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Re: Age Verification
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You're going to hold your kid back purely for athletic reasons? Well it looks like we have the number one pick for idiot parents of the year. SMH.
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If you were focused on bragging than your son is a standout AA player and winning all of the time than it would be a problem but fortunately that isn't you.
Ha, funny. Merely deflecting the parents who say "go play badminton" What I find strange is that there are a number of parents who are only asking for what other sports work hard to provide - a level playing field that is also safe given the inherent risks of the sport. Yet there is a contingent here who for some reason thinks that this is an odd thing to expect, fortunately that isn't you. It isn't odd to expect a safe level playing field and if someone wants to create the lacrosse equivalent of pop warner football with birth certificates, Id cards etc. they are welcome to do that and I can't imagine anybody objecting. What I object to is the notion that US Lacrosse should somehow mandate and enforce those procedures for all tournaments. The reality is that lots of players and their parents enjoy grade based tournaments with no age requirements and believe them to be safe and fair. It really doesn't bother me if a 15 year old attack man plays 2020 and scores on my 13 year old son. It is important to my son that he plays with his friends and classmates from the same grade. Nobody forces anyone to participate in grade based tournaments just as nobody should force all tournaments to be age based with strict enforcement. Are you an idiot! "...The reality is that lots of players and their parents enjoy grade based tournaments with no age requirements and believe them to be safe and fair..." yeah lots of holdback parents. Noone likes to play in a grad eabse which is assumed (make an assout of me) to be age appropriate. Those that what to challenge their sons can play up willingly but no one can truly do that because you don't know who is held back the year above. The hold back concept only worked when few did it now many are and it really muddies the water!
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@#$%!&$#@@ %^&**$# ^&*(*^$ @#$%!&*^ &^$^ boys that play up on Varsity know what they are getting as far as refs and rules. Sure a missed call can happen but it is all organized and coordinated. That is the issue, these tournaments need some set of consistent rules and policies to abide by.
I would suspect many of the underclassmen playing varsity are on the older side of the spectrum. There is a reason not many 13 years olds are playing varsity. With LI heading into the playoffs next week I doubt you can name a team with a 13 year old playing meaningful minutes on a team. I doubt there is more than (25) 14 years olds for that matter.
This part of the season they are 15/16/17/18.
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There is only one thing about age verification and standards that we as parents should care about, and that is safety. The competitive advantage of kids who may be a year older is a sportsmanship debate but one that belongs low on the ladder. The indignation should be that it is unsafe and indefensible to put small for age kids out there with older/bigger kids playing down a year due to the school year math. Best of all worlds is for parents of smaller kids to have the limited discretion to put their kid out with kids same age who are bigger. No s&*# some kids are big for their age. That doesn't argue a point or validly diminish my point. 99% of us should not give a hoot about early recruiting because it won't be in play for our kids. But 100% of us as parents should agree our first duty is for kids to be safe. Why should a lacrosse parent really care about the sport of lacrosse? I don't know if I speak for everyone, but I won't have much if any interest in following lacrosse with much interest after my kids are done playing. Most of us would not stop the TV on a college lacrosse game if not for our kids playing the game and stoking some casual and temporary interest in it for the time being. We are failing to do that. We are failing the kids. We are basically rolling over and playing dead for club owners who would otherwise be middle school p.e. teachers who happened to be at the confluence of the easiest buck on earth to do these events. Very well said. One of the reasons that parents of the holdbacks don't understand the frustration is that their kids are not at risk. There is a market for kids that want to play with and against the best kids of their graduation year regardless of how old they are. There are some club owners who are serving that market. My us lacrosse qualifying u13 son plays with 15 year olds on his middle school team in the spring. I am fine with him playing against 15 year olds in the summer. The websites of the tournaments he is going to state that the AA 2020 division is not for most U13 teams and they have A and B divisions for the other teams. There is no cheating. There simply is no age requirement. One responsibility of a tournament director is to match like teams. If a tournament director is misrepresenting or not enforcing the divisions or otherwise doing a poor job of ensuring a good experience for all the teams that come than the solution is to not go to those tournaments. There is no need for some sort of age police. There is a need for club directors to make sure they are going to well run tournaments where there kids will be safe. Problems arise when the club directors try to save money by going to cheaper tournaments or find it easier to say that the other teams are cheating than to say that they should be playing in a lower division or the other teams were just better. You are a holdback apologise who must have some dealing with holdbacks..coaching, son, etc.. Youth sports is not about satisfying clubs and parents like you...It is about youth sports..School teams are where you get your advantage...not screwing up youth sports for you and your type of thinking.
