Lacosse_Summer09:Layout 1 - Ontario Lacrosse Magazine
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Lacosse_Summer09:Layout 1 - Ontario Lacrosse Magazine
SUMMER 2009 | $4.95 High school lacrosse taking off in Ontario Katie Guy, Lady Blue Knights alumni, and current member of Team Canada THE PASSION LIVES ON How lacrosse helped past, current and future NHL stars CPM Agreement #40752539 Laurier Golden Hawks and Lady Blue Knights driven by tradition, teamwork & winning www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com CONTENTS Summer 2009 • Volume 1 • Issue 3 // St. Peter's Secondary School (Peterborough), 2009 OFSAA AAA/AAAA Champions FEATURES 16 20 22 24 26 8 Ontario high school lacrosse growing by leaps and bounds THE UNDENIABLE LINK From Joe Nieuwendyk to Dave Bolland to John Tavares, hockey and lacrosse continue to enjoy a deep connection A BLUEPRINT TO FOLLOW FORWARD THINKING In Stayner, Whitby and Sudbury, developing programs for a younger generation has attracted a new crop of lacrosse players and enthusiasts HEY REF! Time has come to let the referees have their say www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Photo: Graig Abel Photography 4 SCHOOL’S IN Through tradition, dedication and teamwork, the Lady Blue Knights and Laurier Golden Hawks are putting women’s lacrosse on the map DEPARTMENTS 20 10 12 14 19 28 NEWS & NOTES Team Canada Wins Bronze • NCAA Game Sets Attendance Record • Roughnecks Win NLL Title • OMFLL Recap BAGGATAWAY A stroll down Minto Cup memory lane RULE BOOK Line Changes & Illegal Checks NATIONALS REPORT Major Lacrosse League’s newest team is holding its own LACROSSE ART Talking to the kids behind the masks EQUIPMENT BAG Helmets ON THE COVER Katie Guy, Team Canada Photo: Pellerins Photography Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 3 NEWS & NOTES Ontario Lacrosse magazine is the primary source of information for Ontario lacrosse players, parents, coaches and officials. Published quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall), Ontario Lacrosse is mailed directly to more than 10,000 members of the Ontario Lacrosse Association. Our readers turn to the magazine for the latest lacrosse news, products, trends, insights and expert opinion. All editorial submissions and article queries should be sent to Paul Grossinger, editor: paul@kappublishing.com. After a slow start at the 2009 Federation of International Lacrosse (FIL) Women’s World Cup, Canada defeated England 14-9 to capture the bronze medal. Held in Prague, Czech Republic from June 18 to 27, the 16team tournament was the largest in the history of World Cup play. After losses to Australia (16-11) and U.S.A. (11-4), Canada defeated England (10-9), Japan (23-12) and Wales (10-6 in quarterfinals) before a close semifinal loss to Australia (12-10). Dana Dobbie (18 goals, 3 assists), Amanda Friend (12g, 7a), Crysti Foote (12g, 7a), Brooke McKenzie (12g, 5a) and Abbey Friend (10g, 1a) led Team Canada in scoring. Team Canada members from Ontario included: Jessica Brownridge (Whitby), Alana Chan (Omemee), Christine Comeau (Whitby), Dana Dobbie (Fergus), Kalley Greer (Whitby), Katie Guy (Whitby), Lindsey Hart (Vineland), Tami Rayner (Oshawa) and Kylee White (London). Similar to past tournaments, U.S.A. and Australia met in the finals with the Americans defeating the defending champions 8-7 to take home the gold medal. For complete tournament results, visit: www.lacrosseworldcup2009.com The views expressed by the authors are not necessarily those of the Ontario Lacrosse Association (OLA) or KAP Publishing Ltd. All editorial submissions are subject to editing. All rights reserved. Contents may not be reprinted without written permission of the OLA and KAP Publishing. PUBLISHER Ontario Lacrosse Association 3 Concorde Gate, Suite 306 Toronto, ON M3C 3N7 T: 416-426-7066; F: 416-426-7382 Published in partnership with: KAP Publishing Ltd. 1054 Centre Street, Suite 199 Thornhill, ON L4J 8E5 T: 905-370-0736; F: 905-747-0409 info@kappublishing.com www.kappublishing.com EDITOR Paul Grossinger paul@kappublishing.com ART DIRECTOR Mark Tzerelshtein markintosh@markintoshdesign.com OLA JUNIOR 'A' TITANS MEET IN MID-SEASON SHOWDOWN ADVERTISING SALES REPRESENTATIVE Dave Douglas CONTRIBUTORS Paul Grossinger Nicole Kallmeyer Roger Lajoie Paul Whiteside Melissa Yollick Return Undeliverable Canadian Addresses to: KAP Publishing Ltd. Circulation Department 1054 Centre Street, Suite 199 Thornhill, ON L4J 8E5 Printed in Canada 4 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Photo: Mike Malone Canadian Publications Mail #40752539 In an OLA Junior “A” mid-season battle of the top two teams in league standings, the Orangeville Northmen, powered by the outstanding goaltending of Nick Rose, defeated the Burlington Chiefs 13-10 in Orangeville in front of 1,100 fans. Four consecutive, third-period goals by Adam Jones of Orangeville wasn’t even the featured performance of the contest as the highlight of the night was the dominating face-off skills of the Chiefs’ Jordan McIntosh (pictured). Nine days later in the rematch at Central Arena in Burlington, the Chiefs outscored Orangeville 8-2 in the first period and cruised to a 15-9 victory. For Burlington, Cameron Watts made 46 saves and Kevin Brownell (3g,4a), Kiel Matisz (1g,4a) and Matt Hicks (4g) led the way offensively. Far more important for the Chiefs’ playoff prospects was a loud home crowd of fans genuinely interested in a championship chase likely to include the Northmen, the Brampton Excelsiors and the Six Nations Arrows. Photos: Pellerins Photography TEAM CANADA WINS BRONZE NEWS & NOTES JAMIESON SCORES GOAL OF HIS LIFE Cody Jamieson (43) of Six Nations celebrates his gamewinning overtime goal to capture the 2009 NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Championship at Gillette Stadium in Boston, Ma. Played on May 25, Syracuse defeated Cornell 10-9 to finish 16-2 on the season, and take home back-toback national titles. In victory, the Orangemen set a team record of 10 NCAA championships (since 1971). Cornell had taken a 9-6 lead in the game with 5:31 to play before Syracuse embarked on one of the most memorable comebacks in NCAA history. Three consecutive Syracuse goals by Toronto-native Stephen Keough, Jamieson and Kenny Nims (with four seconds remaining) forced the game into overtime. NCAA GAME SETS ATTENDANCE RECORD SANDERSON & CODD DRIVE CALGARY TO NLL TITLE On April 25, in front of a NCAA men’s lacrosse regular-season record crowd of 30,192 in Columbus, Ohio, the University of Notre Dame beat Ohio State 14-8 to finish as the only undefeated team in U.S. college lacrosse with a record of 13-0. The lacrosse game, promoted as Showdown in the Shoe, preceded the Ohio State Buckeyes spring football game. On the field for the lacrosse Buckeyes that afternoon was Brock Sorensen, a 2006 Minto Cup champion and captain of Team Canada’s U19 squad in 2008. In front of 13,042 hometown fans at the Pengrowth Saddledome, the Calgary Roughnecks captured the National Lacrosse League (NLL) Champions Cup by defeating the New York Titans, 12-10, on May 15. The victory was the second league title in Roughnecks franchise history. Josh Sanderson was named the Reebok Championship Game MVP. Orangeville-native Bruce Codd had a two-goal performance for Calgary and remembers the night. “What a feeling it was winning the Champions Cup!” he says. “There is nothing better than celebrating a championship on your home turf in front of your fans. The game itself was a classic as it was a clash of two very different styles and had a little bit of everything: a goal from centre (Calgary’s Kaleb Toth), between the legs (Titan's Casey Powell) and big saves (by winning goalie Matt King). It truly was a spectacle for our game.” A two-time athlete-of-the-year at Kenner Collegiate in Peterborough, Sorensen reflected on the experience: “The Showdown in the Shoe was very special to our entire program. The atmosphere the crowd creates in Ohio Stadium is breathtaking. For me personally, I don’t think it truly registered that we played in front of that many people in a spectacular venue until weeks later. It was a great experience and our team is looking forward to the same contest next year. With this many people watching in the State of Ohio, it does a lot for the game of lacrosse.” www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 5 NEWS & NOTES FESTIVAL CONTINUES TO GROW The Ontario Lacrosse Festival returns July 31 to August 9 with expanded facilities, program and status that now ranks it as the second largest annual youth sport event in the province. With the 2009 event approaching 6,800 athletes and coaches, the Festival is larger than all Ontario youth sporting events except the Bell Capital Cup hockey tournament in Ottawa. The economic impact of the event is now estimated at $5.1 million. This summer the Festival welcomes four new events as part of its 10-day celebration of the game: the Girls Bantam Lacrosse Championship of Canada, the U19 Girls Field Lacrosse Provincials, the OLA Bantam Provincials, and the OLA Midget Provincials. In total, the Festival hosts 12 separate national and provincial championships in both box and field lacrosse. To accommodate the expanded size of the event, the Festival now includes the use of additional facilities in the City of Oshawa. Children’s Arena, Harman Park Arena and the Donevan Recreation Complex join the stable of existing facilities (Iroquois Park Sports Centre, McKinney, Vipond and Legends Centre) to host approximately 400 teams this year. Opening ceremonies of the Festival are scheduled for August 2 at 4:00 pm on Pad 1 at the Iroquois Park Sports Centre in Whitby. Rogers Television returns to broadcast the championship games of the three national tournaments on Saturday, August 8 from the same location, where organizers expect a sold out facility for the sixth consecutive year. Lacrosse Inside the Game personalities Gary Marks (play-by-play) and Ron Messer (game insights/analysis) will be featured on the Rogers broadcasts. 