by Daniel Morris on Tue May 22, 2007 9:11 am
Brauck, I wish I had an answer for you for this question. It is something that has driven me nuts for a long time. Being a NY Hudson River Valley high school player just 20 minutes north of Manhattan, and attending an east coast college and playing four years with BU, I have seen firsthand what you are talking about, and I am still stumped.
Here are some random thoughts (and mind you, some of this applies to SELC and CCLA, but I am speaking from a PCLL viewpoint)...
The east coast varsity programs do eat up a lot of talent. Where there was a post recently how in the state of Michigan, two or three players were attending Div I programs, I can cite instances where neighboring high schools were sending that many players from their TEAM alone. When I graduated, Yorktown sent 3 guys to Syracuse. And that was just the start of where their players went. Hopkins, Loyola, Maryland. The Yorktown/Lakeland games had bigger turnouts than our nationals did, and the stands were full of scouts. If you were a good player, you got a look and an offer to play in Div I - III. Some went, some (like me) had very specific education goals and went for a certain program. But even the good players had a chance to play somewhere, leaving only the weaker talent to attend schools with club programs.
On top of that, there are only a handful of school without varsity programs in the far east, limiting the MCLA options. We don't have one school in the NY/NJ area. On the flipside, the WCLL and the RMLC have barely any varsity programs and a ton of schools. The WCLL alone is massive. A player in California could stay closer to home instead of travelling across the country, get a great education, and have an amazing lacrosse experience, for under $10,000 a year tuition (at a state school). UMass, SUNY, Maryland, Virginia state schools, they are almost all varsity out here. UMass and Vermont have great club programs, but they can never be MCLA.
Next, the MCLA is fairly new on the upper east coast. Whereas the WCLL has existed as a megaconference for a long time, before joining the MCLA, the PCLL was really closer to the NCLL than a functioning alternative to playing varsity. We joined the MCLA only about eight years ago. When I played in high school, I never even guessed club ball had any organization, much less functioning leagues. Getting the idea into the heads of east coast students that MCLA lacrosse can be is as good as Divisional lacrosse is taking longer than I would have hoped. But the last few years, the PCLL has made great strides in this area.
Finally, weather is killing us. And it isn't just weather, it is weather combined with resources. We have very few indoor facilities, and they are extremely expensive because they are so rare. If a school is lucky enough to have such a facility, our programs can't use it. We don't get many schools travelling out here to play us because the weather is too risky to schedule a trip around during most spring breaks, but the only way to get better is to play better teams. When we travel, most of our teams have only been on a field one or twice for practice, playing schools that have 10-12 games already played! There has been a push by our teams to move the date closer, but none of the other leagues want it. We peak, like other teams, towards the end of the season, but at that point, all we are playing is each other, desperately trying to get our games in under the wire. And since no one has seen us in two months, we drop in the polls, leading to a poor seed at nationals.
So I think Stryker and LaxDad50 have nailed it in their posts. But as the perception of the MCLA improves, so will our recruiting efforts. We will never get the bluechip players, there are just too many nearby varsity options, but we can get players who were solid talents that are interested in a particular school, and not the varsity experience and all the baggage that comes with it. We are also hoping to see more teams travel to us, just as our teams have been travelling to them.
The building blocks of a good league are there. We have some great coaching, some amazing talent, and we are starting to get noticed. We just need to build on that momentum. But as the MCLA name's value increases, so will our prospects for the league.
Daniel Morris
MCLA National Tournament Director
Treasurer, Pioneer Collegiate Lacrosse League
dmorris29@comcast.net