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There is only one thing about age verification and standards that we as parents should care about, and that is safety. The competitive advantage of kids who may be a year older is a sportsmanship debate but one that belongs low on the ladder. The indignation should be that it is unsafe and indefensible to put small for age kids out there with older/bigger kids playing down a year due to the school year math. Best of all worlds is for parents of smaller kids to have the limited discretion to put their kid out with kids same age who are bigger. No s&*# some kids are big for their age. That doesn't argue a point or validly diminish my point. 99% of us should not give a hoot about early recruiting because it won't be in play for our kids. But 100% of us as parents should agree our first duty is for kids to be safe. Why should a lacrosse parent really care about the sport of lacrosse? I don't know if I speak for everyone, but I won't have much if any interest in following lacrosse with much interest after my kids are done playing. Most of us would not stop the TV on a college lacrosse game if not for our kids playing the game and stoking some casual and temporary interest in it for the time being. We are failing to do that. We are failing the kids. We are basically rolling over and playing dead for club owners who would otherwise be middle school p.e. teachers who happened to be at the confluence of the easiest buck on earth to do these events. Very well said. One of the reasons that parents of the holdbacks don't understand the frustration is that their kids are not at risk. There is a market for kids that want to play with and against the best kids of their graduation year regardless of how old they are. There are some club owners who are serving that market. My us lacrosse qualifying u13 son plays with 15 year olds on his middle school team in the spring. I am fine with him playing against 15 year olds in the summer. The websites of the tournaments he is going to state that the AA 2020 division is not for most U13 teams and they have A and B divisions for the other teams. There is no cheating. There simply is no age requirement. One responsibility of a tournament director is to match like teams. If a tournament director is misrepresenting or not enforcing the divisions or otherwise doing a poor job of ensuring a good experience for all the teams that come than the solution is to not go to those tournaments. There is no need for some sort of age police. There is a need for club directors to make sure they are going to well run tournaments where there kids will be safe. Problems arise when the club directors try to save money by going to cheaper tournaments or find it easier to say that the other teams are cheating than to say that they should be playing in a lower division or the other teams were just better. You are a holdback apologise who must have some dealing with holdbacks..coaching, son, etc.. Youth sports is not about satisfying clubs and parents like you...It is about youth sports..School teams are where you get your advantage...not screwing up youth sports for you and your type of thinking. I don't have any dealings with holdbacks. I have four sons who have run the gamut of athletic ability and when they matured. One of my sons didn't play sports. One matured late and has had fun playing at a B level in the summer. Another played at more of an A level and the last one matured early and is age qualifying but has fun playing with his classmates (no holdbacks but a few summer birthdays) at the AA 2020 level. He does play one age based tournament where they play u-15. I like the current system because if you are realistic about your son's abilities and maturity level you can find a team that plays tournaments where the level of play is appropriate. Most of the athletic holdbacks play in the AA divisions. You probably shouldn't play your son in a 2020 AA tournament if you aren't comfortable with him playing in a u-15B tournament. You probably shouldn't play 2019 AA if you aren't comfortable playing in a u-15 tournament that allows high schoolers. I also think the safety concerns are overblown. All of the kids on my son's AA 2020 team are there because they were successful playing with older boys on their middle school teams. If some eighth grader decides to reclass and play down it is no different than what they played against all spring. It is just not a big deal. I coached for years in Pop Warner football. Dealing with all of the birth certificates, pictures for the rosters and the weigh-ins was a huge hassle. I really enjoy going out in the summer and just watching the kids play. What level your son plays at doesn't make you a better or worse parent. Look at the system as it is rather than what you think it should be and make your decisions and you can find competition that is appropriate for your child.
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Re: Age Verification
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Its the same conversation, over and over. Why dosent this sport, like every other sport just use a cutoff date. , why does football, baseball, hockey, even soccer use a date. Why is this so hard. This stupid thread once and for all can come to an end.
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You are a holdback apologise who must have some dealing with holdbacks..coaching, son, etc.. Youth sports is not about satisfying clubs and parents like you...It is about youth sports..School teams are where you get your advantage...not screwing up youth sports for you and your type of thinking.