6 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 NEWS & NOTES NEW EQUIPMENT POLICY RELEASED BIG GOALS IN BIG GAMES New for the 2009 OLA Provincial Championships is the implementation of a policy designed to improve goodwill between competing coaches and teams, reduce potential tensions in arenas and eliminate ambiguity over illegal protective equipment, which may be used during games. Lacrosse is a game filled with goals — goals that help teams play catch-up, goals that change momentum, goals that provide hope and goals that pad leads. Goals can inspire and impress. Some goals are earned, while others are luck. Some goals are of the highlight variety and some are game winners at tournament championship games. Here is just a sample of recent big goals that have been celebrated. Under the policy, protective equipment worn by players/goaltenders falls into one of three defined situations with different prescribed consequences. The primary purpose of the policy is to differentiate between those players/goaltenders using approved legal equipment that may be worn or installed incorrectly and those who choose to wear unapproved illegal equipment. In cases of players/goaltenders using approved legal equipment, which may be worn or installed incorrectly, the player/goaltender is simply ruled ineligible to participate until the equipment problem can be corrected. In these situations, time penalties will not be assessed. With the equipment problem corrected, the player/goaltender is ruled eligible to reenter the game. Under no circumstances will a game be delayed for protective equipment corrections or adjustments. Lacrosse sticks (players/goaltenders) are not considered protective equipment and are therefore not included under this policy. Existing playing rules covering the lacrosse stick apply. The OLA Illegal Protective Equipment Enforcement Policy can be found on the Ontario Lacrosse Festival web site (www.ontariolacrossefestival.com) under Playing Rules Advisory. www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com PLAYER DIVISION TEAMS SCORE TOURNAMENT Bryan Cole Midget A Oakville defeats Oshawa 1 5-4 OMFLL Final Andrew Kelly Midget C West Durham defeats Mississauga 6-5 OMFLL Final Josh Glimes Novice A Mimico defeats Clarington 5-4 OMFLL Final Austin Hasen Novice B Brampton defeats Centre Wellington 5-4 OMFLL Final Patrick Vulgan Novice C Oakville defeats West Durham 6-5 OMFLL Final Ryan Hunt PeeWee A Beaches defeats Oakville 5-4 OMFLL Final Shane Ruddy Midget B Hamilton defeats Guelph 8-7 OMFLL Final Nicholas Karam Bantam A Oshawa 1 defeats Clarington 1 9-8 OMFLL Final Christopher Cloutier Bantam B Kitchener defeats Newmarket 9-8 OMFLL Final Jake McNabb Peewee B/C Owen Sound defeats Whitby 5-4 Innisfil Nicholas Chaykowsky Bantam B/C Newmarket defeats Caledon 4-3 Innisfil Matt Henderson Peewee D Burlington 2 defeats Cambridge 4-3 Six Nations Dustin Birkhof Tyke A Peterborough defeats Clarington 5-4 Peterborough Joshua Medeiros Peewee A Brampton defeats Whitby 5-4 Brampton Shane Halliwell Tyke C Cambridge defeats Milton 6-5 Milton Jackson Topo Peewee C Mississauga 2 defeats Brantford 6-5 Milton Johnny Powless Midget A/B Six Nations defeats Akwesasne 8-7 St. Catharines Chase Kavanaugh Peewee B Windsor defeats Sarnia 4-3 Guelph Nathan Bolger Novice B/C Elora defeats Windsor 6-5 Guelph Zack Herrreweyers Midget B/C London defeats Sarnia 5-4 Guelph Troy Peters Intermediate A/B Kitchener defeats Burlington 4-3 Guelph Nashton Lawrence Peewee C Kahnawake defeats Whitby 4 5-4 Kingston Garen Brant-Foster Peewee D Kingston defeats Nepean 4-3 Kingston Zack Cameron Novice C/D Fergus defeats Toronto Stars 11-10 Stayner Robbie Stovel Peewee C/D Fergus defeats Arthur 5-4 Stayner Cody Farrows Tyke C/D Shelburne defeats Cambridge 7-6 Arthur Robbie Stovel Peewee C/D Fergus defeats Orangeville 2 6-5 Arthur Jacob Giacobbi Tyke B/C Nepean defeats Cornwall 5-4 Cornwall Cortlon Skidders Peewee B/C Cornwall defeats Huntsville 4-3 Cornwall Brine Rice Bantam B/C Kahnawake defeats Montreal 7-6 Cornwall Levi Anderson Novice A/B Six Nations defeats Whitby 3-2 Owen Sound Dean Ferris Midget A/B Elora defeats Barrie 4-3 Owen Sound Kole Scott Novice B/C Orillia defeats Brampton 9-8 West Durham Tyler Antram Bantam B/C Whitby 2 defeats Brampton 5-4 West Durham Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 7 NEWS & NOTES // OMFLL Championships Hail to the CHAMPIONS n May 22-24, the Ontario Minor Field Lacrosse League held its provincial championships in Brampton. Here is a rundown of the gold, silver and bronze medal winners in every division. Congratulations to all the players, coaches, host (Brampton Minor Lacrosse Association) and volunteers who make this annual championship a great event. Photos: Pellerins Photography O 8 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 DIVISION GOLD SILVER BRONZE Novice A Oshawa Oakville Mimico Novice B Caledon Orilla Brampton Novice C Beaches Oakville Oakville Peewee A Oshawa Brampton Beaches Peewee B Oshawa Peterborough Windsor Peewee C Centre Wellington Kitchener London Bantam A Oshawa Clarington Oakville Bantam B Peterborough Mimico Kitchener Bantam C Hamilton Orangeville Oshawa Midget A Halton Hills Peterborough Oakville Midget B Clarington London Hamilton Midget C West Durham Mississauga Kitchener OMFLL Championships // www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com NEWS & NOTES Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 9 BAGGATAWAY // By Paul Whiteside 50 YEARS AND COUNTING A half-century is a long time to wait for anything. Yet this is how long it has been since the Minto Cup was last held in Brampton, Ont. It was also the last time the Excelsiors hoisted the championship trophy. Back in 1959, the Excelsiors were known as the Armstrongs (aka, the A.B.C.s). Since then Brampton has had the misfortune to always win the OLA title during years — 1962, 1976 and 1994 — the Minto Cup championship was held in British Columbia. The 1994 final pitting Brampton and the New Westminster Salmonbellies was a classic showdown between two clubs with great lacrosse traditions, as well as the two teams with the longest championship droughts. (New Westminster had previously won in 1960.) After seven hard fought games, the Salmonbellies returned to the Promised Land, while Brampton fans have remained in the wilderness — 50 years and counting. For Brampton, the other bitter pill to swallow is the fact that a short distance up Highway 10 resides its arch nemesis: the Orangeville Northmen, the defending Minto Cup champs, and a likely participant in this years’ finale. The contrast 10 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 between the two franchises is striking. While Brampton has endured a halfcentury of near misses, but mostly losing seasons, the Northmen have enjoyed endless success since joining the Junior ‘A’ ranks in 1991. Twenty years ago the idea of the small town of Orangeville winning the Minto would have been unthinkable to many lacrosse aficionados. MEMORABLE MOMENTS A tricky task for any Ontario lacrosse fan is to remember the greatest moments in Minto Cup history. Looking back, half the finals were played out West, which leaves many people without immediate access to half of the championships. To compound the problem, lacrosse traditionalists (this one anyway) do not recog- nize round-robin tournaments, which are currently in fashion again. To make matters worse, OLA clubs have dominated Minto Cups played in Ontario as Burnaby in 1977 and a B.C. all-star team in 1949 are the only two western clubs to win the Minto Cup in the east. The norm for OLA fans is Orangeville’s Minto experience. The Northmen played host in 1993 and 1995 and won all eight games played between the two events. I attended seven of those games and it was the kind of miserable defensive dominance I had grown accustomed to seeing Peterborough play in the 1980s. If there’s such a thing as lacrosse terrorism this was it! Frankly, the only memorable moment of those two finals was the unfortunate Game 3 brawl in 1995 with a coach being sucker punched, fans invading the floor and police officers called in to restore the peace. As for my favourite moments at the Minto Cup, Game 3 of the 1997 final stands out. To be precise, it was prior to the actual contest. In my clipboard I was carrying my 1977 Minto program, waiting for a chance to meet Jack Crosby and have him sign it. Crosby was the general manager of Burnaby in 1977 when the team came from two games down to defeat Whitby. Twenty years later, Crosby was still running Burnaby and they were up 2-0 on Whitby and looking good. He was quite happy to sign my little program, a yellow sheet of paper folded in half. I had the nerve to point out to him how his boys had lost the first two games and come back 20 years ago and wouldn’t it be ironic if Whitby, having lost the first two, turned the trick on Burnaby this time. Photos: Tracy Hope, Hired Gun Photography IT’S BEEN A HALF A CENTURY SINCE THE BRAMPTON EXCELSIORS WON THE MINTO CUP, BUT WITH THE CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT BEING HELD IN ITS OWN BACK YARD THIS YEAR, IT IS TIME TO LOOK BACK AT SOME MEMORABLE MOMENTS IN JUNIOR ‘A’ LACROSSE HISTORY BAGGATAWAY I think you can guess what happened. Whitby won the next four games. As for the greatest Minto Cup final held in Ontario, it’s an easy choice. Let me take you back to Whitby’s Iroquois Park Sports Centre for the 1985 final. In the middle of a stretch of round robin tournaments — 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1988 & 1990 — the powers that be decided the 1985 final would be a best of seven series. A youthful Joe Nieuwendyk, 18 years old, was playing his last seven games against the Gait twins, making their first appearance in Ontario. The finals pitted two free wheeling offensive minded clubs. It was the best the Minto