There are many options to consider when stringing
a lacrosse pocket. Remember to choose a style that suits your game and
your needs.
- Things to Consider
- Construction
- Diamond Mesh
- Hard Mesh
- String
- Sections
- Terminology
- Playing Style
- Pockets
- Pita
- Corner
- Hard Mesh
- Perfect
- 9-Piece Mesh
- Goalie
Things to Consider
Different playing styles, ability levels, and positions
benefit from different stinging styles, so it's a regular part of any
laxer's program, to weave custom pockets into their sticks. This guide
offers some general instructions for mesh stringing, as well as some
popular pocket styles for you to try out.
Construction
Diamond Pocket: Tears in your diamond mesh occurrs
normally over time, first in the sidewalls which sustain continual
stress as the impact of the ball pulls the mesh against the sidewalls.
Hard-mesh: These pockets tend to allow for quick releases
and a longer break-in than soft mesh. They offer a long life span and
a reliable pocket shapey.
String: Different strings will have different fraying
effects on the mesh over time, as well, but leather string and shooting
string tend to be the most resilient and gentle.
Sections: Top-string: attaches the mesh to the stick
scoop, Sidewalls Bottom-string: attaches the mesh to the throat, Shooting
strings: create the shape and contour of the pocket body
Terminology
Channels/tracks (Pita and Corner Pockets)
Channels in the pockets give you the ability to roll
The ball on a clean, consistent track.
Channeled pockets offer a secure hold on the ball,
as well.
You should develop a consistent throw to derive the
most benefit from this structure.
Whip (Hard Mesh and Perfect Pockets)
Whip referrs to the ball's lightness or ease in exiting
the pocket. Too much whip can cause an unweildy throw.
The looser the pocket the greater the whip.
Stiffer string helps reduce whip, but overall, pocket
tightness is more effective.
Ball Retention (9-Piece Mesh)
Ball retention describes how well a pocket holds a
ball, especially in complicated maneuvers.
Looser pockets generally offer more ball retention,
but then also increase whip.
Playing Style
Tracks and channels are recommended for advanced players
who can control a consistent throw in a variety of circumstances.
Loose pockets are reccommended for beginners and players
who play a lot of fakes or hits.
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Pita Pocket
This pocket works the best for attack men and middies
who like lots of whip and need ball control.
Materials:
4 leathers
2 sidewalls
4 nylon strings (2 short, 1 medium, 1 long)
4 shooting strings (3 hockey lace, 1 nylon)
- First, take the 4 leathers and put them in the
stick and pull them tight. You can put a little cloth tape on the
tops to prevent them from coming loose.
- Put the sidewall strings in the holes of the head.
This will be pulled tight and remain this way.
- Take the 2 short nylons and tie a knot at one end
of each.
- Thread it through the top hole of the stick and
lace it between the outside leather and the sidewall. You should
make about 5 or 6 knots on the leather.
- String these nylons tightly, pulling the outside
leathers close to the sidewalls. Tie these nylons off through a bottom
hole of the stick.
- Twist this nylon, looping it around the middle
leathers the same amount of times you did on the side nylons. This
twist should be tight, pulling the middle leathers close together.
- Make sure the knots on the middle leathers are
in the middle of the knots on the outside leathers.
- Now take the longest piece of cross lace and string
it between the outside and middle leathers like you would in a normal
6 diamond. String this nylon loosely.
- Tie it off at the bottom and let out some leather
to make a pocket.
The Corner Pocket
Materials:
1 soft mesh piece
2 leathers
2 short nylons
3 sidewalls
Shooting strings
- Cut your mesh piece to about the width of a ball.
That is about 2 or 3 rows of diamonds short of each side. Burn the
edges so it won't fray.
- Lace the mesh into the top of the head on one sidewall.
The mesh should reach to the outside holes at the top of your head.
- Tie that string off and take your 2 leathers and
weave them on the outside diamonds of the mesh piece. Make sure you
loop the leathers around the top of the stick first.
