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Bloomington Youth Lacrosse Association Welcome to Boys Lacrosse

Bloomington Youth Lacrosse Association Welcome to Boys Lacrosse. Rob Graff BYLA Boys Coaching Director March 2014. What we are about. BYLA is an community-active, youth-focused sports organization that teaches lacrosse to boys and girls from kindergarten to 8 th grade.

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Bloomington Youth Lacrosse Association Welcome to Boys Lacrosse

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  1. Bloomington Youth Lacrosse AssociationWelcome to Boys Lacrosse Rob Graff BYLA Boys Coaching Director March 2014

  2. What we are about • BYLA is an community-active, youth-focused sports organization that teaches lacrosse to boys and girls from kindergarten to 8th grade.

  3. Let’s move on….Agenda • General thoughts about lacrosse and connections with other sports • What we teach at each age group • Some tips for parents • Questions & Hopefully answers

  4. General Concepts • Lacrosse is a sport whose focus is to make a 3 inch diameter sphere enter your opponents 6 foot by 6 foot goal more times than your opponent throws the sphere in your goal. • You have 10 players allowed on the field, certain sticks are longer or wider than others and a limited time period during which to score goals. • Can skills/experiences in other sports translate to Lacrosse? • Parts of all sports translate. A “Pull Move” in lacrosse? Yes!

  5. Lacrosse isn’t Hockey/Basketball or Soccer – but it mixes all of them • Hockey without the ice? No. But many similarities (small puck/use stick, face-offs/helmet/position specialization) force low angle shots, protect the middle area. • Important Differences – Lacrosse has more players on the field, bigger field, bigger goals, no boards, use of either hand. • Most “hockey thoughts” regarding volume of shots are irrelevant. Hockey thoughts re: all even offense (dump/chase) are irrelevant.

  6. Well, then is it Soccer? • No, it's not. It has some Soccer elements - big field, spacing issues, conditioning important, goalie can control transition, but there are IMPORTANT DIFFERENCES!!! • Examples - more control over ball in lacrosse, more physical, more liberal substitution patterns, one on one defense is different because contact allowed, no space behind goal to use to make goalie turn. STICK CHECKS. • Soccer thoughts regarding defense not useful, because one cannot transfer foot control of ball to "holding" ball in stick, more control over ball when shooting. Lax need to score goals to win - not many 2-1 games. Almost impossible to get lead and then stall, as in soccer

  7. Then it’s Basketball • Almost…Like Basketball, in lacrosse you can have lots of control over ball, both have lots of scoring, and there is no value to mere “volume” of shots. • Differences: physical, sticks v. hands, face-offs allow for back to back to back possessions, goalie v. no goalie, and shot velocity is important in lacrosse not in basketball. • Many transferable skills – individual defense, shot selection, multiple defense systems, transition offense.

  8. Field of Play

  9. What does this mean? • Understand that Lacrosse is different than other sports. • Know that some skills taught in lacrosse will help in other sports. • Know that some skills taught in other sports will not transfer to lacrosse, although many will transfer. Good feet important in all sports

  10. What are we teaching? Head Up, Control Goalie, Finish! • Different skills to different levels. • Skills build upon what was learned previously • Much of what we teach focuses on two things – fundamentals and decision-making.

  11. Positions • Attack • Midfield • Defense • Goalie • Face off • Long stick Midfield

  12. Positions - Attack • The attack man's responsibility is to score goals and control the offense. • The attack man generally restricts his play to the offensive end of the field. • A good attack man demonstrates excellent stick work with both hands and a strong understanding of what is happening in the team offense. • Each team should have three attack men on the field during play.

  13. Positions - Attack

  14. Positions – Midfield • The midfielder's responsibility is to cover the entire field, playing both offense and defense. (Key emphasis now) • The midfielder is a key to the transition game, and is often called upon to clear the ball from defense to offense. • A good midfielder demonstrates good stick work including throwing, catching and scooping. Speed and stamina are essential. • Each team should have three midfielders on the field.