final has ever or will ever see. Unfortunately, the series was played during a terrible heat wave. The heat, plus seven games in nine days took its toll. The deciding match was the third game in three nights with Victoria’s legs giving out as Whitby ran them off the floor with a 16-8 victory. Now we look forward to this year’s final in Brampton. It will be a four-team tournament, including one non-league champion from Ontario. At this point, as a lacrosse conservative, I’ll exit stage left. Paul Whiteside is a lifetime lacrosse fan whom, back in the 1990s, had the honour of conducting lacrosse research, pre-1961. That journey through time took him beyond the box lacrosse era, back to the start of the Ontario Lacrosse Association and the glory days of the National Lacrosse Union. PRIDE LACROSSE “Canada's Top 100” “Canada’s Top 100” is a lacrosse camp focused on exposing elite Canadian high school lacrosse players to top NCAA Division I, II, and III lacrosse programs. The camp also offers advanced instruction from some of the top players and coaches in the game. Date June 30th and July 1st Location The Hill Academy, Kleinburg, Ontario, Canada Register Email Brodie Merrill at bmerrill@thehillacademy.com Camp is open to Rising Grade 10, 11, 12 High School Students. Canada's Top 100 “Providing Canadian high school lacrosse players with the opportunity to display their talents in front of the nation’s top NCAA programs.” "I spent my money on a number of US based camps last summer. Canada's Top 100 was the best bang for my buck. I was able to showcase my skills in a smaller environment with a large number of NCAA coaches watching. I recently committed to Yale and know that Patrick and Brodie were instrumental in making that happen." Kirby Zdrill Yale Univeristy class of 2014 For more information, please visit our website at www.thehillacademy.com/ath_camps_tournaments Tel: 416.500.2492 www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 11 RULE BOOK LINE CHANGES & Photo: Images of You ILLEGAL CHECKS QUESTION: In arenas where the bench doors are right beside each other, what players (i.e., home or visitors) have the ‘right of way’ during box line changes? ANSWER: The general understanding is that the player leaving the floor has the right of way, but this is not a hard and fast rule. In these situations interference can occur in both directions, either onto or off the floor. Even though the person leaving the floor has the right of way, referees are trained to look for the player who initiates the contact. It is this player — the one who created the interference situation — that would be called for a penalty. 12 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Considering that most of the time the ball is down the floor away from the bench area when this occurs, it would be a two-minute interference penalty. QUESTION: When should an instigator penalty be assessed in box lacrosse? ANSWER: Under the fighting rule (#45) an instigator is described as the person who clearly initiates the altercation, not simply the person who throws the first punch or the one who drops his gloves first. A referee must see the progression for some time prior to the actual altercation to determine if there is a clear instigator of the fight. The same rule goes on to describe an aggressor as the individual who continues to participate in the altercation after being instructed by the referees to stop, after having been separated, or after their combatant has clearly indicated that they are done with the situation. Instigator and aggressor penalties both carry a game misconduct penalty, in addition to any other penalties assessed. Additionally, a report will be filed with the OLA (or tournament convener) about the incident and there may be a hearing called to see if further disciplinary action is required. RULE BOOK lacrosse, what constitutes an illegal check? ANSWER: A player must not roughly or recklessly check/tackle an opponent’s crosse, nor can a player strike an opponent with her crosse or force an opponent’s crosse into the opponent’s body. A yellow card must be assessed for a check that makes contact with a player’s head. A player must not hold her crosse within a field crosse width of an opponent’s head or neck (approximately 18cm or the width of a player’s shoulders). Furthermore, a player must not reach around or across her opponent’s body to check her opponent’s crosse when her feet are behind the opponent or level with the opponent. QUESTION: True or false: in women’s field lacrosse, an advan- www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com tage call/flag is only assessed for a player carrying the ball. ANSWER: The advantage flag is a held whistle for a major foul by the defense when the attacking team is on a scoring play within 15m of the net. The advantage flag area includes the 15m fan and the playing area behind the goal that runs 9m deep and 15m to each side of the centre of the goal line. In this situation, the umpire shall raise a yellow flag when an attack player with or without the ball is fouled while her team is on a scoring play. Do you have any rules-related questions for box, men’s field, women’s field and/or master’s rules lacrosse? If so, e-mail them to offside@ontariolacrosseofficials.ca. One of our experienced officials will gladly answer them in a future issue of Ontario Lacrosse. Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 13 Photo: Pellerins Photography QUESTION: In women’s field NATIONALS REPORT // By Roger Lajoie OFF TO A GOOD START ALTHOUGH EARLY, THE TORONTO NATIONALS ARE PROVIDING FANS WITH BIG-NAME PLAYERS, EXCITING LACROSSE AND EVEN SOME WINS IN ITS INAUGURAL SEASON IN THE MAJOR LACROSSE LEAGUE t hasn’t been easy, but the Toronto Nationals are near the top of the heap in Major League Lacrosse (MLL) in their inaugural season. The Nationals were certainly expected to be one of the league powers this season, primarily because of its veteranladen line up of players from last season’s league championship team that was based in Rochester. But any thoughts of the club dominating the league were dispelled very early in the season. Toronto did win three of its first four games, but all of them were tightly contested affairs. So a much more comfortable 19-12 win over the Washington Bayhawks at BMO Field recently was welcomed by the club, as it put Toronto in first place in the standings. Perhaps more importantly, however, it served as an indication that this team still has the ability to dominate most of its opponents. It was the third straight win over the Bayhawks, completing a season sweep, and the Nationals — for the first time this season — showed just how good a team they can be. I 14 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Top: Geoff Snider faces off against the Washington Bayhawks. Photo: Paolo Cescato Bottom: Brodie Merrill and Matt Vinc compete against the Chicago Machine. Photo: Paolo Cesato Opposite page: (top) Joe Walters scores the first goal in Toronto Nationals history. Photo: Claire Harvey; (bottom) Brett Queener stones the Washington Bayhawks. Photo: Averill Lehan NATIONALS REPORT Rookie goalie Doc Schneider, drafted earlier this year in the Major Lacrosse League (MLL) Collegiate Draft from the University of Massachusetts, looked sharp throughout the game, stopping 11 of 15 shots in his MLL debut “A lot of teams in this league have a lot of talent, with teams folding,” Thomson asserts. “We have a lot of talent on this one team. It’s great to beat a team three times, and this win puts us on top so it was big. The main goal is to win a championship and that’s all that really matters.” As for support of the team, attendance has been “about what we expected,” says Stu Brown, the Nationals’ general manager, who feels that “everything considered, with the economy the way it is, we’re doing pretty well here. We have no doubt that in time, fans are really going to get involved with this team and come out and support us.” 2009 Toronto Nationals tickets are still available for July 23 vs. Boston and August 8 vs. Denver. To learn more about available ticket packages, call the Toronto Rock ticket office at 416-596-3075 or e-mail: tickets@nationalslacrosse.com. Roger Lajoie is a freelance writer in Toronto, Ont. T he H ill A cademy “We’re into the middle third of the season now and I think this is more of what you’ll see the rest of the way,” says Dave Huntley, coach of the Nationals. “It was really the first time we played well offensively all year.” Huntley certainly has a very strong roster to work with, including many players from Canada’s national field lacrosse program. He admits with so many good players on board, getting playing time for everybody at first was a challenge. “Everybody was good about it, the players knew we were going to rotate the line up a bit until we got going,” Huntley explains. “Now it’s a different story.” It was certainly a different story the third time the Nationals beat the Bayhawks. After 17-15 and 17-16 wins the first two times the teams met, Toronto controlled the game this time around and if not for a second half lapse, the final score would have been even more lopsided. Midfielder Joe Walters says that’s because the team is now finally coming into its own. “It was a good team effort, it was a great game for us,” Walters says. “It’s taken a couple of games for us to get used to each other and get a line up we can stick with.” Defender Brodie Merrill scored two goals, and scooped 10 ground balls to be named game MVP. Walters scored three goals and an assist and Merrick Thomson added three goals for the Nationals. Rookie long pole Sid Smith added a short-handed marker and Delby Powless and Jeff Zywicki recorded a pair each. Geoff Snider, Colin Doyle, Jordan Levine and Shawn Williams had one goal each in the afternoon victory. www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com The Hill Academy is a unique private school that offers a