Monthly Archives: September 2008

Mario Waibel Named UC Santa Barbara Men’s Lacrosse Head Coach


Gauchos Announce New Head Coach

The UCSB Men’s Lacrosse team is pleased to announce that Mario Waibel will be the new head coach for the 2008-09 season. Coach Waibel has over 18 years of playing and coaching experience. He is a proven leader with an accomplished history of building winning programs.

Coach Waibel graduated from Washington State University in 1995 as a two year captain. Following college, he moved to California where he played for a number of post-collegiate club teams.

His recent coaching experience includes Head Coaching positions for the Starz LC Elite and West Coast Starz Elite programs in the Los Angeles area. He was named the 2004 Starz LC Coach of the Year, an honor spanning 35 teams in six states.

Over the past two seasons, Coach Waibel took over the reigns at Newbury Park (CA) High School (0-12 record in the prior year) and led them to a third place finish in the state. For this effort, he won the 2007 US Lacrosse Coach of the Year for the West Coast Region Secondary Schools.

While the Gauchos are excited to welcome Coach Waibel to the program, we are sad to see Coach Mike Allan leave after a successful five year stint. Coach Allan has accepted the Offensive Coordinator position at Towson University in Baltimore, MD.

During his time with the Gauchos, Coach Allan guided the team to two MCLA National Championships and three WCLL Championships. He firmly secured the UCSB program as a perennial national powerhouse, and paved the way for many successful years to come. We wish Coach Allan the best of luck at Towson.    

 

Lacrosse “Student-Athlete” Profile: Lauren Taylor, Yale ’08


 LAXBUZZ WILL BE FEATURING OUTSTANDING STUDENT-ATHLETES WHO HAVE EXCELLED IN LACROSSE, ACADEMICS, AND COMMUNITY SERVICE. LAUREN TAYLOR COMPLETED A 4-YEAR CAREER WITH THE YALE UNIVERSITY WOMEN’S LACROSSE PROGRAM AND WAS INTERVIEWED HERE ABOUT HER COMMUNITY SERVICE AND LACROSSE EXPERIENCES…SHE IS NOW AN ASST. COACH AT YALE…HOPEFULLY HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS AND BOYS WILL BE INFLUENCED BY THESE OUTSTANDING STUDENT-ATHLETES WE FEATURE:

Lauren Taylor joined the Yale coaching staff in the Fall of 2008. She is one of the most decorated women’s lacrosse players in Yale history, having earned three All-America selections while leading the Bulldogs to a 43-22 record and one NCAA Tournament appearance over the past four seasons.

“I have come to know Lauren over the last few months and am excited to have her join this talented coaching staff,” said Anne Phillips, Yale’s Joel E. Smilow, Class of 1954 Head Coach of Women’s Lacrosse. “I am looking forward to having her share her skill and tremendous knowledge of the game with a new generation of Yalies. She knows exactly what it is takes to succeed as a student-athlete at Yale. Her new role as coach will allow her to continue to contribute to the proud tradition of the Yale Women’s Lacrosse program.”

Taylor finished her career with 198 goals and 246 points, placing second to Tracy Ball ’81 on Yale’s all-time lists in both categories. She received the Nellie Elliot Award as the top senior female student-athlete at Yale last spring.

Taylor was a first team All-Ivy League selection for the fourth straight year in 2008, becoming just the fourth player in league history to accomplish that feat. She won the Barbara Bowditch Award as Yale’s team MVP for the second straight time, leading the Bulldogs with 41 goals and 59 points. This was the fourth straight season she has led Yale in both of those categories.

Taylor, who was named ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District for the second time this year, received her B.A. in history of science/history of medicine this past spring. She is part of a unique five-year academic program at Yale and will receive a Masters degree in public health from Yale in 2009.

Prior to Yale Taylor attended Manhasset High School.

Playing Career

2008: Recipient of Nellie Elliot Award as Yale’s top senior female student-athlete … Received third IWLCA/US Lacrosse All-America selection (second team) … Second team WomensLacrosse.com All-American … ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District I first team … Academic All-Ivy League … Tewaaraton Trophy watch list … IWLCA All-Northeast Region first team for the third time … Unanimous first team All-Ivy League selection, becoming fourth player in league history and second in Yale history to be named first team All-Ivy four times … Won second straight Bowditch Award as Yale’s most valuable player … Finished career second to Tracy Ball ’81 on Yale’s career goals list (198) and career points list (246) … Led team in goals (41) and points (59) for the fourth straight season.

