Anonymous wrote:Have you seen this?
deadspin.com/hey-ungrateful-quitter-emails-from-an-angry-lacrosse-660703941/amp
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where did the top kids end up going?
I believe there were several Landon and Bullis kids on the DC Express 2021 team.
To quote one of the Founding Fathers of club lax in the DMV...
Ungrateful Quitters!!
Anonymous wrote:Where did the top kids end up going?
I believe there were several Landon and Bullis kids on the DC Express 2021 team.
Anonymous wrote:You guys are all windbags. No wonder everyone wants this thread deleted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's one example (and there are several more from the same day)
"The difference? He's on the wall, practicing shooting, doing drills on his own;"
If I were a betting man that was one of your posts.
How bout taking the time to understand what a poster is saying before becoming unhinged. I didnt read the post as being braggy, but offering a different perspective from all of the know it all, lax wannabe dads (yourself included) that think the prescription to playing at the next level is wall ball.
+1. And please spare us the incoherent, rambling lecture
Different poster than the guy you're attacking.
I'm a prior poster who thinks that maybe the two (one) poster in attack mode should take a little time to peruse the philosophies of kids like Steph Curry or older guys like Michael Jordan who talk about how important that it is that they practice at their craft. Curry is by no means an all-around multi-ability athlete walf hile Jordan clearly is yet both show the same focus and dedication to refining their skills. So if you two (or one, as the case probably is) should keep on believing that your miracle child will defy all the odds but the rest of us will allow our kids to practice on the wall or with a lax buddy.
Although, now, going back to reread your post, it is quite probable that you are a kid given your poor grammar, sloppy spelling/punctuation and lack of erudition.
And, by all means, please take it easy and lay off the practice. It is doing you (your kid?) a world of good!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's one example (and there are several more from the same day)
"The difference? He's on the wall, practicing shooting, doing drills on his own;"
If I were a betting man that was one of your posts.
How bout taking the time to understand what a poster is saying before becoming unhinged. I didnt read the post as being braggy, but offering a different perspective from all of the know it all, lax wannabe dads (yourself included) that think the prescription to playing at the next level is wall ball.
+1. And please spare us the incoherent, rambling lecture
Anonymous wrote:Here's one example (and there are several more from the same day)
"The difference? He's on the wall, practicing shooting, doing drills on his own;"
If I were a betting man that was one of your posts.
How bout taking the time to understand what a poster is saying before becoming unhinged. I didnt read the post as being braggy, but offering a different perspective from all of the know it all, lax wannabe dads (yourself included) that think the prescription to playing at the next level is wall ball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all kids need to spend hours on the bounce back, shooting, etc. My kid is playing d1 ball, and I could never get him to do any of that - it wasn't fun for him, so he didn't do it. Instead, he played a lot of basketball, football, and soccer. In the end, he earned a spot on a team for his defensive and transition skills, most of which he developed playing other sports, not hitting a bounce back in the backyard.
First, congrats to your son.
Second, nobody said developing your lax skills was mutually exclusive from playing other sports.
Third, if you're trying to convince anyone who's played or coached at the D1 level that your son isn't putting in extra work, then your son is sitting on the sideline cheering his team mates on. There is a huge chasm between making a D1 team and playing. If your son is on a quality team, he understand this already.
My point was that there are other ways to get there than wall ball and focusing solely on offensive skills (which is how several recent posters described their kid working hard). But you are right, regardless, you got to put in the work, and your kid needs to be driven. As an aside, I found that hanging with other kids equally as driven was a motivating factor as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not all kids need to spend hours on the bounce back, shooting, etc. My kid is playing d1 ball, and I could never get him to do any of that - it wasn't fun for him, so he didn't do it. Instead, he played a lot of basketball, football, and soccer. In the end, he earned a spot on a team for his defensive and transition skills, most of which he developed playing other sports, not hitting a bounce back in the backyard.
First, congrats to your son.
Second, nobody said developing your lax skills was mutually exclusive from playing other sports.
Third, if you're trying to convince anyone who's played or coached at the D1 level that your son isn't putting in extra work, then your son is sitting on the sideline cheering his team mates on. There is a huge chasm between making a D1 team and playing. If your son is on a quality team, he understand this already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone know how the Madlax Girls tryouts went?
No. Nobody cares
NP. Some of us are curious. My DD is a middle schooler who plays for a top club and has a lot of lax friends who play at various Nova clubs and no one she knows tried out.
I had no idea there was a girls program. Is it new? Where are the players mainly coming from?
Thats just it - its new. I hear tryouts were pretty sparse. Imagine there aren't enough girls per grad year to fill a rosters in order to actually play in a league or tournament. Its hard to imagine anyone allowing their daughter to play for the guy who owns Madlax.