program specifically designed for Student-Athletes. While students are engaged in an outstanding academic program, they are working at a level of sports training normally available only at the College/University level. The “Hill” provides the foundation for intellectual, athletic, and personal development enabling each individual to maximize their full potential and ultimately reach the next level. C oaches Brodie Merrill Men’s Varsity Jamine Aponte Women’s Varsity T estimonials "Each day the faculty at the Hill pushes me to become a more mature player and student which will prepare me for my post-secondary career. This year at the Hill I have learned and grown as a player, student, and person and feel confident that I will be able to walk into SBU and make a positive impact on the team on and off of the field." - JJ Laforet Stony Brook University class of 2013 "The Hill Academy empowered me. The coaching and training at the Hill helped me improve my athletic and lacrosse skills which greatly improved my confidence and my game. Now my ultimate dream of playing Division I lacrosse has come true. Thanks Hill Academy!" - Jason Card Hofstra University class of 2011 For information on how to apply to The Hill Academy, please contact us at 905.893.7065 or admissions@thehillacademy or visit our website www.thehillacademy.com Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 15 SCHOOL’S IN DESPITE SEVERAL OBSTACLES, HIGH SCHOOL LACROSSE IN ONTARIO IS GROWING IN POPULARITY, MAINLY DUE TO THE ENTHUSIASM, COMMITMENT AND DEDICATION OF THE COACHES WHO ARE TRULY PASSIONATE ABOUT THE SPORT THEY LOVE Photos: Paul Grossinger // By Melissa Yollick H igh school sports in Ontario is no joking matter. Whether it is hockey, rugby, track & field or volleyball, both boys and girls from grades 9 to 12 are participating at record levels, and at great intensity. You can now throw lacrosse into the mix of high school sports garnering greater interest from kids, university coaches and the media as participation in the game has expanded to 70 boys and 60 girls lacrosse teams in Ontario, according to the Ontario Federation of School 16 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Athletic Associations (OFSAA). And with many kids landing scholarships to play at colleges in the United States, there is no doubt that high school lacrosse in Ontario is only getting stronger. However, there are still several issues that stand in the way of the sport ever reaching the popularity of more traditional high school sports, such as hockey and basketball. The concerns from high school lacrosse coaches vary from the usual complaints like competition for field time and lack of funding, to more complex issues such as the sport not being sanctioned as an official Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS) at the university level (for men), and the lack of athletic scholarships at Canadian universities. While there is still significant room for growth, and some challenges that lie ahead, it seems the enthusiasm from the coaches — who simply love the game — is what is driving lacrosse’s positive progression. Becoming an OFSAA sanctioned sport in 2007 has no doubt helped develop high school field lacrosse over the past few years. However, since lacrosse (at the high school level) is played in the spring, it depends on the availability of outdoor fields, thus the season’s length is at the mercy of school board regulations that do not allow teams to start playing until May 1. One way around this obstacle is to install turf fields, which may be customary in private and independent schools, but not for public schools that are already feeling the pinch of tightening budgets. And it is because of turf fields that teams like St. Michael’s College in Toronto, Ont., can start practicing right after March Break — more than a month before many of the public schools. Besides the turf versus grass debate, some of the other challenges confronting high school lacrosse affect all schools and high school sports, such as dividing the leagues by school population instead of ability. “It is a challenge because we have a couple of schools in our conference that could probably be better suited playing with teams that are more on par with their skill level, but they have to play based on school population,” says Rob McDonald, the boy’s field lacrosse coach at St. Mary Catholic School in Pickering, Ont. As for girls’ high school field lacrosse, there are some schools that are seeing more development, such as St. Mary, which started a girls’ program this year. But where the most development lies is at the university level because Canadian women’s field lacrosse has been sanctioned as an official CIS sport since 1998. This status provides them with larger budgets, among other benefits, making it easier to play more games. “One of the barriers is the failure of Canadian universities to sanction men’s lacrosse as an official CIS sport, so many of our best college-bound lacrosse players go to the United States,” says Greg Reid, director of athletics at St. Andrew’s College in Aurora. www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com It is evident by watching just one game that high school lacrosse is surely not lacking talented, passionate and skilled players. It is this skill level that attracts many coaches from U.S. Division I, II and III colleges. “There’s about 150 Canadians on various scholarships and bursaries right now playing men’s lacrosse [in the U.S.],” says Reid. “In Canada, there are a number of universities playing lacrosse, and have been doing so since the early 1980s. The Canadian universities generally do not have athletic scholarships. We are told this may be changing, but we haven’t seen it yet.” While there are a number of former Ontario high school students currently playing lacrosse at U.S. universities on athletic scholarships, talent alone cannot lead to receiving a scholarship. Many high school coaches are teachers as well, with busy schedules and not enough resources or time to place their students’ academic and athletic prowess in front of U.S. college coaches. >> Continued on page 18 ST. PETER’S CROWNED CHAMPIONS At this year’s OFSAA Boy’s AAA/ AAAA field lacrosse championships held on June 4-5 at the Sheppard’s Bush Conservation Area in Aurora, 12 teams started the two day event with only one goal in mind: to be crowned champion. However, only one team left the tournament with the right to this claim and that was Peterborough's St. Peter’s Secondary School which beat Holy Cross Catholic Secondary School 14-11 in the gold medal game. St. Andrews College nipped Leo Austin Catholic Secondary School 8-7 to take home the bronze medal. Going into the two-day, pool play tournament, the 12 teams were ranked in the following order: #1 Holy Cross, St. Catharines (SOSSA Champion); #2 St. Andrews, Aurora (CISAA Champion); #3 St. Peter’s, Peterborough (COSSA Champion); #4 Father Leo Austin, Whitby (LOSSA Champion); #5 Malvern Collegiate Institute, Toronto (TDSSAA Champion); #6 MSGR Paul Dwyer Catholic High School, Oshawa (LOSSA Representative); #7 Mayfield Secondary School, Caledon (ROPSSAA Champion); #8 Notre Dame Catholic Secondary School, Burlington (GHAC Champion); #9 Sir William Mulock Secondary School, Newmarket (YRAA Champion); #10 Aurora High School, Aurora (YRAA Representative); #11 Brampton Centennial Secondary School, Brampton (ROPSSAA Representative); #12 St. Joseph Catholic High School, Nepean (NCSSAA Champion). In the OFSAA Boys’ A/AA Field Lacrosse Championship game, held in Peterborough on June 1-2, Hagersville Secondary School defeated Holy Cross Catholic Secondary School 13-10. Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 17 Photos: Paul Grossinger >> Continued from page 17 “Teachers in the public and catholic school systems have their plate full with teaching. If kids want to get athletic scholarships in the States, they almost have to do it themselves. They have to go to summer camp in the U.S. and they have to promote themselves because most teachers don’t have the information, the experience or the extra time to do it for them,” adds Reid. That being said, there are coaches who are going above and beyond to make sure their players get noticed. Next year, both St. Mary and St. Michael’s are planning to go to Florida to promote their teams in front of university coaches. This June, St. Michael’s went down to New England to showcase 10 students in front of approximately 50 U.S. university coaches, while St. Andrew’s ventured on a similar trip to Pennsylvania earlier in the year. “It takes a lot of leg work on a high school coach’s behalf and I know most are interested in moving their kids to a higher level. They are in it for the student athletes, and you hope that when their playing days are done they are going to jump back in there themselves and help with the next generation,” says St. Mary’s McDonald. 