By Tom Hoffarth
Like the latest strain of the West Nile virus, an agitated swarm of African Killer Bees and the construction of another Wal-Mart, lacrosse must be eradicated before it permeates any more neighborhood parks in Southern California.
The first question that's bound to cross your mind if you happen to be accosted by someone trying to push this snooty East Coast-rooted prep schoolyard activity as the newest hip, hot, happening sport is: Why?
Lacrosse is a pretentious cross between hockey and hokey. It's NASCAR paint swapping with reinforced butterfly nets and face cages. It's an excuse to practice police baton submission techniques while propelling a croquet ball at a goalie that only wishes he'd be allowed to wear at least a pair of shin guards before he develops any more welts.
Anyone who wanted to do some cross checking on their own could have dropped $35 for a midfield seat at the frigid Home Depot Center in Carson on Saturday night to experience the magic of something called the inaugural "First 4 Lacrosse Invitational." Traditional Division I college powerhouses Notre Dame, Syracuse, North Carolina and Georgetown were invited to travel cross-country to: a) introduce it to Californians as an alternative to full-contact surfing and b) pound each other without facing criminal prosecution under California's more lenient laws.
Between teeth chattering from the fog that rolled in and teeth rattling from the wicker wacks delivered across the grill, it was an event only a well-paid orthodontist or a displaced alum could enjoy.
Apparently, this is just the apex of a slippery slope. That crazy bunch at AEG, trying to make ends meet since the Kings' season has been flushed, have bought into something called Major League Lacrosse and will financially support a Los Angeles franchise starting with the 2006 season.
Consider yourself warned.
"At a time when more Southern Californians than ever are following and playing the sport of lacrosse, we couldn't be more pleased to bring to Los Angeles and the Home Depot Center a Major League Lacrosse franchise," said Tim Leiweke, the point man for everything the otherwise astute Anschutz group does.
It should be pointed out that this is also a time when more Southern Californians than ever are driving cars. The freeway arteries once engineered to get people from the Home Depot Center and the downtown Staples Center within a calendar month are already too darn congested.
L.A. is one of four West Coast targets for the exuberant expansion dreams of the MLL and commissioner -- get this -- Jake Steinfeld, the same "Body By Jake" infomercial fitness freak who made his name as the price-gauging trainer to the stars. What little transplanted lacrosse community there already is in L.A. is just asking to be seduced into the false hope of a big-time popularity by a fast-talking, loud-mouth New Yorker who has set up shop here.
We're already familiar with Jake's body of work. We're not pumped up.
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