By Hunter Francis and John Weaver
Lacrosse is booming! Just look at all the new sticks, heads, gloves and pads. Not to mention all the new places on-line and real stores to buy the stuff now. With all this growth, everyone in the lax biz is getting rich and doing great. The game is in the best financial shape it's ever been in. Right?
Not really. As of the middle of August, three of the game's most recognizable retailers are in major financial and structural change, and a notable upstart declared bankruptcy. If all the signals of growth are on the rise, why aren't these businesses following suit? What's happening and why? And how will it affect the game and its players, if at all?
It's a classic short story of supply and demand and it takes place on a retail shelf in a lacrosse store near you. You're in the story. You are "the demand" and the manufacturers are "the supply". That's "the retailer" lying on the floor between you. Here's why.
Looks like Tex Lax (Texas), Bacharach (Maryland), and Dr. Laxx (Maryland) are all out of the business. I bought my first gear from Bacharach in Towson. Sad to see you go. Also hard to believe that Texas can't support Tex Lax with all the youth and H.S. kids playing these days in Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, etc.
Link to Full Editorial on E-Lacrosse:
http://www.e-lacrosse.com/roadkill.html