18 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Some professional players have done just that, such as Jim Veltman and Jason Crosbie, former and current Toronto Rock players, respectively, who coach high school and other junior field lacrosse teams in Ontario. “Because of the dynamic of professional lacrosse, professional athletes are very accessible,” adds Alex Fescura, head coach of the St. Michael’s boys lacrosse team. It is these men, and the other men and woman coaching high school lacrosse throughout Ontario, who are fueling interest and excitement in the game for the younger players, and are stimulating the growth of the sport. “Ideally, the high school players that I have now that are going to university will comeback in five years time and say, ‘Coach, can I give you a hand?’ or they become teachers and start their own teams, and give back to the sport,” says a hopeful McDonald. And with more opportunities to play at the university level, the more players there will be to come back and pass on their enthusiasm to the next generation of high school student-athletes. Melissa Yollick is a freelance writer in Toronto, Ont. LACROSSE ART Behind THE MASK EVERY GOALIE MASK HAS A STORY, SO WE ASKED SOME KIDS TO TELL US THEIR’S MATT HASTINGS LIAM WYNNE Age: 13 Goalie Experience: Started in minor tyke Team: Clarington Green Gaels Story Behind Mask: With his nickname “The Wall,” Liam’s parents decided to go with a design based on the album cover of Pink Floyd’s The Wall. — “I play both field and box lacrosse, and I like playing goalie because it offers more action. My parents designed it — it was a surprise.” Age: 16 Team: Mimico Mountaineers Goalie Experience: Started when he was five years old Story Behind Mask: Native headdress (mom is part Chipawa Indian) and grim reaper because Matt is into supernatural and good luck charms. — “I needed a new mask, so I was pretty excited. It was a surprise from my dad.” KEATON DALE, Hamilton Bengals BENOIT GAGNIER, Gloucester Griffins JONATHAN DONVILLE, Oakville Hawks STEPHEN WALSH www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com HAYDEN JOHNSTONE Age: 15 Goalie Experience: 7 years Team: Toronto Beaches Story Behind Mask: Bought by coach — “I was outside in the backyard playing with friends, and they needed someone to shoot on. I tried goalie and I liked it.” Photo: AZ Images Age: 10 Team: Clarington Green Gaels Story Behind Mask: Steven selected mask, but was surprised when he got mask for Christmas from his parents. He used to wear a hockey goalie helmet, which was getting small and he wanted to have a “real” lacrosse goalie helmet. — “Lacrosse is really fun and it helps with my hand-eye coordination.” Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 19 THE UNDENIABLE LINK // By Roger Lajoie H ere’s a trivia question for all of you die-hard hockey fans: What do Wayne Gretzky, Steven Stamkos, Brendan Shanahan, Gary Roberts, Joe Nieuwendyk, Paul Kariya, Joe Sakic, Paul Coffey and Adam Oates, just to name a few NHL greats, have in common? For a lacrosse fan, the question is a ridiculously easy one to answer. All of those hockey superstars – and many more actually – have all played and loved lacrosse. “I always said that there were a lot of us that would have picked lacrosse over hockey if we could have made the same kind of living playing it,” says Gary Roberts, 43, who retired this John Tavares, the first pick in this year’s NHL Entry Draft, attributes some of this elite hockey skills to his days playing lacrosse. Photo: London Knights Hockey Club 20 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 past year after playing 22 seasons in the NHL. “The toughness and physical aspect of lacrosse has definitely had an influence on my playing ability in hockey.” In his younger days, Roberts was a terrific lacrosse player, as was his Whitby buddy Joe Nieuwendyk, whose brother Gil is considered a superstar in the sport. Joe, recently named the general manager of the Dallas Stars, wasn’t that shabby himself as his impressive lacrosse résume includes a MVP award from the Minto Cup when he was as 18 years old. “Lacrosse was a great way to get ready for hockey, but it was much more than that to me as well,” Nieuwendyk says. “The memories I have from minor lacrosse, growing up in Whitby, and from the Minto Cup and the lessons learned from that, are very special ones for me.” Roberts and Nieuwendyk grew up and FROM WAYNE GRETZKY TO JOE NIEUWENDYK AND MORE RECENTLY DAVE BOLLAND TO JOHN TAVARES, IT IS AMAZING TO HEAR THE HUGE AND POSITIVE IMPACT PLAYING LACROSSE HAD ON NHL STARS FROM THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE played lacrosse together more than 25 years ago now. But hockey players playing lacrosse — or for that matter, lacrosse players playing hockey — was a common trend long before their time and is still today. One just has to look at the success of David Bolland of the Chicago Blackhawks for proof of today’s connection between lacrosse and hockey. The 23-year-old Bolland just completed his first full season in the NHL, in which he tallied 47 points in 81 games, and sported an impressive +19 plus-minus rating. The Mimico native also got his first taste of the Stanley Cup playoffs, which ended in the Western Conference semi-finals with a loss to the mighty Detroit Red Wings. Although he is toiling in the Windy City now, the former London Knights standout says lacrosse was a love for him while growing up in Mimico. “When my dad emigrated to Canada from Scotland, he basically didn’t know anything about hockey,” Bolland recently told Sun Media. “But my uncle and my brother were big into it and I started playing and loved it. Lacrosse was a big thing for us growing up and it’s a sport that really helped me develop as a hockey player.” The Chicago Blackhawks’ Dave Bolland fondly recalls his days playing lacrosse in Mimico. Photo: Chicago Blackhawks checks or lean into guys, use your body to create room, you do a lot more of that in lacrosse because it’s such a possession game,” he adds. “You learn to make room for yourself, like in hockey. I learned a lot of those things, working the puck down low in front of the net to make room for myself, get shots off or make plays and create scoring chances [from lacrosse.] Obviously hand-eye coordination is a big one as well. And it’s a physical sport so you learn how to play that physical style.” Tavares admits he misses lacrosse, a sport he loved as a youngster, and played until he was 16 years old. “Lacrosse was a great thing for me because it let me get away from hockey for the summer as a kid,” he says. “My mom never really believed in summer hockey. I needed a break and I always looked forward to the lacrosse season. And when hockey season came around I was really looking forward to that. It was good both ways to help myself in both sports.” The elder Tavares was a great role model for the younger Tavares. From his uncle he has learned the importance of being a good teammate and leader, but the budding hockey superstar says he learnt a great deal watching his uncle play lacrosse — and playing lacrosse himself as a youngster — that have paid dividends for him as a hockey player. “The biggest [thing] is moving in traffic, shooting in traffic, making plays while guys are on you,” Tavares told nhl.com. “When you’re able to do that, you’re able to draw guys toward you, make those plays in traffic, I think it creates a lot of chances offensively. “Also rolling off checks — when you roll off “I loved lacrosse, too, it’s a great passion of mine,” he adds. “It was tough to give it up, but you know it has to be done when the commitment gets this high at this level of hockey. I was a pretty good lacrosse player. I wish I could play both.” He’s not the only hockey player who feels that way. In fact, perhaps the greatest hockey player of them all — Wayne Gretzky — told Sports Illustrated the same thing many years ago. “I couldn’t wait for hockey season to end so I could pick up a lacrosse stick again,” Gretzky said. And when it comes to describing hockey players, love for lacrosse, that pretty much says it all. When he first came to the Oshawa Generals as a budding 14-year-old superstar, John Tavares wanted to keep playing Junior ‘A’ lacrosse in Mississauga. However, he only played one season of Junior "A” Lacrosse for there was much at stake as the number one pick in the 2009 NHL Entry Draft. “It’s lacrosse that helped teach me to spin off checks, take shots and protect the puck under pressure,” says the all-time leading goal-scorer in Ontario Hockey League history. “My stick skills, the way to read the play quickly comes from lacrosse. The hand-eye coordination is just one of the little things that helps you in hockey.” In fact, when Tavares scored a “lacrosse-like” goal at the world junior hockey championships in Ottawa last Christmas, he once again gave credit to his lacrosse roots for his amazing ability to control a puck with his stick. “Some of that comes from playing lacrosse and www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Photo: Chicago Blackhawks Photo: London Knights Hockey Club working after practice fooling around,” he asserts. “Sometimes those things come into play and help you out.” Tavares certainly had a great mentor in his life when it comes to lacrosse. His uncle John Tavares is of course one of the legendary players in the sport’s history. A two-time National Lacrosse League MVP, Tavares is the league’s all-time leader with 671 goals, 749 assists and 1,420 points in 17 years with the Buffalo Bandits. In 2009, even at the age of 40, he led the league with 51 goals and was fifth with 94 points. Roger Lajoie is a freelance writer in Toronto, Ont. Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 21 A BLUEPRINT TO FOLLOW WANT TO BUILD A SUCCESSFUL LACROSSE TEAM? LOOK NO FURTHER THAN OSHAWA’S LADY BLUE KNIGHTS LACROSSE CLUB AND WILFRED LAURIER UNIVERSITY’S WOMEN’S LACROSSE SQUAD — TWO ORGANIZATIONS THAT EXEMPLIFY TRADITION, WINNING AND TEAMWORK // By Nicole Kallmeyer here is no secret to building a successful women’s field lacrosse organization. Just ask Lynn Orth or Barb Boyes, two women who have run two of the most outstanding lacrosse teams in Ontario, and perhaps all of Canada. “It’s a combination of a lot of years, a lot of leaders, and a lot of work on team,” says Orth, the head coach of Wilfred Laurier University’s women’s lacrosse team, the Golden Hawks. “The biggest key to our success is the [girls’] commitment level,” adds Boyes, chairperson of the Oshawa-based Lady Blue Knights Lacrosse Club. Although Orth and Boyes both site traditional methods of strengthening their lacrosse programs, their teams’ superior reputations and numerous trophies indicate they must be doing something different, something more than the average lacrosse organization. Laurier’s team has won six consecutive Ontario University Athletics (OUA) championships to date, and Photos: Wilfrid Laurier University T boasted six of the top 10 scorers in the OUA last year. In the last nine years, the Lady Blue Knights have grown to 430 from 90 members, many of whom move on to play for Team Canada or at U.S. colleges via athletic scholarships. Luckily, these lacrosse leaders are willing to share the insights and strategies that got them to the top. When Orth took over the reigns of Laurier’s lacrosse team in 1998, women’s lacrosse was in its trial year for varsity status in the OUA. “I was definitely not recruiting at that point because I didn’t know how or where to recruit,” she says. Two years later, the team won its first OUA championship “almost by accident,” and that marked the beginning of the Golden Hawks’ rise and Orth’s recruiting efforts. She started sending letters to existing women’s field lacrosse club players telling them about the program and the team’s early triumph. She has done this every year since, and her pro- 22 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 motion efforts are boosted by a comprehensive web page established by Laurier’s athletics department. The site’s latest headlines are likely to entice any varsity lacrosse hopeful: “Lacrosse Hawks remain unbeaten,” and “Lacrosse Hawks pick up six All-Star awards.” As for Boyes, she relies on a “solid volunteer base” to get the word out about the Blue Photos: Lady Blue Knights Knights. A media co-ordinator promotes the club in local papers, and other volunteers organize the production and dissemination of “high-end, glossy” posters and flyers. The club also heavily recruits from hockey teams in surrounding communities. Successfully recruiting players is one thing, but keeping them year after year is another. Boyes emphasizes the need to create a family atmosphere in the league, where the girls can develop close relationships with their teammates and a true passion for the game. “When they develop that passion, they keep coming back,” Boyes says, adding she tries to include fun activities for the girls in conjunction with their practices and games. The Blue Knights have travelled to Vale, Co., and Lake Placid, NY, while family picnics are organized alongside tournaments that mix all ages and skill-levels. “We go above and beyond trying to create opportunities for them,” she adds. Camaraderie is also a key ingredient in Laurier’s recipe for success. The team spends time together both on and off the field, and older members help rookies integrate into the team and balance their athletic and academic commitments. Similarly, the Blue Knights pride themselves on the mentorship that flows from coaches to players. Almost all the coaches played for the club and return voluntarily year after year. Boyes says her club is unique in its exclusive use of young, female coaches rather than older fathers. “How is a dad a role model for a female athlete?” she asks. Taylor Landry exemplifies Boyes’ theory. The Under 19 A-team standout has played with the Blue Knights for six years. She says her best experience thus far has been learning from her coach, Kristen Millar. “Seeing her get a scholarship and seeing the success she created for her- self through this program really just inspired me to keep playing,” says Landry. As for Orth, coaching Laurier’s team has been an amazing learning experience. “I knew nothing when I started the job,” she admits, adding she has developed her own unique style over the years. “I’m a very quiet coach. All my players will tell you I don’t ever yell at them on or off the field.” Orth gives her players lots of input in practice, and although they discuss strategies and set plays beforehand, she allows the team to get creative in matches. She also has a unique no cut policy. Anyone who comes to tryouts, stays on the team, although they might not get to play in games. “You might find a diamond in the rough who by her third or fourth year becomes a dominant player,” Orth says. Orth’s willingness to develop inexperienced players is matched by Boyes’ attention to the Blue Knight’s non-competitive house league program. Boyes believes a solid house league is the foundation of her rep teams’ success and the overall growth of the Blue Knights program. Recently, the club has started house league teams for seven to nine year-olds. With such an early start, these girls are sure to become great competitive players in the future, says Hanna Burnett, who has the pleasure of coaching this age group. Burnett epitomizes the success of the Blue Knights and Golden Hawks. She played with the Blue Knights for two years before playing goalie on Laurier’s team in her first year of university. She is also a past OUA all-star and has been coaching with the Blue Knights for two years. Like her teammates in both programs, she has become a strong, dedicated lacrosse player and a gracious competitor who fights hard to stay on top. “Success breeds success,” Orth says. If that’s the case, the Lady Blue Knights and Laurier’s Golden Hawks won’t be slowing down any time soon. Nicole Kallmeyer is a freelance writer in Toronto, Ont. www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 23 WITH LACROSSE ASSOCIATIONS ACROSS ONTARIO ALWAYS SEARCHING FOR NEW PLAYERS, IT SEEMS THE BEST COURSE OF ACTION IS TO GET KIDS INVOLVED YOUNG AND BREED LACROSSE ENTHUSIASTS AT AN EARLY AGE // By Paul Grossinger f you ever have the opportunity to talk to John Grant Sr., take it — you will not be disappointed. The passion Grant has for the sport of lacrosse is contagious. It is this passion, mixed in with his experience in and knowledge of the game that has led to the unbelievable success of the Greater Sudbury Lacrosse Association (GSLA). Add a committed team of volunteers and some pretty savvy promotional strategies that include free lacrosse sticks given to every new player and a dedication to get everyone in the association involved in tournament play in order to bolster pride amongst club members, and what you get is an association that is making a difference within the community it serves. Launched eight years ago, the GSLA focuses most of its attention on its house league programs, with kids of all ages – four to 20 — participating in weekly games from April to June. Sprinkle in the rep teams it fields in the older age divisions, and the GSLA is building a grassroots 24 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Photo: Stayner Hitmen Lacrosse Association I lacrosse program in an area of Ontario that is typically known for its hockey fanaticism. “It’s a hockey mad community in Northern Ontario,” asserts Grant, whose son John Grant Jr. is a star with the Rochester Knighthawks of the National Lacrosse League. “[Lacrosse] is not as strong here as it is down south. Up here, they still think their kids are going to the NHL. They feel they need the edge so there are a lot of hockey people running spring camps. Although, some hockey people see the value [in lacrosse] and put hockey where it should be in the summer: back in the box.” In its first year in existence, the GSLA signed up 500 kids to play. It hired referees, ran coaching clinics and painted a three-foot line from the Photo: Whitby Minor Lacrosse Association FORWARD THINKING Photo: Whitby Minor Lacrosse Association boards to eliminate contact, thus improving player safety. During its first three years in existence, the association was not part of the Ontario Lacrosse Association (OLA) because, according to Grant, its house league was not yet ready to “venture into the OLA world.” Similar to lacrosse associations across the province, the GSLA is always looking for ways to promote itself, with the intention of recruiting kids to play lacrosse. One way that has proven effective for the GSLA to attract a new crop of lacrosse enthusiasts every year is offering new players — regardless of age — a free stick. Measured, taped and ready to go when the season starts in April, the free stick promotion seems to be working for the GSLA. “We believe if you want them to stick with the game you have to give them the best possible products to use,” says Grant, adding the receipt of a grant from the Ontario Trillium Foundation when the GSLA was established definitely helped allow for the stick promotion to become a reality. Funds from the grant were also used to purchase goalie equipment, and shooting targets, even some adorned with Bugs Bunny and Sponge Bob for the younger kids. The GSLA is not alone in its belief that getting younger kids hooked on lacrosse is the best path to success. One just has to look at the Whitby Minor Lacrosse Association (WMLA) for proof. Two years ago, it launched Soft Lax, an introductory lacrosse program for three year olds. Soft Lax teaches soft skills and forbids contact. It is comprised of about 80 boys and girls, who enjoy a 10-week session, plus a championship day to close off the year. Each week, the kids take to the floor for an hour-long practice, al- www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com Photo: Whitby Minor Lacrosse Association Photo: Stayner Hitmen Lacrosse Association though they might not last that long because they get tired. The cost of the program is an amazingly affordable $50. “We teach them how to scoop and we keep it fun,” says Michael Wheller, the director of house league for WMLA’s primary divisions. “The best drills are the ones where they don’t know they are learning.” “If you can introduce them a little younger they hopefully catch that lacrosse bug,” he adds. “We are fortunate in that we have a ton of volunteers so we have about five coaches per team. You can actually use more because it is like herding cats. You make it fun and the goal in all of our divisions is to get them to sign up for next year and help grow the sport.” Similar to the WMLA, the Stayner Hitmen Lacrosse Association (SHLA) is trying to build its membership through a grassroots approach. Drawing kids from towns like Collingwood, Creemore, Wasaga Beach and Stayner, the association has poured a lot of time and financial