uzisuicide wrote: public school clubs need to find a way to get the sport moved into the realm of UIL. That my friends will really change things.
Pardon my ignorance - what is UIL and why will it change things?
I'm in Michigan and we just went under the MHSAA umbrella, which isn't a great thing necessarily.
(I just answered my own question, reading further into this thread).
Someone asked about other states, and I have been very involved in the move to sanctioned status her in Michigan, helping to train the new refs that MHSAA has recruited from other sports. It has certainly been a point of contention as to whether this move is a good thing. Long term, most likely. Short term -LOTS of disruption. Lacrosse used to be run by the Michigan Scholastic Lacrosse Association, a group organized to run lacrosse in the state. Now under MHSAA, we are lumped in with all other sacntioned sports and have to follow their regulations. These cover when a team can start practice (7 days from now), when a coach can work with players in a group larger than 3 (forbidden until practice starts), how many games a day/week a team can play (no weekend tournies with multiple games a day), how far a team can travel (no more than 300 miles), all players have to be from the district (before a kid from a neighboring town could join a team if his didn't offer lacrosse) etc. etc. There are about 65 teams playing boys lacrosse now, which seemed to be the magic number for MHSAA to take interest. Besides setting the rules for the year, MHSAA runs the state tournament now. Before, there were three classes of teams, based on skill level. There was also a developmental level for new squads and they had their own separate state tournament, which was fun for the kids. As you would expect, the Class A + B teams really diss on the new squads ("It's not really a true state tournament, you can't call yourself state champs, yadda, yadda"). Now there are two classes, based on school size, although a team can opt up (but not down). There are several newer teams from large high schools with little experience that will be thrown in with squads that have played for years and there will be severe mismatches as a result.
Teams also have to be recognized by the school district now, rather than just being organized by a parent's booster club. This has caused some existing programs to drop out, which is a shame. The booster club can still fund and support the team, and there is no Coach/Teacher requirement, which is nice. There will definitely be a step backward this year, and hopefully it leads to long-term growth. However, since the district has to sponsor it, it will be more difficult I believe to get teams started, since now you have to convince the AD, who doesn't like losing baseball players, track runners, etc., besides the football argument. Fortunately in my town, lacrosse is the "cool" sport now, so a lot of the football players do both, and many are excellent talents.
The challenge on my end is that we have added twice as many new refs as we had existing HS refs! We covered all the games before, now we have to spread the assignments out, and we will have lots of very raw refs with no exposure to the game before. Previously, most refs came from the lacrosse community. Training requirements have been extensive, and I have done a lot of it!
So overall, I guess we're poised for more growth, but I think it will be very incremental rather than exponential. This year is going to be very, very challenging to the established lacrosse communiity, and I would assume there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth before we're through. I'll keep you posted.