Los Angeles Times

Lacrosse starts to stick to Southland prep scene

Traditiona­l East Coast sport shifts west, with uptick in high school participat­ion and Division I prospects.

- By Luca Evans

The coastal divide in the United States might be best defined not by arguments over bagels and pizza, but by attitudes toward a sport played with a ball and stick.

Loyola boys’ lacrosse coach Jimmy Borrell is from northern Virginia, an East Coaster through and through. His teammates at the University of Maryland had dads who played there, and granddads, and greatgreat granddads. The sport is in the region’s very blood. So coaching in Southern California was culture shock.

Once, Borrell impersonat­ed, a player told him he missed practice because “the waaaves were too good.” Another kid once skipped because he had a “glass-blowing club.”

“I’m like, ‘You have a glass-blowing club — you guys making bongs over there?’ ” Borrell recalled, joking. “What’s going on in California?”

Lacrosse culture in the greater Los Angeles area, though, is starting to shift as more East Coast products have settled roots out west. A total of 6,670 high school athletes played Southern Section lacrosse in 2021-22, according to CIF participat­ion census data, up from 5,870 in 2016-17. And the number of Division I prospects in the Southland, coaches say, has grown from a handful to a platoon.

As the sport continues to search for a wider audience, here’s a guide to the ins and outs of high school lacrosse in the Los Angeles area and beyond.

What attracts athletes to lacrosse?

Simple.

“You can whack someone with a metal stick,” Borrell said. “It’s not a tough sell.” Well, that’s in the boys’ game — the girls’ game is much different, with a shorter field, less padding and less physicalit­y. But both are sports of constant motion, coaches say, in which dominance comes from stick skills and hand-eye coordinati­on rather than a built frame and speed.

Profession­al lacrosse is a less-than-lucrative profession, but solid recruits have the potential to earn scholarshi­ps to top academic schools on the East Coast. Take Loyola graduate Owen Gaffney, now playing at Harvard, or Brad Sharp of Palos Verdes, now starting at Yale.

“You might be a low-level Division I football player that goes to some obscure school,” Borrell said, “but on a lacrosse field, man, you might be able to go to an Ivy League.”

The Southern California game

When lacrosse first began as a Southern Section sport, Santa Ana Foothill girls’ coach Cristina Rodriguez said, there was about “one good player per team.”

But fundamenta­ls have improved as a generation of East Coast players have settled in the area to helm some of the top programs in Southern California. Rodriguez, a native of Baltimore, has shaped Foothill into the top dog in Southern Section girls’ lacrosse: 6-0 to start 2022-23 after a Division 1 title last year. Corona Del Mar and Loyola, coached by former East Coast college players G.W. Mix and Borrell, were the last two Division 1 champions in boys’ lacrosse.

“That East Coast passion for always playing, always having a stick in your hand, has helped grow the game,” Rodriguez said.

The keys to winning in Southern California are depth and fundamenta­ls, coaches say. Under rules of the National Federation of State High School Assns., the high school game doesn’t have a shot clock, meaning a wide range of teams prefer to play grind-itout lacrosse. Individual players who can pull off complicate­d moves and shoot on the run stand out.

“Making sure the stick is an extension of your body — that is what separates the best lacrosse players from the good lacrosse players,” Agoura coach Sean Lindsay said.

Continued growth

On a tiny patch of turf on a South L.A. campus, a group of six View Park girls and boys giggled as they tried to knock the ball out of one another’s sticks during a practice session.

They shot on a tiny net, because their only full-size one — lent by a now-graduated Pacific Palisades player — was broken.

The sticks in their hands were either left over by an old camp run by youth nonprofit Harlem Lacrosse or bought via aggressive Facebook Marketplac­e maneuverin­g by coach Elizabeth Waterman.

“The aspect of funding,” first-year coach Waterman said, “has been difficult.”

It is a microcosm of the promise and obstacles high school lacrosse programs face in Los Angeles.

A stick can cost up to $150, gloves $200, helmets $300.

The City Section has just 12 schools that field a lacrosse team. The class disparity has correspond­ed to a racial disparity at the collegiate level.

Despite modest improvemen­t during the last decade, 83% of women’s and men’s lacrosse teams last year were mostly white.

“If you go around saying you play lacrosse, you got people saying, ‘Oh, that’s that white people s—,’ ” said Ayomide Aborisade, a member of the View Park girls’ team.

Youth programs such as Harlem Lacrosse, which has establishe­d roots at Compton High, are key to growth in lower-income communitie­s, coaches said.

View Park has forfeited every game this season, not fielding enough students to play. But more will come after the school’s rugby season finishes, Waterman hopes, and the sport’s effect on a joyous bunch at the practice was clear.

“It’s a pretty unique sport,” Aborisade said. “We also want to make it more known, for not just white kids, for Black kids.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Luca Evans Los Angeles Times ?? AYOMIDE ABORISADE, left, and View Park lacrosse teammate Eve Hart on the practice field. Aborisade said she enjoys the different challenges of the sport, which emphasizes stick skills and hand-eye coordinati­on.
Photograph­s by Luca Evans Los Angeles Times AYOMIDE ABORISADE, left, and View Park lacrosse teammate Eve Hart on the practice field. Aborisade said she enjoys the different challenges of the sport, which emphasizes stick skills and hand-eye coordinati­on.
 ?? ?? MEMBERS OF View Park’s lacrosse teams, which have not had enough players to compete this season, but the sport continues to grow and seek wider audiences.
MEMBERS OF View Park’s lacrosse teams, which have not had enough players to compete this season, but the sport continues to grow and seek wider audiences.

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