resources into expanding its Little Shooters program. Designed for kids four to eight years old, the program is key to the future viability of the as- sociation. To increase enrollment for this age group, the association places ads in local publications, holds fun days consisting of lacrosse demonstrations so parents and kids can see what the sport is all about — the kids even get to play with sticks and throw the ball around — and, similar to the GSLA, gives every new player a free stick. According to Chris Matthews, a member of the SHLA executive, the association has been helped by several key sponsors, including The Lax Shack, which provides discounts for the free stick promotion, and Tim Hortons, which sponsors jerseys and medals awarded to players at the end of the season. All three associations are outstanding examples of how getting young kids to play lacrosse pays dividends for long-term growth and success. Each is also proof that it is not necessary to always try to reinvent the wheel. Take the GSLA as an example. It patterned itself after the Peterborough Minor Lacrosse Association and has now become a blueprint for other lacrosse associations to follow. Most recently, the association received a call from someone in Newfoundland who expressed interest in starting a minor lacrosse house league of his own in Atlantic Canada. “We share everything we have done — what works in one community might work in another,” says Grant. “We feel we have been successful. Our association is a template of Peterborough, where I come from. There, the kids have to play house league to be play rep and we believe in that.“ At the end of the day, every lacrosse association is only as strong as its volunteers. And with the case of Stayner, Whitby and Sudbury, nothing can be truer. For Grant, the GSLA has been very fortunate to have a strong group of people who care about the game and who are learning as they go, while in Whitby, its volunteers consist of many people giving back to the sport that has given them so much. For example, both Steve Toll and Shawn Williams of the Rochester Knightawks help coach their kids in Whitby’s Soft Lax program. “We are fortunate that we have a lot of great volunteers,” says Wheller, adding the WMLA boasts 1,400 members. “There is a lot of tradition in this area and it is one of those pockets in Ontario that [loves] lacrosse.” Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 25 HEY REF! YOU MIGHT NOT ALWAYS AGREE WITH THEM, BUT THE MEN AND WOMEN WHO REFEREE ONTARIO LACROSSE GAMES – BOX, FIELD, WOMEN’S FIELD AND MASTERS — ARE PEOPLE TOO. IF YOU DON’T THINK SO, KEEP READING. MARISA DI BARI Hometown: Toronto Age: 33 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 8 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Women’s field Do you currently play lacrosse? I am not playing anymore. I started out playing varsity for York University (where I later coached), then club for the Oshawa Lady Blue Knights. What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? I like being able to give back to the sport by ensuring the game is safe and that the traditions of the game are upheld. Also, I get to umpire with some of the best umpires in the world and they make me feel like I’m a part of an elite group of people. Biggest lacrosse game refereed: A few years ago, I refereed a game in the senior provincials: Orangeville vs. Six Nations. I had friends on both teams, they were the two best teams in the league, both played with heart and showed what women’s lacrosse is all about — finesse! Toughest aspect of refereeing lacrosse: Knowing you have to go from being yourself to being an unbiased umpire who is umpiring your friends, former players and former teammates. The worst part is having to issue a card to one of your friends when necessary. The other hard part is having people (fans, coaches, players) not agreeing with a call you made and getting “booed” for it. But that’s part of the game; you learn to block that out. Lacrosse rule you would like to see changed: Allowing goggles. If we played the game the way it was intended, we wouldn’t need goggles. I’m not a fan of the goggles, but I guess I’m biased because I’m a goalie, but I think that if people use their skills properly, they wouldn’t need more equipment. Most confusing rule amongst coaches and players: A charge call against the offensive 26 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 player. Some players still think it’s okay to push their way through a well set up defense. And on the reverse of that, players often think they set up a good defensive block and that’s not always the case. JOE SELLORS Hometown: Whitby Age: 19 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 5 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Minor Box, Men’s Masters Box Do you currently play lacrosse? I played from the age of five until I was 18. Why did you become a referee? Initially, I became a referee for a summer job and to stay in shape. As I gained confidence as an official, I developed a passion for being on the floor. The intensity of being right beside the action every step of the way can’t be explained through words. It’s something you have to experience for yourself. What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? I have a chance to make a difference and provide a fair outcome to the best of my abilities for each team. It is also the people you meet both on and off the floor, the friendships that develop and the memories you take home that is so satisfying. Most embarrassing moment refereeing lacrosse: I was refereeing a novice house league game and as I was turning to run up the floor I tripped over one of the players. I made my best effort to avoid him and in doing so fell flat out on the floor. The fans were pretty amused but the best part was when the player asked: “Am I going to get a penalty?” Biggest lacrosse game refereed: Last year, I was given the opportunity to referee in the qualifiers program, a two-weekend tournament with highlevel lacrosse at the peewee and bantam ages. From there I was invited to referee in the Final Six: The Ontario Provincial ‘A’ Championships. Toughest aspect of refereeing lacrosse: No matter how precise your call is, you will most likely get yelled at. When one team is happy, the other is usually not. I think this is what drives younger officials away from the game. They don’t know how to ignore the yelling and feel intimidated by it. I admit, being 6'10'' definitely gives you some authority on the floor but being tall will never discourage a coach or a fan from letting you know just how dumb they think you are. If you get past the yelling then the game is nothing but fun. EMILY BRANTON Hometown: Wallaceburg Age: 21 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 6 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Boys and Girls Box What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? There are a few things more rewarding than being on the floor and knowing that you are part of the game. Not having had the opportunity to play growing up, I love that referring is giving me a chance to be a part of the game I love. The second is the sense of family that is created, the camaraderie with your fellow officials and mutual understanding of a shared passion. Why did you become a referee? My summers have been centered on lacrosse for the majority of my life and I grew up loving the game. My brother and dad have both played and my mom was a big part of my house league association for a long time. Since I was unable to play, I think refereeing was my way to be involved with the game. Biggest lacrosse game refereed: The biggest game that I have refereed was the Bantam Girls Gold Medal game at provincials. It was a really intense game and well played by both teams. Having been a part of the girls system over the past few years, I saw this game as a big step for girl’s lacrosse. The skill level has just improved so much since the league started and I am happy to see that girls lacrosse is really coming into its own. Toughest aspect of refereeing lacrosse: The toughest part is being a minority in the game. There are few female officials so we take a lot of flak. Even before the game, people have a preconceived notion of me just because I have a ponytail ANDREW ECCLESTONE Hometown: Fergus Age: 23 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 10 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Box, Men’s Field, Board Box Photo: Images of You and I find a lot of people think that my gender alone is grounds for harassment. There have been countless times that derogatory comments have been made about me being female and a lot of men (and even some women) can be extremely disrespectful of my authority on the floor. However, the reward definitely outweighs the harassment. Do you currently play lacrosse? No. I did play minor lacrosse from tyke upwards for the Fergus Thistles. What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? Being part of the game of lacrosse and the camaraderie amongst officials. We get the opportunity to see many different teams across Ontario and to make some good friends along the way. Biggest lacrosse game refereed: I would say the gold medal game at the Peewee Nationals back in 2004. It was my first big gold medal game, it was televised, and Pad 1 at Iroquois Park Sports Centre was full. I remember teams Ontario and B.C. went right down to the wire. It was fun, intense, and one of my most memorable games ever. Toughest aspect of refereeing lacrosse: Refereeing is a big commitment, so it is hard to be able to juggle work and play or family and friends with it. On top of it all, it is physically demanding so you are usually exhausted and need some recovery time after a long weekend of tournaments and some cross-province travel. Lacrosse rule you would like to see changed: It’s not so much a rule as it is a procedure, but I would like if all minor and major