2007: Tewaaraton Trophy nominee … ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District I second team … IWLCA Academic Honor Roll … Named All-American by three different organizations, including first team IWLCA/US Lacrosse All-American … IWLCA All-Northeast Region for the second time … Ivy League Player of the Year, Yale’s first Ivy Player of the Year in the award’s 27-year history… Unanimous First Team All-Ivy … Lead country in goals per game (65 in 17 games, 3.82 per game) … Third Team Inside Lacrosse Preseason All-American … Sixth in country and first in Ivy League in points per game (77 in 16 games, 4.81 per game) … Had 24-game point scoring streak and 16-game goal-scoring streak in progress at end of season … First Yale player to break 70 points in a season in 27 years … 61 goals place her third on Yale’s single-season record list, and 77 points place her fifth … Four-time Ivy League Offensive Player of the Week selection … womenslacrosse.com National Player of the Week Mar. 26 … Scored game-winning goals against both Dartmouth and Princeton, helping Yale beat those two teams in the same season for the first time in 16 years … Game-winner against Princeton came with 10.4 seconds left, giving Yale a 6-5 victory … Had seven game-winners overall … 16 assists doubles her previous career high … Had four ground balls twice, at Fairfield and vs. BC … Had three caused turnovers twice, vs. BC and at Fairfield … Had five draw controls vs. Dartmouth … Had three assists twice, at Fairfield and vs. Cornell … Had four or more points in a game 11 times, including each of the first four games of the season … Improved conditioning enabled her to move from attack to midfield.

2006: Second team IWLCA All-Northeast Region … First team All-Ivy … Led the Ivy League in goals with 45 and had a Yale-best 53 points … Scored five or more goals in a game three times, including an 8-point (7 goals, 1 assist) effort in Yale’s 15-8 win over New Hampshire … Ivy League Offensive Player of the Week Mar. 13 … womenslacrosse.com Honor Roll Mar. 20 … Third team preseason All-American.

2005: Third team IWLCA/US Lacrosse All-American … First team IWLCA/USLacrosse North All-Region … First team All-Ivy … Led team in points with 53 (47 goals, six assists) …… Was named the Ivy League Offensive Player of the Week on April 4 after she picked up 10 points in two games against Fairfield and Harvard … At Brown on April 20 had six tallies and scooped up four ground balls … selected for the 2005-06 U.S. Women’s Lacrosse Developmental Team.

Academics: History of science/history of medicine major … One of seven students selected to be part of a five-year academic program in public health, taking graduate-level courses starting her junior year … After getting her B.A. in 2008, she will receive a Masters degree in public health from Yale in 2009 … Was selected for Yale’s Directed Studies program, a one-year honors program in history, literature and political science, as a freshman.

Community Involvement: Will work for Boundless Playgrounds, the first national nonprofit dedicated to helping communities create barrier-free playgrounds where children with and without disabilities can play together, in Summer 2008 … Based in Bloomfield, Conn., company was founded by former Yale football captain Fred Leone ’82 … Selected as a freshman counselor for her residential college, Silliman, in her senior year … Counselors are responsible for easing the transition of incoming freshmen to the academic, social and cultural life of Yale College … Has also served as a Yale Female Athlete Mentor and has been a member of the student focus group for Yale’s Women’s Intercollegiate Sports Endowment and Resource (WISER) … One of 34 students selected for the Yale Alumni Community Service Fellowship in Summer 2007 … As part of that program, spent the summer of 2007 running the Ford Fellowship Program at the 92nd Street Y (a cultural center) in New York City … Ford Fellowship Program was designed with the goal of enhancing efforts of emerging leaders in communities throughout the world … Worked for the Red Cross in New York City in Summer 2005 … Revived the organization’s children’s programs, which had been cut because of funding redistribution after Sept. 11 … Spoke with more than 1,000 children about health issues and created an instructional handbook on how to start similar programs.

Before Yale: Enjoyed three dominant years in New York scholastic athletics … Earned all-state recognition in field hockey twice and was a lacrosse All-American in 2004 … As a senior, captained her team to a Long Island championship and was the leading scorer and assister in Long Island … In 2003, helped Manhasset to a state championship.

