Gvlax wrote:Chowdah Head wrote:Just throwing this out there, but in my opinion I feel like the tradition of NCAA lacrosse has a lot to do with its appeal (at least to me). Watching a good Maryland/Hopkins or a Syracuse/Princeton game evokes a lot of history and tradition in the programs. The MLL has been around for less than a decade so no real significant rivalries have taken shape yet.
Also, not to downplay the MLL players' dedication, but for most of them, they all have second jobs and lacrosse is a secondary focus. From what I hear most of them work throughout the week at their primary job, and fly into their team's city on Thursday or Friday morning, have one practice, play the next day, then fly home (Alex, please correct me if I'm wrong). NCAA players fully dedicate themselves to their team and program 7 days a week for 4 years. There's something a little more rewarding about watching people whose lives focus around lacrosse than post collegiate players where lacrosse is on the back burner. I'm sure a lot of you disagree with me, but I figure I'd throw out my opinion.
Im sure many of them would focus on being pros more if they got paid more than 10,000 a year. They have to have second jobs unless you are kyle harrison or the powell's who get sponsor money.
I'm not faulting any of the players, it's just a reality that they don't focus purely on lacrosse. I had a long discussion about it several years ago with Paul Carcaterra who had to quit the league because he couldn't juggle the MLL with his normal career. I'm simply saying that if players did get paid enough to make a living solely on lacrosse, and dedicate themselves the way other pro athletes do, it may make the league more exciting