coincidental penalties cancelled each other out the way minor hockey in Ontario does it. It takes so long and mistakes are often made when sorting out multiple penalties. If we were able to cancel out coincidental penalties, then we could just say, “Both of you who just came in, sit there for two minutes, and wait for a dead ball before coming onto the floor!” Most confusing rule amongst coaches and players: Equipment! There are always new makes and models of sticks, facemasks, goalie www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com pads and other lacrosse equipment. Some makes and models of equipment are legal for junior-major, while illegal in minor field or box lacrosse. Then there is other lacrosse equipment that was legal last year but is illegal this year, or has never been legal, or is modified, or does not conform to the body. It seems like everyone (including referees, players, and coaches) are not all on the same page, which causes some major confusion. JOSH HILTZ Hometown: Brampton Age: 23 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 9 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Minor Lacrosse What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? Being able to stay a part of the game, meeting new people and working with different partners. Why did you become a referee? I played the game for about 16 years. I became too old to play anymore, but I still wanted to be a part of the game. Most embarrassing moment refereeing lacrosse: When I was refereeing a Junior ‘B’ game, a fight broke out and the one guy fell to the ground. I linked on to the guy that was on top and he took me for a ride and smashed my face off the ground. The two players who were fighting stopped right away and said, “Look the ref is hurt.” Funny enough, they stopped fighting. Biggest lacrosse game refereed: In my second year, I did a Junior ‘A’ playoff game in the second round. I have never refereed a game where the arena was sold out. Toughest aspect of refereeing lacrosse: My size. I’m not a very big guy, but if you work hard and listen to other refs, you quickly realize size doesn’t matter. Lacrosse rule you would like to see changed: The 30-second shot clock on the penalty kill. If a team has a good player that can run around and keep the ball off of the other team for two to five minutes, I think he should be able to do that. As of now, the rule states that the 30-second shot clock runs during all possessions. Most confusing rule amongst coaches and players: The “No offense/defense” rule. Bantam and divisions below cannot change their players on the fly. They have to play a shift at both ends of the floor, but are allowed a draw team, a penalty kill team and a power play team. CAROLYN TOLL Hometown: Oshawa Age: 36 Years of Lacrosse Refereeing Experience: 20 Type of Lacrosse Refereed: Women’s Field Do you currently play lacrosse? No, I retired from the Canadian team in 2001 — after the World Cup. What do you like most about refereeing lacrosse? Exercise, working in the outdoors, giving kids the opportunity to play and providing women with the opportunity to play at a high level. Why did you become a referee? I was involved in the grassroots development of women’s lacrosse in the late 1980s. The game was progressing and girls were getting involved faster than umpires were being trained. I was quickly given a whistle and learned the game over the next 10 years. I continued to umpire and play into 2000. After I finished playing at the 2001 World Cup, I decided it was time to focus on officiating and retire from playing. I have two children who are involved in the sport so it is easier to choose my schedule instead of trying to work around a playing schedule. Biggest lacrosse game refereed: Bronze Medal Game, England vs. Canada, Naval Academy 2005. Lacrosse rule you would like to see changed: Currently, the “check to the head” rule says that the offending player must sit out for two minutes, but can return to the game after the two minutes has expired. I would like to see all “checks to the head” resulting in a two minute penalty for the offending team and the offending player would not return to the game. My reason for this change is clear: there are some people in the lacrosse world who are pushing for helmets. I would never want to see the game played with helmets. Instead, let’s make the punishment more severe so the defenders work harder to get better body positioning and think twice about swinging their sticks. Most confusing rule amongst coaches and players: Most coaches and players complain about the consistency of a “dangerous check.” A player must establish good body positioning and be in control of her stick to make a stick check. Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 27 EQUIPMENT BAG CCM Vector V10 The Vector helmet features a shell with ergonomic, aerodynamic design, EPP liner for multiple impact protection, heat activated molded memory foam for comfort, lift and lock tool-free length adjustment, extensive venting for maximum air flow and availability in small, medium, large and extra large sizes. • www.ccmhockey.com GAIT Identity XP The Identity XP offers a quick flip adjustment system that allows users to quickly adjust the helmet to fit. Its Dial Fit Comfort System allows users to adjust the overall fit of the helmet, while its Tru-Vu Vision System provides players with good visibility. CLA approved, features include interchangeable visor and chin pieces; and oval wire. • www.debeerlacrosse.com // Helmets BRINE Triumph XP The Triumph XP provides safety for a player’s head as it features a new safety comfort liner that replaces all interior memory foam. Its Custom 360 utilizes an infinitely adjustable interior fit ring that creates a fitting helmet for any size or shaped head, while its facemask configurations offer quality sightlines. It also comes with an integrated shell, visor, jaw and facemask designed to create the maximum field of vision and is customizable with 15 different colour options. • www.brine.com STRYKE Pro Z Titanium The Pro Z Titanium comes with a chinstrap pivot pint and 15 vapour flow vent holes aerodynamic venting system that channels air in and moisture out. Available in a variety of sizes (i.e., XS, S, M, L, XL), it features: Bucktex laminate liner that offers moisture management, dual density foam liner, three expanded ear holes, cutback shells for increased peripheral awareness, extended back shell length, raised platform chin straps and availability in custom colours. • www.strykelacrosse.com BAUER 9500 Helmet The 9500 helmet is CSA, HECC and CE certified, and features FXPP foam protection, triple-density impact management foam, ergo translucent ear covers, bio-mechanical shell, occipital lock 2.0, tool-free adjustment, ventilation ports, and molded memory foam temple pads. • www.bauer.com 28 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009 Helmets // EQUIPMENT BAG NAMI OTNY Box Lacrosse Cages NAMI/OTNY box lacrosse cages are available in five sizes to fit all helmets from tyke to adult. The following models are available and CLA approved: Tyke, Junior, and Intermediate/Senior. The facemask curves under the chin and its kit includes adult-sized facemask, hard chin cup, straps and hardware. • www.nami.ca RIDDELL XR Chrome The XR Chrome Lacrosse Helmet comes with a Chrome-Tek face cage and an aerodynamic chin strap. It offers an inflatable lining system for an individual custom fit, an extended aerodynamic jaw-line protection and lowered visor with sleek mask to create an unobstructed sight line. Available in medium and large, the helmet also offers a lowered visor, exclusive Cycolac Shell, which enables full customization with custom paint, and a Chrome-Tek Cage available in chrome or graphite. • www.riddell.com REEBOK 8K Helmet The 8K hockey helmet features a mechanically attached expanded polypropylene (EPP) liner for professional level protection and integrated venting channels to keep users comfortable and cool. It also has translucent Surlyn ear covers for protection. CSA, HECC and CE certified, the 8K also features: FitClip that adjusts the length of the helmet; MicroDial, which adjusts circumference by tightening the stabilizer straps for a customized snug 360 degree fit; molded grip texture Comfort Cushions; and secure-strap ear loops that keep the chin strap in position. • www.reebok.com www.ontariolacrossemagazine.com CASCADE CPX The CPX box lacrosse helmet has a liner system built to the NOCSAE standard. Offered at three different price points, the one size, fully adjustable helmet is available in classic black mask, Chromanium or Titanium. Helmets can be customized with various colour combinations for shell, chin and visor at no additional charge. • www.cascadelacrosse.com WARRIOR Venom The Venom comes with an adjustable EXO Air Fit System that inflates inside the shell to create a custom fit while providing the maximum protection for the head during impact. Its BlackChrome and all chrome face mask finishes with U-bar connections offer good vision and protection, while its 5-Point Face Mask Mounting System is designed for extra protection in critical impact zones. The helmet also features neckline padding and an extended back shell length for additional protection against errant sticks. Other features include: vapour flow vent holes throughout the helmet, expanded side ear holes that provide improved air flow into the helmet, and adjusts to fit small, medium, large and extra large heads. • www.warriorlacrosse.com To have your company’s lacrosse products considered for potential preview in a future issue of Ontario Lacrosse magazine, or on its web site, e-mail product features, specifications and high resolution picture to: info@kappublishing.com Summer 2009 | Ontario LACROSSE 29 IN ACTION , 2009 0 2 e n Ju nals Photo: Buffalo Bandits Natio ws o t n o Tor utla O r e v n vs. De COLIN DOYLE #7 Toronto Nationals 30 Ontario LACROSSE | Summer 2009