Year GP GS G A Pts GB DC T/O CT
2005 16 16 47 6 53 17 6 27 6
2006 16 16 45 8 53 21 22 33 12
2007 17 17 65 16 81 29 43 42 23
2008 16 16 41 18 59 23 19 31 19
Career 65 65 198 48 246 90 90 133 60

Spending By Colleges On Lacrosse Increases While Other Sports Decline


“While tennis, gymnastics and wrestling participation have waned, lacrosse and soccer have increased in recent years for both genders.”

 

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iYN17LGHvhCTWP3vnDK3DBl2thCAD93D36400

NEW YORK (AP) — College sports spending at Division I schools has increased 7 percent annually since the mid-1990s, an amount that has limited the expansion opportunities for sports other than football and basketball.

The findings were detailed in the report “Who’s Playing College Sports? Money, Race and Gender” by professor John Cheslock of the University of Arizona and released by the Women’s Sports Foundation on Wednesday.

The report indicated the 7 percent annual growth from 1995 to 2005 increased spending by $8.2 million per school over that period, with football outlays increasing by approximately $2.5 million per team and women’s sports other than basketball rising by only $135,000 per team.

“Athletic expenditures are increasing at a rate that complicates any efforts to increase or even maintain athletic participation opportunities,” said Cheslock, who studied 625 schools from 1995 to 2004, with Division II and III schools also posting a growth rate near 7 percent.

The report also indicated data from the NCAA and Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act shows men’s participation increased 6 percent in all divisions between 1995 and 2005 and women’s participation increased 20 percent.

Cheslock argued that universities have responded to Title IX by increasing women’s participation in sports rather than decreasing men’s participation.

He noted that from 1992 to 2001, the period when Title IX was most vigorously enforced, women’s participation increased annually by 4.5 percent and men’s participation increased by 0.3 percent in all divisions. From 2001 to 2005, the increases were 2.5 percent and 0.2 percent, respectively.

“You see increases in participation growth for women but you don’t see substantial changes for men,” Cheslock said. “That’s why I claim the evidence suggests that most schools have responded to the increased enforcement of Title IX by stepping up their women’s participation rather than drastically reducing their men’s participation.”

To comply with Title IX, a school can show proportionality of female athletes to female students on campus; or a history of increasing sports for women; or prove it has met the interest and ability of the underrepresented group.

Cheslock noted that the number of wrestling teams fell by 36 between 1985 and 1988, one of the largest three-year declines, when athletic programs were exempt from Title IX.

While tennis, gymnastics and wrestling participation have waned, lacrosse and soccer have increased in recent years for both genders.

The report suggests trends in sports participation involve a number of factors, including enrollment strategies that consider academics and diversity.

“Athletic directors and college presidents will be more likely to sponsor sports whose high school participation numbers are increasing,” Cheslock said, “sports with low injury rates which result in lower health care and insurance costs, and sports that do not require the school to rely heavily on international athletes in order to remain competitive.”

Dr. Marj Snyder, chief planning and program officer of the Women’s Sports Foundation, said fiscal responsibility from athletic directors is key to providing balanced opportunities.

“(Title IX) has become sort of an easy whipping boy,” Snyder said. “It’s a lot easier to blame Title IX than it is to tell your football and men’s basketball coach to do a little cost control.

“We would be much better served if we could figure out for the wrestlers and baseball players and men’s gymnastics to work together with women to apply greater pressure on the system so that we don’t have escalating costs like we do at this 7 percent annual rate, which is completely unsustainable.”

The greatest gains in racial diversity occurred in the years following the passage of Title IX in 1972, according to the report. Nearly 68 percent of black female athletes participate in basketball and track and field, with those numbers unchanged from 1999 to 2006.

Snyder suggests encouraging grass roots participation in a variety of sports and adding sports that already include diverse groups.

The Women’s Sports Foundation also recommended better enforcement of Title IX by the Office of Civil Rights and rescinding of the March 2005 clarification policy that puts the burden of proving interest in sports on female students.

Snyder called for the NCAA to enlist certification and self-evaluation requirements so schools can be monitored for Title IX compliance.

“There should be some penalty, like not being able to compete in tournaments,” she said.

Congress should grant the NCAA a limited antitrust exemption to restrain athletic spending, Snyder said.

“The NCAA currently would not have the ability to enforce a lot of requirements that would restrict growth,” she said. “They just don’t have the authority to do it. We need Congress to step in and give them a little bit of that authority.”

