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With a history that
spans centuries, lacrosse is the oldest continuously played sport in North
America. The sport is rooted in Native American religion and was often
played to resolve disputes, heal the sick, and develop strong, virile men.
To some Native Americans, lacrosse is still referred to as "The Creator's
Game."
The evolution of the
Native American game into modern lacrosse began in 1636 when Jean de Brebeuf,
a Jesuit missionary, drew attention to a Huron contest in what is now
southeast Ontario, Canada. At that time, some type of lacrosse was played
by tribes scattered throughout what is now southern Canada and all parts of
the United States. For the uninitiated, lacrosse is a combination of football (soccer), hockey, and basketball. It has been called the fastest game on two feet and is a grueling test of stamina. There are 10 positions on a team (one goalie, three attackmen, three midfielders, and three defensemen). The object: put a 5 oz. hard-rubber ball into your opponent's net with a long-handled stick with a triangular pocket at the end, while keeping your opponent from doing the same to you. Like soccer, lacrosse is played on an open field with goals at both end; like hockey, the player carry sticks and can roam behind the net; like basketball, the offensive players set picks and run patterned offenses and fast breaks, while the defenses are man-to-man or zone; in fact, basketball inventor James Naismith was a lacrosse player in the late 1800s. Glen (Pop) Warner, famed football coach, substituted lacrosse at the Carlisle, PA, Indian School for baseball because, "Lacrosse is a developer of health and strength. It is a game that spectators rave over once they understand it," he said. He undoubtedly had an ulterior motive. Lacrosse, a contact sport, helped prepare his grid warriors for the fall season.
In 1956, the game got a
boost when a superior athlete from Syracuse University, Jim Brown, scored
six goals for the North in the North-South Lacrosse game. Brown, one of the
greatest running backs in the history of the National Football League,
admitted he would rather play lacrosse than the grid sport. A unique
combination of speed, skill, agility, grace, endurance, finesse, and
historical significance, lacrosse may just be, according to basketball
inventor James Naismith, "the best of all possible field games." * History of Lacrosse partially adopted from the USLacrosse ® Parents' Guide |
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Last Edited: 04/22/2003 09:05:00 AM