  15. Positions - Midfield

  16. Positions - Defense • The defenseman's responsibility is to defend the goal. The defenseman generally restricts his play to the defensive end of the field. • A good defenseman should be able to react quickly in game situations. Agility and aggressiveness are necessary. • Each team should have three defensemen on the field.

  17. Position - Goal • The goalie's responsibility is to protect the goal and stop the opposing team from scoring. • A good goalie also leads the defense by reading the situation and directing the defensemen to react. • A good goalie should have excellent hand/eye coordination and a strong voice. Quickness, agility, confidence and the ability to concentrate are also essential. • Each team has one goalie in the goal during play.

  18. Positions – Defense/Goalie

  19. Positions - All

  20. U9Introduce the Game Helmet fitting is Important • Love the game and have fun! • How to hold the stick • Scooping, catching and throwing mechanics on the run • Spacing & How to help our friends • Defensive foot movement (stay between ball and goal, “spidering in” • Trashcan Lacrosse

  21. U11 Fundamental skills & love for game • Learn and develop proper scooping/ throwing/catching mechanics. • Learn and develop proper ideas of passing to moving target, catching on move, and keeping head up while moving. • Learn and develop proper ideas regarding moving feet on defense, and forcing to outside. Learn and develop proper poke check/lift check.

  22. U11 • Install ideas regarding keeping the ball moving. • Teach mechanics of shooting, and begin to teach ideas about where to shoot • Work on finding space, creating space and exploiting advantage situations. • Do so in a fun-focused way with positive reinforcement and teaching.

  23. U13Develop basic team/game concepts • Refine and continue to develop above fundamentals, but at faster speed with more challenging drills - Do it Faster! Nice Jump Shot Form!

  24. U13 • Learn how to recognize and react to more complex unsettled situations • Work on 2 man game concepts off ball as well as on-ball • Learn basic team defense concepts – when do I slide, how do I slide • Refine offensive dodging - defensive 1-1 concepts • Work with F/O men

  25. U15Integrate and Accelerate Lax at the Big House • The focus during these years is to refine ones stick skills, while making the right DECISION! And doing it FAST. • Situation specific drills to drive acceleration in thinking and stick work

  26. U15 • Conditioning focus • Continue to refine stick skills - force repetition, force speed • More teaching in game-related situations - double teams, moving ball 2x to shot, early slide defenses, counters to those defenses. Expectations rise for stick skills. • Refining offensive and defensive skills - setting up dodge, dodging off pass, movement off ball to facilitate same, 2 man game. Defensively - when to check, more work on holds, really emphasize defensive talk as an expectation. • Learn to play with pace- advantage of slow v. fast pace. • Clearing/Riding become big focus here.

  27. Practical Tips for Parents He needs the $125 head, your U13 probably doesn’t… I. . If you come away with nothing else from this paper/talk, please note this point. At this level, the type of head that the player uses is pretty irrelevant – most are not skilled enough to take advantage of the expensive “pinched” heads. But the pocket is another matter. There is nothing more important to the youth player/coach than having each player with a pocket that is NEITHER a “tennis racquet” NOR a “bag”.

  28. Practical Tips • Kids need to practice throwing and catching away from practice. Tennis balls can be used to lessen potential damage… • Provide viewing opportunities for your players to watch better lacrosse than they play. ESPNU and YouTube. 10,000 Hours…

  29. Practical Tips IV. Enjoy Watching and learning a new sport. Most studies of lacrosse indicate that one significant reason players love it is because their parents have not played it, and thus cannot correct them.

  30. Practical Tips V. Lacrosse Camps. There are numerous opportunities. Like all other sports, different camps for different players. Legendary Joe Cuozzo

  31. Bloomington Youth Lacrosse Association Great Organization. Great Coaches. Great Experience for our children. 2012 7/8A State Champions

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