Evolution
of Lacrosse
Lacrosse has
witnessed great modifications since its origins in the 1400s, but
many aspects of the sport remain the same. In the Native North
American
version, each team consisted of about 100 to 1,000 men on a field that
stretched from about 500 to 800 metres with some fields being several
kilometres long. Rather than having traditional goals where the ball
has to pass through goal posts, many of the Native teams used a large
rock or tree as their goal. They would hit the deerskin ball against
the goal to earn points. The medicine-men acted as umpires, and the
women urged on the men by beating them with switches. These lacrosse
games lasted from sun up to sun down for two to three days. These games
were played to settle inter-tribal disputes and also used to toughen
young braves in preparation for future combat.
Click on picture for video.
The game became
known to Westerners when a French Jesuit
Missionary, Jean
de Brbeuf, saw the Iroquois
Natives play it in 1636. In 1763, after
Canada
had become British, the game was used by the Natives to carry out an
ingenious military deception. On the 4th of June, when the garrison of
Fort
Michilimackinac
(now Mackinac)
was celebrating the king's birthday, it was invited by the Ottawas,
under their chief Pontiac, to
witness a game of "baggataway" (lacrosse). The players gradually worked
their way close to the gates, when, throwing aside their crosses and
seizing their tomahawks which the women suddenly produced from under
their blankets, they rushed into the fort and massacred all the
inmates, lest a few Frenchmen.
By the 1800s,
lacrosse evolved to become less violent and more of a sport as French pioneers
began competing. In 1867, W.
George Beers, a Canadiandentist,
codified the game, shortening the length of each game and reducing the
number of players to ten per team. The first game played under Beers'
rules was at Upper
Canada College in 1867, with
Upper Canada
College
losing to the Toronto
Cricket Club by a score of 3-1. By the 1900s, high
schools,colleges, anduniversities
began playing the game, and lacrosse was contested as a medal sport in
the 1904
and 1908Olympics.
In the 1930s, an
indoor version of the game, box lacrosse
, was introduced in
Canada.
It quickly became,
and remains, the dominant form of the sport in that country. A later
version of box lacrosse, indoor lacrosse,
is played professionally in both
Canada
and the
United
States.
In the United States,
the sport is popular in Maryland
(where it became the official team sport in 2004), New
York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,New
England
and other areas along the east coast.
In addition, its popularity has started spreading to the west coast,
spurred by the sport's increasing visibility in the media as well as
the growth of college
and high
school
programs and "pee wee" leagues throughout the country. This
explosion
has been facilitated by the introduction of plastic heads invented by Baltimore-based
stick maker STX
in the 1970s.
This innovation reduced the weight and cost of the stick, and allowed
for faster passes and game play. The plastic head is now universally
used, and while wooden sticks remain legal, they are far outclassed.
At the collegiate
level,
there are currently 57 NCAA Division I
men's lacrosse teams, 31 NCAA Division II
men's lacrosse teams, and 130 NCAA Division III
men's lacrosse teams. There are also currently 82 Division I women's
lacrosse teams, 35 Division II women's lacrosse Teams, and 154 Division
III women's lacrosse Teams.
At the
professional level, there are 11 National Lacrosse
League (indoor)
teams; 8 in the United
States and 3 in Canada, with
2 new teams starting in the 2007 season
(See Chicago
Shamrox). In Major League
Lacrosse,
there are 10 teams all of which are based in the
United States,
and 2 more expansion teams are set to play in the 2008
season.
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