Cheslock said when he read transcripts of governmental hearings on Title IX during his research, there was a recurring theme.

“Everyone just spends all their time arguing, ‘How has participation changed?'” he said. “Countless time has been spent debating this question. To me, as an academic, the data are clear on this issue.

“Let’s move past this issue and figure out what else to do about intercollegiate athletics.”

“Victory Collegiate Consulting” And Tom Kovic Presenting “College Athletic Recruiting Seminar” At Foothill High School In Santa Ana, CA On November 4, 2008


tom-kovic1uslax4

UCLA Women’s Lacrosse Starting October 1


http://uclabruins.ialax.com/

Sep. 23, 2008

UCLA Women’s Lacrosse first team meeting will be Wednesday, October 1st at 8pm in the Games Lounge in the John Wooden Center. This meeting is mandatory for all new and returning players.

Other important dates:

*Friday October 3rd, 3-5pm:  Returning UCLA Players Only Practice

*Monday, October 6th, 5-7pm:  “Introduction” Practice
No-pressure, no coaches, everyone welcome, just come try it out! Sticks will be provided to those who need them.

*Wednesday, October 8th, 5-7pm:  First Day of Practice

Fall Quarter practice schedule is: Mon/Wed 5-7pm, Fri 3-5pm
All practices will be held on the IM Field.

Fresno State Women’s Lacrosse: Hitting The Ground Running


by Jac Coyne, Lacrosse Magazine Online Staff

When the search committee at Fresno State University initially contacted Sue Behme, the coach at Nazareth (N.Y.) College for the past nine years, about the coaching position for its fledgling women’s lacrosse program, her initial response pretty much summed up the conventional wisdom about the school’s decision.

“My first reaction was, `What are you guys, crazy?'” laughed Behme.

Adding the sport to an institution located smack dab between San Francisco and Los Angeles isn’t part of the lunacy. In fact, both those cities are becoming as fertile in girls’ lacrosse as the rich soil in the San Joaquin Valley where Fresno is located, and could eventually provide Fresno with a pipeline of talent. It wasn’t the facilities or support, either, as home games will be played in Bulldog Stadium and the team will have the full compliment of scholarships from the beginning.

It was the timeline.

Fresno State officially announced the addition of women’s lacrosse on Jan. 7 with the assumption it would start varsity action in the spring of 2009. If the Bulldogs play their first game on March 1 (their schedule is incomplete), there would be less than 14 months to start a program, recruit student-athletes, put together a schedule, work out travel plans and hire a staff.

This accelerated timeline is in stark contrast to the calculating manner in which many athletic departments start a program, be it lacrosse or others. Oregon, which will be one of Fresno’s conference opponents in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF), announced the start of its women’s lacrosse program and hired its coach in 2003, with its first game coming in the spring of 2005. Florida was even more deliberate, adding the sport in June 2006 with intentions to debut in the 2010 season.

Unfortunately, Fresno State did not have the luxury of a methodical build up. Because of a disproportionate ratio of scholarships between men and women — not the typical problem of lacking a proportional number of opportunities between the genders — the athletic department needed to add sports that have a relatively high number of scholarships in relation to team size to become compliant with Title IX.

Because women’s lacrosse has a favorable ratio of student-athletes (typically 23 or 24) to scholarships (the NCAA max is 12), it will continue to emerge as a logical option for institutions facing gender equity issues. For Fresno State, it is part of the perfect solution.

“The way our numbers will work out, among the I-A institutions, we’ll be as compliant and close to hitting the quantifiable requirements of Title IX as any school in the country,” said Thomas Boeh, Fresno State’s athletic director. “We’re going to be at the very top of the list.”

Betsy Mosher, the senior associate athletic director at Fresno State, was a member of the Gender Equity Task Force appointed by the school’s president to tackle the scholarship dilemma. She said the goal of the task force was to not only find numerical solutions, but also to update their department.

“I think we wanted to not only bring in a sport — swimming — that brought back something that was very strong here, but we needed to be a part of the new California, the wave of the future, and lacrosse certainly fit that,” said Mosher.

The challenge was to find a coach who could not only construct a workable Division I program in a year, but also one who would embrace the duty of growing the sport in California. Fulfilling this mandate would seemingly lead Fresno State to a scouring of the ranks of Division I assistants for a young, high-energy candidate who knew the drill, but had the charisma to shrug off the inevitable early struggles Fresno State would face. But the athletic department was attempting to accomplish something outside of the norm, and in doing so they needed to ignore the path most traveled.

