Anonymous wrote:DCE has become a feeder for Bullis which has scared off a few parents who might have otherwise looked at the program. Only 5 of the 25 boys on the DCE '21 team are at Bullis. All top lax HS programs are well represented.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did DC Express 2021 lose yesterday to West Coast Stars 2021 @ the B'More Fall Classic? The Tourney Machine app stopped updating with DCE down 4-1.
WCS lost its first 2 games.
DCE beat Crabs 8-2 and then immediately played WCS, DCE was up 6-5 and WCS scored with a few seconds left on a man up to end the game tied at 6-6.
My son is friends with someone on DCE 2021 and that player told my son that DCE lost to WCS.
confirmed 6-6 and DCE unlucky to end in a tie
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did DC Express 2021 lose yesterday to West Coast Stars 2021 @ the B'More Fall Classic? The Tourney Machine app stopped updating with DCE down 4-1.
WCS lost its first 2 games.
DCE beat Crabs 8-2 and then immediately played WCS, DCE was up 6-5 and WCS scored with a few seconds left on a man up to end the game tied at 6-6.
My son is friends with someone on DCE 2021 and that player told my son that DCE lost to WCS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is intimidating! DS is a MIAA player who started as a sophomore, probably because he works really hard on the field and in the gym, is a good overall athlete, and a great size for his position. (He does not play for one of the top MIAA teams but not for a bad one either.) He has never played club. Now a junior he wants to play D3 or even club lax at a SLAC. Looking through this thread, I signed him up for a few of the summer showcases suggested for D3 players like the NE Top 150. Schools in the Liberty League or in the Northcoast Athletic Conference would be good academic fits even without lax. Any other things he should do? Any good academic SLAC with decent club teams that would be worth considering? He knows that getting on a D3 team is unlikely but he has really grown to love the sport after a late start.
You want the truth? Your son has started too late to be recruited. Your best bet is for him to be deemed a preferred walkon. Coming from the DMV does carry a lot of cachet in lacrosse circles. Sign him up for Prospect days. If his grades are high, that could offset low or developing lacrosse IQ.
It doesn't take years to develop "lacrosse IQ." It doesn't take a genius. If he has played a season with an MIAA varsity team, then he likely developed what he needed to know how to play the game. But he really should look at which schools are the best fit for him overall, not for club lacrosse. Club lacrosse in college is a little lame.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is intimidating! DS is a MIAA player who started as a sophomore, probably because he works really hard on the field and in the gym, is a good overall athlete, and a great size for his position. (He does not play for one of the top MIAA teams but not for a bad one either.) He has never played club. Now a junior he wants to play D3 or even club lax at a SLAC. Looking through this thread, I signed him up for a few of the summer showcases suggested for D3 players like the NE Top 150. Schools in the Liberty League or in the Northcoast Athletic Conference would be good academic fits even without lax. Any other things he should do? Any good academic SLAC with decent club teams that would be worth considering? He knows that getting on a D3 team is unlikely but he has really grown to love the sport after a late start.
You want the truth? Your son has started too late to be recruited. Your best bet is for him to be deemed a preferred walkon. Coming from the DMV does carry a lot of cachet in lacrosse circles. Sign him up for Prospect days. If his grades are high, that could offset low or developing lacrosse IQ.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is intimidating! DS is a MIAA player who started as a sophomore, probably because he works really hard on the field and in the gym, is a good overall athlete, and a great size for his position. (He does not play for one of the top MIAA teams but not for a bad one either.) He has never played club. Now a junior he wants to play D3 or even club lax at a SLAC. Looking through this thread, I signed him up for a few of the summer showcases suggested for D3 players like the NE Top 150. Schools in the Liberty League or in the Northcoast Athletic Conference would be good academic fits even without lax. Any other things he should do? Any good academic SLAC with decent club teams that would be worth considering? He knows that getting on a D3 team is unlikely but he has really grown to love the sport after a late start.
Anonymous wrote:the IAC players tend to make a name for themselves in college.
I can't name one kid who has come out of the WCAC and made a name for himself in college other than Billy Gladding in the early 2000's at UVA and obviously Paul Rabil from DeMatha.