On my way to practice with the Chrome team the day before our game in Hamilton, Ontario, this past weekend, I read that our goalie, Jacksonville head coach John Galloway, had been named as the coach of a new U17 U.S. developmental team. US Lacrosse also named coaches for a U15 team, with boys and girls participating at both age levels.
It seems that we are following the soccer model with having standing youth teams that move up the ranks towards the senior men’s and women’s national teams. I am not here to debate whether this is a good idea and/or a necessary and logical development.
What I was struck by, however, was having just returned from Lake Placid and the competition in the inaugural 65-and-over division. There sure seemed some irony in U15 teams there being introduced alongside the results of the 65+ division, nearly defining the absolute boundaries for active participation in lacrosse.
I am here to declare enthusiastically that all the older guys walked away and that the Cloud Splitters captured this first senior championship. Here is an interview with Lake Placid founder and past masters veteran George Leveille, founder of the Lake Placid Summit Classic, which celebrated its 30th anniversary.
I am the one with the yellow hat in the handshake line who is thankful there was limited video of the actual game play!
We used some “handicap-accessible” rules in Lake Placid, and I would like to review a couple and suggest some additional adjustments for senior play.
We used World Lacrosse’s Olympic trial field size, which is approximately 80-by-40 yards. The field size may work, but the 6v6 international game may be too few players for that space, and our 10v10 was too many. It was just too crowded in the half-field, and some additional space would sharpen the play. I would suggest that we eliminate an attackman and a defenseman and play 8v8.
I would also like to see us limit the faceoff to only the start of each period, and don’t feel strongly whether the play should be restarted behind the goal (that was scored on) or at the midline. We play only 10 to 12-minute quarters, and each faceoff takes up too much game time.
At every level of lacrosse, the faceoff is when our game most resembles baseball — a couple of guys intimately involved in the play and everyone else just standing around. (Let me throw in my two cents for the college game: Make the clamp illegal. You have to quick rake the ball out.)
Finally, with the smaller field, I would suggest we cap the senior rosters at 16 to 18 players per team. Both the Splitters and the Legends (my team) had more than 20 players dressed and, if we reduce the number on the field, we would give everyone a chance to play more. If each team declares an 18-man roster, I will be happy to organize an overflow team and/or one that accommodates strays.
Forget Ken Cuccinelli. Give me your poor, your tired, your huddled masses.
As long as you also give me a goalie.