I don't have any dealings with holdbacks. I have four sons who have run the gamut of athletic ability and when they matured. One of my sons didn't play sports. One matured late and has had fun playing at a B level in the summer. Another played at more of an A level and the last one matured early and is age qualifying but has fun playing with his classmates (no holdbacks but a few summer birthdays) at the AA 2020 level. He does play one age based tournament where they play u-15. I like the current system because if you are realistic about your son's abilities and maturity level you can find a team that plays tournaments where the level of play is appropriate. Most of the athletic holdbacks play in the AA divisions. You probably shouldn't play your son in a 2020 AA tournament if you aren't comfortable with him playing in a u-15B tournament. You probably shouldn't play 2019 AA if you aren't comfortable playing in a u-15 tournament that allows high schoolers. I also think the safety concerns are overblown. All of the kids on my son's AA 2020 team are there because they were successful playing with older boys on their middle school teams. If some eighth grader decides to reclass and play down it is no different than what they played against all spring. It is just not a big deal. I coached for years in Pop Warner football. Dealing with all of the birth certificates, pictures for the rosters and the weigh-ins was a huge hassle. I really enjoy going out in the summer and just watching the kids play. What level your son plays at doesn't make you a better or worse parent. Look at the system as it is rather than what you think it should be and make your decisions and you can find competition that is appropriate for your child. [/quote] You are full of it.. One breath " I dont have any dealing with holdbacks " Yet your son is on on a grade based team. You are a apologist for grade based youth sports. Pretty simple. Age makes a huge difference at these youth levels of play. And when you have a few years of training along with being older .. 6-8 grade the difference really comes out. After 9th many boys are growing so the difference is starting to be less. But by that time, the kids that played the most get the upper hand and that is the holdbacks and kids that are true athletics. If you are average to good...you would be better off holding you kid back... You wont be better than the true athletics ..but you will be better than most average ones......There is only so many true athletes playing lacrosse. Most go to money sports... Somehow people like you think certain kids (holdbacks) should get an advantage at youth sports. I dont along with all other team sports that go by age. And the BS about pop warner and hassle of cards. Soccer has many more players than Lacrosse yet they have no problem keeping youth soccer at proper age with cards. Really easy system. But once again the Bizarro world of lacrosse ..lets give special privileges to certain kids...CraZY
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Its the same conversation, over and over. Why dosent this sport, like every other sport just use a cutoff date. , why does football, baseball, hockey, even soccer use a date. Why is this so hard. This stupid thread once and for all can come to an end. Because Lacrosse special privileged players (holdbacks) get no advantage to playing against proper age children.
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Its the same conversation, over and over. Why dosent this sport, like every other sport just use a cutoff date. , why does football, baseball, hockey, even soccer use a date. Why is this so hard. This stupid thread once and for all can come to an end. Because Lacrosse special privileged players (holdbacks) get no advantage to playing against proper age children. How True
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Its the same conversation, over and over. Why dosent this sport, like every other sport just use a cutoff date. , why does football, baseball, hockey, even soccer use a date. Why is this so hard. This stupid thread once and for all can come to an end. Because Lacrosse special privileged players (holdbacks) get no advantage to playing against proper age children. How True Why is it so hard for the age based proponents to understand that changing to age based doesn't make things any better for the vast majority of players? In a lot of areas of the country boys play for their middle schools in the spring so it doesn't matter what us lacrosse says or does from the sixth grade on. In the summer teams can choose tournaments by whether they want to play holdback teams or not so it doesn't matter then either. Trying to get the whole country to change from a grade based system that they enjoy for what is primarily a npyll problem is silly. Frankly I don't care what the Crabs do or don't do. Change the npyll rules and leave the rest of us out it. Even better if you really want to solve the problem get the NCAA to ban early recruiting. Most of the abuses stem from the pressure on eighth and ninth graders to stand out so they can commit early.
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Its so obvious in pop warner that the top teams are full of older lighters. That one year makes a huge difference
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Its the same conversation, over and over. Why dosent this sport, like every other sport just use a cutoff date. , why does football, baseball, hockey, even soccer use a date. Why is this so hard. This stupid thread once and for all can come to an end. Because Lacrosse special privileged players (holdbacks) get no advantage to playing against proper age children. How True Why is it so hard for the age based proponents to understand that changing to age based doesn't make things any better for the vast majority of players? In a lot of areas of the country boys play for their middle schools in the spring so it doesn't matter what us lacrosse says or does from the sixth grade on. In the summer teams can choose tournaments by whether they want to play holdback teams or not so it doesn't matter then either. Trying to get the whole country to change from a grade based system that they enjoy for what is primarily a npyll problem is silly. Frankly I don't care what the Crabs do or don't do. Change the npyll rules and leave the rest of us out it. Even better if you really want to solve the problem get the NCAA to ban early recruiting. Most of the abuses stem from the pressure on eighth and ninth graders to stand out so they can commit early. This issue never has been about school teams.. Youth should be age based..Pretty simple concept that is hard for the special privileged to accept. I do agreee that early recruiting has helped drive this along..
