Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9:17, thanks for taking the time for posting!
This is what I don't get - do all the teams that you mentioned end at U-15? The 3 that you mention where my sons have played all do. So what happens after U-15? Is is all just focused on high school teams?
9:17 here. Of the clubs I mentioned, Next Level, VLC, Madlax and Blackwolf all have HS teams. Next Level really is about youth lacrosse. They have a combo 11-12th grade team, and a 9-10th grade team. Neither are very good, and NL definitely is focused on U11-U15. They have their own facility in Bethesda, so they do a lot of instructional clinics, etc.
VLC has three excellent HS teams for 9th, 10th and 11th. All are among the best in the country. The sophomore team already has 4 kids committed to Division 1 programs. They are also fielding one combined Select team per grade with the Baltimore Crabs for certain tournaments.
Madlax has teams multiple teams for 9th, 10th and 11th - at least two per grade, and sometimes three. They usually have a good list of college commitments. They also have a Select team that is the best of all their teams that is very good, but it is mostly comprised of juniors and seniors. Like other clubs, they have been on an acquisition path, acquiring the Generals and Chesapeake Rock most recently.
Blackwolf is the sexiest name right now. They won a big recruiting tournament a couple of years ago, and they aggressively poach players from other clubs. The head of the program is not for everyone, but they have had a lot of Division 1 commitments from their teams. Their team has a lot of players from Gonzaga, Prep, St. Stephen's & St. Agnes, as well as VA public school kids.
I forgot to mention Bethesda Lacrosse. Their travel teams are historically pretty bad. The program is comparable to Breakout in terms of being a good program for developing players. But they are a non-profit (I think) and their kids obviously come primarily from Bethesda. But as a travel club, they are not competitive.
Thanks for all of this helpful information. I'm a single mom who knows nothing about the sport, although my son is crazy about it, and apparently quite good. My son is at a private school, although still in middle school. For the high school club teams you mention, do some schools gravitate towards one team or another. In other words, if you go to Landon or STA, you'll more likely end up at x team, while if at Bullis or Prep, another team?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:9:17, thanks for taking the time for posting!
This is what I don't get - do all the teams that you mentioned end at U-15? The 3 that you mention where my sons have played all do. So what happens after U-15? Is is all just focused on high school teams?
9:17 here. Of the clubs I mentioned, Next Level, VLC, Madlax and Blackwolf all have HS teams. Next Level really is about youth lacrosse. They have a combo 11-12th grade team, and a 9-10th grade team. Neither are very good, and NL definitely is focused on U11-U15. They have their own facility in Bethesda, so they do a lot of instructional clinics, etc.
VLC has three excellent HS teams for 9th, 10th and 11th. All are among the best in the country. The sophomore team already has 4 kids committed to Division 1 programs. They are also fielding one combined Select team per grade with the Baltimore Crabs for certain tournaments.
Madlax has teams multiple teams for 9th, 10th and 11th - at least two per grade, and sometimes three. They usually have a good list of college commitments. They also have a Select team that is the best of all their teams that is very good, but it is mostly comprised of juniors and seniors. Like other clubs, they have been on an acquisition path, acquiring the Generals and Chesapeake Rock most recently.
Blackwolf is the sexiest name right now. They won a big recruiting tournament a couple of years ago, and they aggressively poach players from other clubs. The head of the program is not for everyone, but they have had a lot of Division 1 commitments from their teams. Their team has a lot of players from Gonzaga, Prep, St. Stephen's & St. Agnes, as well as VA public school kids.
I forgot to mention Bethesda Lacrosse. Their travel teams are historically pretty bad. The program is comparable to Breakout in terms of being a good program for developing players. But they are a non-profit (I think) and their kids obviously come primarily from Bethesda. But as a travel club, they are not competitive.
Anonymous wrote:How do kids have time to play for both their HS and clubs? How are time conflicts handled?
Anonymous wrote:NP here. There are a number of clubs that have HS teams - Crabs, Breakers, Madlax, Zingos, Generals are just a few. From what I understand Blackwolf is in a league by itself because of the high caliber players they select.
Anonymous wrote:9:17, thanks for taking the time for posting!
This is what I don't get - do all the teams that you mentioned end at U-15? The 3 that you mention where my sons have played all do. So what happens after U-15? Is is all just focused on high school teams?
Anonymous wrote:9:17, thanks for taking the time for posting!
This is what I don't get - do all the teams that you mentioned end at U-15? The 3 that you mention where my sons have played all do. So what happens after U-15? Is is all just focused on high school teams?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting, and would love to see this be true, but it is not showing up at the U13, U11 or U9 level yet. Breakout has done very poorly in the Bethesda league the past few years and does not even have a team that is competitive enough to be in the NYPLL at any level. They have been at the bottom in that new Fall elite League that plays at Tilden, too. I hope you are right, and they are working on ball skills and game skills but, in my experience with a child who played for Breakout for several sesons, the coaches they hire do not know how to teach the whole game with skills and strategies. Heck, in the youngest age groups the coaches dont even always teach the kids the rules of the game.
You should try Club Blue or Next Level. Both are top notch programs. No disrespect intended for Breakout. I don't know anything about their program.