Enter Sue Behme.

“What we were primarily looking for was that person who had the enthusiasm and drive, because the reality is there’s a difference between starting a program and just maintaining a program,” said Boeh. “It is going to take a certain type of person to start from scratch. In this particular case, given the youth of the sport, Sue just knocked everybody’s socks off.”

Behme is a live wire; a perfect fit for the program despite not having any Division I experience. At 37, she has the savvy to know what she is getting into, but the 20-something mentality that rejects any kind of constraint on the future. And, to be honest, the immediate future might be grim.

Behme is stacking the schedule with the best teams she can find, along with a stiff MPSF schedule that includes Stanford, Denver and Oregon. This despite the fact only 16 players were committed to the Bulldogs’ roster as of mid-July, and those are either converts from high school basketball, softball or soccer, or incoming freshmen recruited at the 11th hour. Unlike Oregon, as well as forthcoming varsity programs at Florida and Boise State, there is no club program on which to build at Fresno State.

When pressed about the certain futility of the upcoming season for the Bulldogs, Behme raises her chin and welcomes the challenge.

“I don’t set any limits on myself as a coach, on my student-athletes, or on my program,” she said. “I know a lot of people would assume certain things, and that’s fine, whether it’s wins and losses or whatever. I don’t gauge my coaching philosophy on assumptions. These 16 kids I’ve talked to so far, they’ve said, `You know what, Coach? We very much believe in the same things you believe in. The better teams you play, the better you get quicker.’ Period. Either you jump in full force or you don’t, and we’re in it full force.”

“Suffice it say, we’re going to get beat up a little bit next year, but that’s to be expected,” said Boeh. “I think it’s another reason why Sue Behme is such a good fit for us, because she has that enthusiasm. When the time comes where they have to keep their heads up and keep plugging, knowing they are making progress every week and that this is just the beginning of the program — that takes a special personality to be able to work through that. Most important is to establish the proper culture in the program. Working hard and being respectful of each other — that’s what never goes away whether you win or lose; having the culture.”

It’s tough to get a feel for the culture from the players yet. Despite Behme’s claim of having 16 kids already in the fold, there will be no official student-athletes on the women’s lacrosse team until they pass through the NCAA Clearinghouse and satisfy other compliance necessities. That wasn’t scheduled to happen until early September.

Until then, it’s impossible to even find their names, never mind garner an interview. It’s just another part of the wacky nature of Fresno State women’s lacrosse right now. Fortunately, the Bulldogs have a coach ready to embrace the craziness.

“Once they offered me the job, I said, `You know what, is there a better challenge?'” said Behme. “And if anybody can do it, I can do it. This is going to be an experience of a lifetime. I know my value system and that I do things the right way.

“You’ve got to start somewhere, right?”

“Lacrosse War” Update: Warrior Disputes NCAA Position On New Head Measurements


The following statement by Warrior Sports regarding its lawsuit against the NCAA for its new men’s lacrosse stick specifications, effective in 2010, was released Tuesday to Lacrosse Magazine Online. To read LMO’s original story about the lawsuit, click here.

Last week, a federal judge denied Warrior’s request for an injunction, according to The Grand Rapids Press, noting that the firm and retail store named as a co-plaintiff in the suit waited six months to file against the collegiate sports association.


WARREN, Mich. – Warrior Sports announced this month that it has filed a multi-million dollar lawsuit against the NCAA, stemming from a recent rule change made by the NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Rules Committee.

Warrior’s lawsuit also seeks to prevent the rule from going into effect. Joining with Warrior as a plaintiff in that case is Athlete’s Connection of Lansing, Mich., a lacrosse equipment retailer. Absent court intervention, the new rule, which sets stringent requirements for the dimensions of lacrosse heads, will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2010.

The new rule, announced in February of this year, contains the latest dimensional mandates for a lacrosse head, after having announced two prior versions of this rule change – one in September 2006, and the second in September 2007.

Prior to these rule changes occurring over an 18-month period, the dimensional requirements for a lacrosse head were essentially unchanged for decades. Historically, the only relevant measurements consisted of a top-to-bottom measurement of 10 inches, and a side-to-side measurement, at the widest point of the head, of not less than 6.5 inches.

