agentogden wrote: everyone complains about not getting coverage in their lame, look what we do for kids, magazine.
Hey, every organization has room to improve, and there are sports that didn't get enough press. But if you want kids to learn lacrosse as kids, and show up at your college with strong fundamentals, lots of game experience, and a strong sense of sportsmanship - then USL is doing their best to make that happen.
Who else is offering the grants, equipment donations, rules education, etc? Seriously - I don't see the MCLA, or IL or the NCAA taking on these initiatives in such a powerful way.
Think of it this way - if you paid $50 for 1 service - just getting the magazine, and USL put all of their financial resources into producing the magazine - then the product would be considerably better.
Damn, when I think of it, what a shoddy product we get from Sports Illustrated for the price, when you consider how little gets covered outside of NBA, MLB and NFL.
But in reality, probably $10 is spent on the US Lacrosse magazine, and the other $40 is spent on developing the sport through grants, education, website support, rules development and interp, umpires, national teams, hall of fame, runs a convention for 5000+ people, and a variety of other initiatives. Lacrosse has exploded in the last 5 years around the country and US Lacrosse is doing their best to help it grow.
There is never enough money to go around. Would it have been cool to see more MCLA coverage in the July issue? YES, I noticed it was missing too. Does USL have limited staff and travel budgets to cover all the various championships in May and June - YES, as far as I can tell, they don't have a money tree growing in the back of the office.
Does this sound like I'm an employee of US Lacrosse? Well, I'm not. But I worked for USRowing a few years ago, and for a $65 fee (instead of $50 at USL) they have NO magazine, NO grants, NO equipment donations, NO rules interp for coaches, a primitive website compared to US Lacrosse, and they run a convention for 200 people. They do run 3 national championships and a couple of regional championships (which I used to direct). They also spend $250,000 per year on average litigating with national team members or would-be national team members because of disputed selection procedures. Don't believe me? Check out their IRS Form 990 for 2006 to see the legal fees.
why would anyone join USRowing? You had to in order to compete in the regional and national championships. The toll to cross the road, so to speak. But we'd all feel better about if they offered as many services as USL does to grow the sport.
If you want to see the sport grow, if you want kids to show up at college with some lacrosse skills, if you want to see more parity in the MCLA, if you want to access USL resources on their website, if you want a national organization to run multiple national teams (and yet keep the national teams from dominating the agenda - or costing lots of lawyer money), if you want to play different teams when you go to summer tournaments, because now lacrosse is popular in a new area and they are sending teams to Vail and Tahoe and Lake Placid -- then join USL.
Not all the services come back directly to you, it's an investment on the lacrosse community's future. I don't see many other lacrosse organizations out there that perform all the initiatives that USL takes on.
So far, the NWWLA hasn't authorized the funds for me to purchase a shotgun to hold to your head, to force you to join USL. So right now, it's purely voluntary. Join if you want to. Or don't. But quit complaining.