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You aren't going to stop parents from holding back kids for kindergarten and in middle school. Yes lacrosse is one reason this happens but there are also other benefits to a given kid being held back; lack of maturity, academic struggles, etc. it's not always about lacrosse performance. The grade based system ship has sailed largely due to college recruiting practices. A better solution is limit the number of holdbacks a middle school club team can have (perhaps 4 per club team) and require birth certificates or state issued ID's for validation for leagues and tournaments.
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It should be grade based with a cutoff and roster like football. But it still doesnt matter because the rules will NEVER BE ENFORCED. The leagues and tournament bodies that make the rules blindly look away while taking the money. Club X enters 5 teams in each of your tournaments are you really going to complain? Team Y says if they dont bring in older/out of town/ringer kids then they cant field a team and hence cant pay you... who can turn away a check i mean player?
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Edge Lacrosse is the epitome of what is wrong with youth lacrosse. Registering teams down an age bracket is pure cheating. Coming to a tournament this summer. You are forewarned.
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Edge Lacrosse is the epitome of what is wrong with youth lacrosse. Registering teams down an age bracket is pure cheating. Coming to a tournament this summer. You are forewarned. But all the kids will do a PG year later..So that makes it ok in bizzaro lacrosse world..And they think that the Maryland holdbacks shouldnt be the only special privileged players..They want their rights to play down in age too...
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Maybe you can rev the Iroc and scare them big Canadians away.
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Maybe you can rev the Iroc and scare them big Canadians away. The scary thing is that you feel as if you are funny or clever with the Iroc joke. You go ahead and use that 30 year old joke, and we will all continue to be happy that we don't live anywhere near Baltimore.
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well I thought it was funny. The LI tough guy routine gets a little old quick.
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well I thought it was funny. The LI tough guy routine gets a little old quick. I guess the Edge Lacrosse program issue has indeed been beaten to death. Registering each team down an age group is certainly deplorable, but none of us on this board can influence their program practices. The tournament directors are culpable. As long as each parent is forewarned of the age disparity (its the program registering the team down, not parents), I'm fine with allowing my son to play. Disclosure will set you free.
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Yes, clearly it is only edge lacrosse reclassifying kids. Sweetlax, Crabs, 91, LI, Mesa, Clams, Denver elite,3d noooooooooo none of them do it. Quit bashing our Canadian friends who add so much to this game.
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Yes, clearly it is only edge lacrosse reclassifying kids. Sweetlax, Crabs, 91, LI, Mesa, Clams, Denver elite,3d noooooooooo none of them do it. Quit bashing our Canadian friends who add so much to this game. Get your facts straight. Edge doesn't reclassify. They register their teams down an age bracket. There is a very significant difference. It's systemic.
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Yes, clearly it is only edge lacrosse reclassifying kids. Sweetlax, Crabs, 91, LI, Mesa, Clams, Denver elite,3d noooooooooo none of them do it. Quit bashing our Canadian friends who add so much to this game. Get your facts straight. Edge doesn't reclassify. They register their teams down an age bracket. There is a very significant difference. It's systemic. Does a Rose smell so sweet even if you call it another name!!
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Yes, clearly it is only edge lacrosse reclassifying kids. Sweetlax, Crabs, 91, LI, Mesa, Clams, Denver elite,3d noooooooooo none of them do it. Quit bashing our Canadian friends who add so much to this game. Get your facts straight. Edge doesn't reclassify. They register their teams down an age bracket. There is a very significant difference. It's systemic. Does a Rose smell so sweet even if you call it another name!! If a team has 3-4 kids who reclassified, is that the same as an entire 2020 team playing in a 2021 division (for instance)? Of course not. The parents are holding their kids back, Edge is simply playing teams down. Why wouldn't all clubs simply begin to register their teams down a year in order to dominate? Comments, rose?
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC.