The new rule, as ultimately configured by the NCAA as of February 2008, introduces three additional measuring points that dictate the shape of the lacrosse head. The measurements required by this rule are as follows:

Measurement from throat | Minimum distance from narrowest point on crosse
1.25″ | 3.0″ (all measurements)
3.0″ | 3.0″ (all measurements)
5.0″ | 3.5-4.0″ front and 3.5″ back
The widest point | 6.0-6.5″ front and 6.0″ back

According to an NCAA press release, the reason for the new head measurements rule is to “promote free dislodgement of the ball.”

“The NCAA has failed to provide any studies or any conclusive data that indicates the sport has a problem with free dislodgement of the ball from the lacrosse head. Nor has it articulated how this new rule will, in the least drastic method, solve this claimed problem,” said David Morrow, president of Warrior Sports. “Without any supporting data, and given that the NCAA changed the same rule three times in an 18-month period, you would have to conclude that this is a purely arbitrary rule change with no factual basis behind it.

“It appears that there are few, if any, lacrosse heads currently manufactured that will meet these new minimum measurements.

“We were disappointed that the NCAA did not respect the production limitations of manufacturers and did not allow for an appropriate phase-in period. That meant that manufacturers were expected to completely redesign, retool and introduce entire new product lines by next fall in order to meet the Jan. 1, 2010 date set by the NCAA. This ruling will result in significant and unnecessary expenses for manufacturers, dealers and players, as there will potentially be a ton of obsolete products out there, stuck in the hands of players who can’t use them or dealers who can’t sell them.”

Historically, most amateur lacrosse organizations, including the National Federation of State High School Associations, (NFHS) have followed the NCAA lacrosse rules. Currently, there are an estimated 290,000 amateur lacrosse players in the country.

“This is a concern for the entire sporting goods industry, not just Warrior, if the NCAA can, on a whim or as part of a secret deal, and with no supporting scientific or technical data, render an entire product line illegal for play, said Morrow.

NCAA men’s lacrosse rules currently in place to promote free dislodgement of the ball are referred to as “Stick Check Rules.” These rules provide for on-field tests, designed to ensure that the ball freely dislodges from a lacrosse head. One test involves holding the stick parallel to the ground and rotating it forward, to ensure the ball freely rolls out the side of the head. The other involves holding the stick perpendicular to the ground and tilting the head forward past 90 degrees, to ensure the ball rolls out of the bottom of the head.

The NCAA currently enforces these field test rules on a random and selective basis.

“Lacrosse Scholarships”: Here Are The Numbers


 
By Ryan Wood, Active.com
Lacrosse is a sport that continues to expand its presence across the country. But Division I lacrosse programs remain almost exclusively on the East Coast, and the number of colleges sponsoring lacrosse, while growing, is still small.
That means scholarships are at a premium. If you want to be proactive in recruiting and make yourself known to coaches who may want you, it’s a good idea to know just how many scholarships are out there for the taking. Below is a breakdown of lacrosse scholarships across the different divisions.

NCAA Division I

How many schools: There are 84 schools sponsoring women’s lacrosse at the Division I level, including

Click Picture To Donate To Cancer Fundraiser Before Nov. 15

Click Picture To Donate To Cancer Fundraiser Before Nov. 15

powerhouse teams like Northwestern and Virginia. On the men’s side, 56 schools sponsor lacrosse, including perennial powers Syracuse and Duke.

Scholarship count: Women’s programs can work with 12 scholarships. Men’s programs have 12.6 scholarships to distribute.

Scholarship breakdown: Scholarship money can be passed out among some or all of the team, meaning partial scholarships are common in college lacrosse.

NCAA Division II

How many schools: There are 42 schools in Division II that play women’s lacrosse, including powerhouse West Chester, and 34 schools playing men’s lacrosse, including three-time national champion Le Moyne.

Scholarship count: Division II schools are allowed 9.9 scholarships for women’s lacrosse and 10.8 scholarships for men’s lacrosse.

Scholarship breakdown: As in Division I, scholarships can be cut up and dished across an entire roster. Partial scholarships are common.

NCAA Division III

How many schools: There are 154 women’s lacrosse teams in Division III and 148 men’s lacrosse teams.

Scholarship count: Division III institutions do not offer athletic scholarships.