- Take the leathers through their normal holes at
the bottom of the head and insert the sidewalls as normal.
- Once the sidewalls are in, take the 2 short nylons
and, starting in a hole at the top of the stick, weave them down,
attaching the leathers, and mesh piece, to the sidewalls.
- Tie these off and use the extra to close off the
hole at the bottom of the stick where the mesh meets the head. Now
add your shooting strings.
- This pocket works the best with 3 or 4 hockey laces
strung close together.
- A piece of tape (about 1/8 inch wide) around each
knot of the nylon may prevent wear and breakage at the sidewalls.
The Hard Mesh Pocket
This pocket is good for keeping whip at a minimum
and playing in wet weather.
Materials:
1 durable mesh piece
3 sidewalls
Hockey lace
- Attach the top of the mesh to the top of the head,
similar to the way you would string soft mesh.
- Tie a knot at 1 end of the sidewall and thread
it through one of the holes at the bottom of the head.
- Insert the sidewall by weaving it on the outside
diamonds of the mesh piece. Make sure to loop the sidewall around
the top of the stick first.
- Once the sidewall gets to the top of the mesh piece,
put the sidewall through the top hole of the stick and start going
back down, this time wrapping the sidewall around itself and the
mesh piece.
- This should be done rather loosely to give it some
kind of pocket.
- Tie it off at the bottom of the stick and then
use it to attach the bottom of the mesh to the head.
- Once the mesh is in place you can put in the whip
strings. Hockey lace works best here.
The Perfect Pocket
This pocket plays with little to no whip, and holds
the ball tightly in one spot.
Materials:
4 leathers
5 medium nylons
Shooting strings
- Leave the leathers through the head, leaving them
loose. Add the sidewalls and leave them tight.
- Tie off a sidewall at one end. Thread it through
the hole at the top of the stick, then run it through the top loops
of the leathers where they meet the top of the stick.
- Continue with the sidewall, threading it through
all 4 leathers and then tying it off at the top hole in the other
side of the stick.
- Take your nylons and thread each one of them over
the sidewall at the top. Make sure you fold them exactly in half.
- Take the 2 halves and twist loosely, knotting between
4 to 8 times around the leathers.
- Tie the nylons off at the bottom of the head and
add the whip strings. Hockey strings are recommended.
The 9 Piece Mesh
An all-purpose soft mesh pocket that is easy to string.
Materials:
1 piece of soft mesh
2 sidewalls
4 hockey lace shooting strings
long piece of regular shooting string
short piece of cross lace or sidewall
- Attach the mesh to the top of your stickwith the
large shooting string.
- Then, starting from the top, use the sidewalls
to attach the mesh to the frame moving straight down the side of
the stick.
- After you've got both sidewalls in you need to
add the 4 shooting strings, weaving them in like a ladder from top
(tightest) to bottom (loosest).
- Use the short piece of cross lace or sidewall to
tie off the bottom of the mesh. This should be done so that the mesh
is even and there are no wrinkles in the mesh.
Goalie Mesh
The goalie version of the standard corner pocket
Materials:
1 piece of goalie mesh
2 sidewalls
2 medium nylons
2 regular shooting strings
1 really long sidewall
4 long hockey laces
- Attach the mesh to the top of the head, using the
sidewall or a goalie leather.
- Add the sidewalls, leaving them kind of loose.
- Now, take the regular shooting strings and tie
off 1 end at the top of the head, preferably on the outermost hole
on the top plastic.
- Weave the shooting string in and out of the last
row of mesh on either side all the way to the bottom.
- Tie it off at one of the holes at the bottom of
the head, but leave them loose for a nice pocket.
- Connect the mesh to the sidewalls using the medium
nylons and working your way down from the top. Knot the nylons around
the shooting strings about 10 to 15 times and tie them off at the
bottom.
- Use the extra sidewall to attach the bottom of
the mesh piece to the head, closing off the gap so the ball doesn't
fall through.
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