Can't beat it with a stick (article from Ohio newspaper)

Can't beat it with a stick (article from Ohio newspaper)

Postby Sonny on Sun Jun 05, 2005 7:02 pm

'Fastest-growing game in U.S.' is experiencing a boom locally as well

By Colleen Kane
Enquirer staff writer

As a sophomore in high school in 1988, Dan Fisher played on the inaugural Moeller lacrosse team, one of the first high school teams in the area for the sport. He went on to play at Ohio State and then moved after college. When he returned four years ago, the lacrosse scene was far from the way he left it, he said.

"It's pretty unbelievable, the growth I've seen," Fisher said.

On April 25, Sports Illustrated ran a nine-page spread on the growth and changes in lacrosse, calling it the "fastest-growing game in the U.S. at every level." This weekend and next, as the lacrosse season winds down, the area will see some of the products of that growth at different levels.

Fisher is now 33 and the president of the Cincinnati Lacrosse Club, a post-collegiate team that has been around since the 1970s. At 1 p.m. today at Summit Country Day, Cincinnati will play the other area men's post-collegiate team, the Budweiser Mount Adams Rams, in a crosstown showdown. The game, which is in its ninth year, pits veteran Cincinnati against Mount Adams, which was established about 10 years ago. They expect the usual large turnout of players, and some of their friends and family also to attend.

"People seem to come out of the woodwork for this game," Fisher said.

Tom McDonald, a member of Mount Adams, said well-established Cincinnati usually has the edge in the game, but the Rams are improving. They have players on their roster who went to Dayton, Toledo, Cincinnati, Miami and Wright State. McDonald, who came from Rochester, N.Y., six years ago, also thinks the lacrosse scene has blossomed here.

"Where I grew up - we lived in New York City - to get to a club, you only had to go to the next stop on the interstate," McDonald said. "Around here, it was not quite as easy, but it's getting easier."

Fisher said many of his about 30 teammates are former area high school and college players, and most are either coaches or referees in the area, too. Cincinnati won the 16-team Midwest Cities Lacrosse Conference championship last season and hopes to contend for the title again June 12-13 in Chicago.

"We're starting to see guys from different programs and different schools come back," Fisher said. "The level of play keeps rising."

The surge in area youth players also will be seen next Saturday and Sunday when Mount St. Joseph holds the Ohio state all-star lacrosse games. The event, hosted by the Greater Cincinnati Lacrosse Association (www.cincylax.com), will feature high school and middle school teams.

About 20 area boys' teams play in the Ohio High School Lacrosse Association, according to its Web site (www.ohsla.org). That number is similar in the Ohio Schoolgirls Lacrosse Association, in which Sycamore made the Division I state final four this weekend and Mason made the Division II final. On the boys' side, Sycamore made it to the Division I-B South final of the state tournament. Cincinnati Country Day played in the Division II final Saturday, and Anderson won the Division III final May 28.

In addition, more than 10 area schools fielded teams in the Ohio Middle School Boys' Lacrosse Championships May 14-15. The Cincinnati Blue Jays, made up of sixth, seventh and eighth graders on the east side, went 3-1 to make it to the final of the Division II tournament. Middletown won the Division III section.

"When I came here, there was just Moeller, Sycamore and maybe one other school," McDonald said. "Now, every school has got something in the works."


LINK:
http://news.enquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ ... 1/1078/SPT
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