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Just FYI...New [lacrosse] State: NYSPHSAA, Inc. BYLAWS and ELIGIBILITY STANDARDS 1.AGE AND GRADE: Regulation of the Commissioner of Education: A student shall be eligible for interschool competition in grades 9, 10, 11 and 12 until his/her nineteenth birthday. If the age of nineteen years is reached on or after July 1, the student may continue to participate during that school year in all sports. NY State regs seems to be more reasonable imo.
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Laxachusetts was caught playing kids on two teams at NLF over the weekend but games were not stopped nor were they disqualified. If you saw their 2020 team, you know which kids were playing down. Shameful
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Laxachusetts was caught playing kids on two teams at NLF over the weekend but games were not stopped nor were they disqualified. If you saw their 2020 team, you know which kids were playing down. Shameful More like typical!
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Laxachusetts was caught playing kids on two teams at NLF over the weekend but games were not stopped nor were they disqualified. If you saw their 2020 team, you know which kids were playing down. Shameful More like typical! US Lacrosse has no balls and defers to the clubs so this will never ever change. Go to a national database with player cards that must be shown at check in. Its tougher to check in a soccer team at a tournament than it is to get a passport. But the teams are all LEGAL!
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Laxachusetts was caught playing kids on two teams at NLF over the weekend but games were not stopped nor were they disqualified. If you saw their 2020 team, you know which kids were playing down. Shameful More like typical! US Lacrosse has no balls and defers to the clubs so this will never ever change. Go to a national database with player cards that must be shown at check in. Its tougher to check in a soccer team at a tournament than it is to get a passport. But the teams are all LEGAL! Until a child is SERIOUSLY injured (not JUST a broken arm, wrist, hand...hip) there will be no outcry. Soccer and hockey are doing it correctly. At least enforce current rules and regs with vigor. Protect the kids.
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The sentence below is right from the rule book governing New England boarding schools athletic age eligibility
"Age: NEPSAC regulations state that a student who is 19 years of age or younger on September 1st of a given school year is eligible to compete in interscholastic athletics."
So If you're wondering why the Laxachusetts players look a lot older, the rule above explains it. If you play at a prep school governed by NEPSAC you can enter your senior year as a 19 year old, turn 20 after September first, and you are eligible. All but four players on the 2018 Laxachusetts team fall into the above definition (they'll be 19/20 years old their |Senior year) according to one of the dads we spoke to down at Adrenaline. It is legal, but as Ty Xander tweeted out, there is a pretty big physical difference between those Laxachusetts teams and the Long Island teams they played, whose players will be 17/18 year old seniors, not 19/20 year old seniors playing under NEPSAC. Laxachusetts was caught playing kids on two teams at NLF over the weekend but games were not stopped nor were they disqualified. If you saw their 2020 team, you know which kids were playing down. Shameful More like typical! US Lacrosse has no balls and defers to the clubs so this will never ever change. Go to a national database with player cards that must be shown at check in. Its tougher to check in a soccer team at a tournament than it is to get a passport. But the teams are all LEGAL! Until a child is SERIOUSLY injured (not JUST a broken arm, wrist, hand...hip) there will be no outcry. Soccer and hockey are doing it correctly. At least enforce current rules and regs with vigor. Protect the kids. Parents and teams don't want it fixed as lacrosse has turned into a Me First just get recruited sport. Its almost never about the team only individuals. So if its only about your kid nobody care about what's good for the sport and safety
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Re: Age Verification
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To answer the comment that "US Lacrosse has no balls" I will say this. After meeting with a USL rep the answer seems simple enough. Privately run tournaments that are not sanctioned by USL can obviously not be controlled by them. Private tournent directors can choose to look the other way and concerning age classification and they certainly do.
One of the measures currently in place it to have USL sanction these tournaments giving them the ability to oversee many aspects including age.
I wonder how many clubs and/or parents will not allow their teams and kids to play in Un-sanctioned USL tournaments.
If the US Lacrosse logo and signage is visible then it is sanctioned. If you see the logo and signage at a private un-sanctioned tournament you need to contact USL in Baltimore immediately.
How many of you would support US Lacrosse sanctioned tournaments and avoid the private ones? That's the real question.
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To answer the comment that "US Lacrosse has no balls" I will say this. After meeting with a USL rep the answer seems simple enough. Privately run tournaments that are not sanctioned by USL can obviously not be controlled by them. Private tournent directors can choose to look the other way and concerning age classification and they certainly do.
