok when the outfits are revealing.
Anonymous wrote:An hour of wall ball a day is about as fun as playing tennis or watching men's tennis on TV. Every school year class in the DMV there will be 50-60 kids who commit to D1 college programs, and good for them I say. About 40 of those kids will never see the field. Then there are thousands more kids who will play rec, some club and HS and then maybe club in college. In a lot of years I've never seen Madlax or Crabs turn an otherwise weak lacrosse player into a first line middie at an ACC school, but I've seen them sell dozens of bench players to same.
When my 11 year old is done playing I want him to say what my college son said to me last summer before heading off for his senior year: "Thanks for all those years of hanging out and keeping lacrosse fun, dad. We had a blast, didn't we." We sure did. BTW, that's not some sublime daddy bragging. He hasn't played a whole lot at an Ivy, but has had a lot of fun and made lifelong friends in that program. Earlier this week he got into a doctorate program at Oxford in the UK. Which means a lot of pints and a lot more laughs. I'll click my heels over there, thinking of your post. Thanks for playin'.