Lacrosse, considered to be America's first sport,
was born of the North American Indian, christened by the French, and
adapted and raised by the Canadians. Modern lacrosse has been embraced
by athletes and enthusiasts of the United States and the British Commonwealth
for over a century.
The sport of lacrosse is a combination of basketball,
soccer and hockey. Anyone can play lacrosse--the big or the small.
The game requires and rewards coordination and agility, not brawn.
Quickness and speed are two highly prized qualities in lacrosse. An
exhilarating sport, lacrosse is fast-paced and full of action. Long
sprints up and down the field with abrupt starts and stops, precision
passes and dodges are routine in men's and women's lacrosse. Lacrosse
is played with a stick, the crosse, which must be mastered by the player
to throw, catch and scoop the ball.
Lacrosse is one of the fastest growing team sports
in the United States. Youth membership (ages 15 and under) in US Lacrosse
has more than tripled since 1999 to nearly 100,000. No sport
has grown faster at the high school level over the last 10 years and
there are now more than 130,000 high school players. Lacrosse is also
the fastest-growing sport over the last five years at the NCAA level
and that's just the tip of the iceberg. There are more than 500 college
club programs, the majority of which compete under the umbrella of
US Lacrosse and its "intercollegiate associates" level.
BRIEF HISTORY
With a history that spans centuries, lacrosse is the oldest sport in
North America. Rooted in Native American religion, lacrosse was often
played to resolve conflicts, heal the sick, and develop strong, virile
men. To Native Americans, lacrosse is still referred to as "The Creator's
Game."
Ironically, lacrosse also served as a preparation
for war. Legend tells of as many as 1,000 players per side, from the
same or different tribes, who took turns engaging in a violent contest.
Contestants played on a field from one to 15 miles in length, and games
sometimes lasted for days. Some tribes used a single pole, tree or
rock for a goal, while other tribes had two goalposts through which
the ball had to pass. Balls were made out of wood, deerskin, baked
clay or stone.
The evolution of the Native American game into modern
lacrosse began in 1636 when Jean de Brebeuf, a Jesuit missionary, documented
a Huron contest in what is now southeast Ontario, Canada. At that time,
some type of lacrosse was played by at least 48 Native American tribes
scattered throughout what is now southern Canada and all parts of the
United States. French pioneers began playing the game avidly in the
1800s. Canadian dentist W. George Beers standardized the game in 1867
with the adoption of set field dimensions, limits to the number of
players per team and other basic rules.
New York University fielded the nation's first college
team in 1877, and Philips Academy, Andover (Massachusetts), Philips
Exeter Academy (New Hampshire) and the Lawrenceville School (New Jersey)
were the nation's first high school teams in 1882. There are 400 college
and 1,200 high school men's lacrosse teams from coast to coast.
The first women's lacrosse game was played in 1890
at the St. Leonard's School in Scotland. Although an attempt was made
to start women's lacrosse at Sweet Briar College in Virginia in 1914,
it was not until 1926 that Miss Rosabelle Sinclair established the
first women's lacrosse team in the United States at the Bryn Mawr School
in Baltimore, Maryland.
Men's and women's lacrosse were played under virtually
the same rules, with no protective equipment, until the mid-1930s.
At that time, men's lacrosse began evolving dramatically, while women's
lacrosse continued to remain true to the game's original rules. Men's
and women's lacrosse remain derivations of the same game today, but
are played under different rules. Women's rules limit stick contact,
prohibit body contact and, therefore, require little protective equipment.
Men's lacrosse rules allow some degree of stick and body contact, although
violence is neither condoned nor allowed.
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