One of the measures currently in place it to have USL sanction these tournaments giving them the ability to oversee many aspects including age.
I wonder how many clubs and/or parents will not allow their teams and kids to play in Un-sanctioned USL tournaments.
If the US Lacrosse logo and signage is visible then it is sanctioned. If you see the logo and signage at a private un-sanctioned tournament you need to contact USL in Baltimore immediately.
How many of you would support US Lacrosse sanctioned tournaments and avoid the private ones? That's the real question. A definite YES!!
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Everyone makes us be registered with US lax before tryouts. US Lax COULD go to the hammer and cut some people off but the problem is that CR and clubs like the YJ's wield a tremendous amount of power its almost like the ncaa vs SEC football. The conference is way more powerful than the governing body and renders them almost insignificant
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To answer the comment that "US Lacrosse has no balls" I will say this. After meeting with a USL rep the answer seems simple enough. Privately run tournaments that are not sanctioned by USL can obviously not be controlled by them. Private tournent directors can choose to look the other way and concerning age classification and they certainly do.
One of the measures currently in place it to have USL sanction these tournaments giving them the ability to oversee many aspects including age.
I wonder how many clubs and/or parents will not allow their teams and kids to play in Un-sanctioned USL tournaments.
If the US Lacrosse logo and signage is visible then it is sanctioned. If you see the logo and signage at a private un-sanctioned tournament you need to contact USL in Baltimore immediately.
How many of you would support US Lacrosse sanctioned tournaments and avoid the private ones? That's the real question. How will sanctioning events prevent programs from registering teams down?
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Yes, clearly it is only edge lacrosse reclassifying kids. Sweetlax, Crabs, 91, LI, Mesa, Clams, Denver elite,3d noooooooooo none of them do it. Quit bashing our Canadian friends who add so much to this game. Get your facts straight. Edge doesn't reclassify. They register their teams down an age bracket. There is a very significant difference. It's systemic. Parents reclassify kids, Edge Lacrosse enters teams in divisions one year younger than their age/grade.
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How does an organization get insurance for a non-sanctioned event? I thought that was the only actual benefit of USL. Obviously they don't keep kids safe by taking a check from a manufacturer who provided "testing" and slapping a sticker on helmets.
They need to act like governing bodies in hockey and soccer. seems to me kids still get recruited in those sports.
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Joined: Aug 2012
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User
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 648 |
To answer the comment that "US Lacrosse has no balls" I will say this. After meeting with a USL rep the answer seems simple enough. Privately run tournaments that are not sanctioned by USL can obviously not be controlled by them. Private tournent directors can choose to look the other way and concerning age classification and they certainly do.
One of the measures currently in place it to have USL sanction these tournaments giving them the ability to oversee many aspects including age.
I wonder how many clubs and/or parents will not allow their teams and kids to play in Un-sanctioned USL tournaments.
If the US Lacrosse logo and signage is visible then it is sanctioned. If you see the logo and signage at a private un-sanctioned tournament you need to contact USL in Baltimore immediately.
How many of you would support US Lacrosse sanctioned tournaments and avoid the private ones? That's the real question. How will sanctioning events prevent programs from registering teams down? They will apparently be age based.
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SCPAL board had the opportunity implement a photo registration system like football and actually voted it down. Start there.
Do you really think the major Long Island tournament organizers who are affiliated, owned or dependent to the major clubs need or want US Lacrosse in Maryland to "sanction" their tournaments to get teams to play?
Give me a break. USL is a joke here on LI. May as well get the tournaments certified kosher by a Rabi or blessed by the church.
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To answer the comment that "US Lacrosse has no balls" I will say this. After meeting with a USL rep the answer seems simple enough. Privately run tournaments that are not sanctioned by USL can obviously not be controlled by them. Private tournent directors can choose to look the other way and concerning age classification and they certainly do.
One of the measures currently in place it to have USL sanction these tournaments giving them the ability to oversee many aspects including age.
I wonder how many clubs and/or parents will not allow their teams and kids to play in Un-sanctioned USL tournaments.
If the US Lacrosse logo and signage is visible then it is sanctioned. If you see the logo and signage at a private un-sanctioned tournament you need to contact USL in Baltimore immediately.
How many of you would support US Lacrosse sanctioned tournaments and avoid the private ones? That's the real question. How will sanctioning events prevent programs from registering teams down? They will apparently be age based. Many already are but enforcement is the key.
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