Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
How about Harvard, Yale, Brown, Penn, Duke, Georgetown, UVA, UNC, Hopkins, Naval Academy, Washington & Lee, the list goes on and on. (Haters gonna hate.)



And prefirsts and reclassed
are gonna play younger players!


This is a youth lacrosse argument. So weak to bring up in HS or College discussion.


Crabs and King Crab were early proponents of reclassing kids and getting the grade base prefirst league going. Just like Germany will never live down their past..Crabs will always be know as prefirts/reclass kings.



Crab's started what? The Gait brothers were 20 year old college freshman and already married when they started at Cuse in 87. The list is never ending of things you can incessantly complain about in life....meanwhile, the rich get richer, Cuse is still a powerhouse and more Crab's athletes commit to top D1 programs. What has your ignorant finger wagging gotten your kid.....yet another excuse to add to his pile of mediocrity?

Life is tough and it's not fair. Lead, follow or get the [lacrosse] out of the way.


Ok YOUTH lacrosse apologist for letting older children play against younger children. Yea those darn pesky 4th graders should lead, follow or quit complaining !

Your strawman about the college Gaits is hilarious.


I don't know about all of the cliches, but at the end of the day, if you are worried about a one year age spread, you're probably more suited for rec., even though they have age spreads too, it will perhaps give your kid that chance to seem like the best one out there, or maybe not, and you can start complaining about the A's, B's, and C's. Have fun with it, but don't plan on taking it to seriously. If he ends up being really really good, you'll end up in the competitive club format for real one day, and will no longer be a holdback complainer, and will probably be a die hard Crab-er. We'll see you later, or maybe we won't.