Scholarship breakdown: While athletic scholarships do not exist in Division III, student-athletes can receive academic scholarships and need-based grants to help with school while playing lacrosse.

NJCAA

How many schools: The NJCAA has 16 schools participating in women’s lacrosse and 27 schools participating in men’s lacrosse.

Scholarship count: Both men’s and women’s programs at the junior college level can offer 20 scholarships per team.

Scholarship breakdown: Scholarships are commonly, but not exclusively, given out as full rides at the junior college level. Signing day typically is in April.

National Letter of Intent

At most Division I and II colleges that offer athletically related aid, players sign a national letter of intent. Administered by the Collegiate Commissioners Association (CCA), the NLI is a voluntary program designed to help and protect both student-athletes and institutions:

By signing a National Letter of Intent, a prospective student-athlete agrees to attend the designated college or university for one academic year. Pursuant to the terms of the National Letter of Intent program, participating institutions agree to provide athletics financial aid for one academic year to the student-athlete, provided he/she is admitted to the institution and is eligible for financial aid under NCAA rules. An important provision of the National Letter of Intent program is a recruiting prohibition applied after a prospective student-athlete signs a Letter of Intent. This prohibition requires participating institutions to cease recruitment of a prospective student-athlete once a National Letter of Intent is signed with another institution.

For more information on the NLI, visit the link above. Also note that the signing dates for student-athletes enrolling in college for the 2009-2010 academic year (i.e., current high school seniors for the most part) are November 12-19 for the early period and April 8-August 1, 2009 for the regular period.

Stanford University To Screen Athletes For “Cardiovascular Ailments” As Competitive Sports Place Significant Demands On Cardiac System


“There are 200 sudden cardiovascular deaths a year in young athletes. We would like to see that it doesn’t happen here,” he said. “It is such a paradox, that the kid who is the best physical specimen can die suddenly.”

 

http://www.mercurynews.com/crime/ci_10525412

Stanford searches the world to recruit athletes with heart. On Sunday, it made sure those hearts were healthy.

Hundreds of student-athletes underwent extensive heart checks in the school’s most ambitious effort yet to prevent sudden cardiac death, the leading killer of young American athletes.

Young, strong and fit, athletes from 35 teams seemed to be the picture of health as they awaited electrocardiograms (ECG) and echocardiograms at the Sports Medicine Center of the Arrillaga Center for Sports and Recreation.

But heart ailments can be silent killers, said Stanford’s Dr. Victor Froelicher, lead cardiologist for the Sunday screening.

“There are 200 sudden cardiovascular deaths a year in young athletes. We would like to see that it doesn’t happen here,” he said. “It is such a paradox, that the kid who is the best physical specimen can die suddenly.”

Stanford’s testing is unique among college athletic programs. It is rare even in professional sports leagues; only the National Basketball Association mandates that players undergo both tests.

“Competitive sports place significant demands on the cardiac and metabolic system,” said Gordon Matheson, director for Stanford’s sports medicine.

The $1 million worth of loaned equipment from Stanford Hospital and the university’s Sports Medicine Division, as well as volunteer time of two dozen doctors, nurses and staff, made the effort practical, Froelicher said.

Last year, when Stanford physicians held the first comprehensive ECG screening for student-athletes, the testing identified 60 athletes with issues that prompted closer evaluation with magnetic resonance imaging.

 

One young woman had surgery and is now healthy. This year, Stanford added the echocardiogram. While the ECG studies electrical impulses in the heart, the echocardiogram images the heart’s structure and motion.

In addition, the Stanford student-athletes filled out a 100-query questionnaire about their health, which helps build a comprehensive health profile. They also undergo the usual battery of health tests.

“We’d usually be sleeping. Or in the library,” said Vickie Fanslow, 21, a lacrosse player who woke at 8:45 a.m. to take the tests. With classes starting Monday, there was still unpacking to do, books to buy — and the favorite Sunday morning pastime, brunch.

“It’s a good thing, in case we have heart problems,” Fanslow said. A biology major, she hoped that all the data would contribute research into a better understanding of athletes’ cardiovascular systems.

“I’m curious about my body,” said teammate Eleanor Foote, 20. “Besides, I had a cough all summer and would like to find out what’s going on. We have all this technology. Why not use it?” she said.

But rower Molly Wachtel, 19, was more skeptical.

“I’m not a big fan of the tests,” she said. A Stanford transfer, while at the University of California-Los Angeles she was misdiagnosed with a genetic, progressive heart condition called Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Dysplasia after a fainting spell. She had to undergo extensive testing and feared being sidelined. “Sports is your community,” she said.

“We worry about false positives,” Matheson said. “You hate them to stop playing. But if we see something, we know we can follow it. … We screen pregnant women, pilots and police — it makes sense to screen these young people.”

There are many different types of cardiac death. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a structural heart defect, is the most common cause of death in young athletes. It killed Loyola Marymount University basketball star Hank Gathers at 23 and Boston Celtics’ star Reggie Lewis at 27.

Artery problems are another leading source of death. An autopsy of Pete Maravich, the all-time leading NCAA Division I scorer at Louisiana State University who collapsed at age 40, showed that he had been born with a missing left coronary artery.

An assortment of other cardiac problems can also go undetected. U.S. Olympic volleyball star Florence Hyman collapsed during a match at age 31 because of heart failure caused by undiagnosed Marfan’s Syndrome.

“We can’t always detect problems. We can’t eliminate risk. And we’re not saying everybody should be doing this,” Matheson said. “But we can reduce the number of unnecessary deaths.”

Women’s Lacrosse Injuries: “Compartment Syndrome” Is A Repetitive Stress Injury Effecting Multi-Sport Athletes


 “She suffered from pain in both legs while playing lacrosse last spring and eventually was diagnosed with compartment syndrome, a condition that results when pressure within the muscles builds to dangerous levels. This prevents nourishment from reaching nerve and muscle cells.”


http://www.baltimoresun.com/sports/highschool/bal-va.ha.profile21sep21,0,2583900,print.story

Jen Zoltoski is expected to make her 2008 soccer debut in the coming days. It will be an emotional and satisfying moment for the John Carroll senior.

Zoltoski, who plays defense, had to recover from surgery on both legs this summer. She suffered from pain in both legs while playing lacrosse last spring and eventually was diagnosed with compartment syndrome, a condition that results when pressure within the muscles builds to dangerous levels. This prevents nourishment from reaching nerve and muscle cells.

A surgical procedure was done on both legs in the summer, and Zoltoski then worked hard to rehabilitate and get ready for this year. She’s headed to Richmond to play lacrosse next year, but didn’t want to sit and watch her senior seasons pass by.

This will be her third year on the John Carroll varsity. Zoltoski also played on the Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland A Conference indoor soccer championship team last winter.

When did you first realize that you had a problem with your legs?

It was probably in the beginning of lacrosse season, around February. When I was running, in the first eight minutes or so, I would get this intense pain in both of my legs. It kept happening. At first, I thought it was from changing surfaces, going from playing [soccer] inside to being outside. But it wouldn’t go away.

Did you play the whole outdoor season?

Yes, I played it. They switched me from midfield to defense. I was lucky enough to be able to play through the pain. I wanted to be on the field because I love playing lacrosse, and it wasn’t easy to sit back and watch. I’d rather be helping my team.

Tell me about the decision to have the surgery.

My options were either to sit out like a year or two and see if it got better, or just to quit sports altogether, which I couldn’t imagine doing. So I played lacrosse in the summer for the recruiting season, and then had the surgery in July as soon as that season was over.

What was the procedure that was done?

Basically, it was a release surgery, so there’s three incisions on each of my legs. They split the sheathing around my muscle on each leg. There’s four compartments there, so they had to release all of them. I was kind of in an Ace bandage thing, and I couldn’t walk for a week on each leg. It was an outpatient thing.

Were you worried that you might lose some speed or quickness on the field?

Yes, definitely. I’m going to physical therapy three times a week. I’ve just been really working hard to get that back. I want to be just as strong and fast as I was. Right now, I think I’m doing really well. I think I’m making really good progress. They didn’t think, at first, that I’d be ready to play this soccer season, but I guess I’ve worked very hard and am happy that I’ll be back.

How is your speed and quickness at this point?

Right now, I’d say it’s about 75-80 percent, but I’m working every day to get it back. But I’m pretty sure that I’ll be back to 100 percent in the next couple of weeks.

How much support have teammates and coaches and friends given you and how has that helped?

There’s been so much. I don’t think I could have gotten through this without my teammates, friends and family. It’s been really hard, and whenever I’m down on myself, they bring me back up, and it’s great having them surrounding me.