Daily Archives: August 7, 2009

Lacrosse Website Profile: “LaxCoachMike.com” Features Nationally Recognized NCAA And High School Lacrosse Coaches Sharing Coaching Tools To Help Lacrosse Coaches Improve

Mike Muetzel is the founder of laxcoachmike.com. Coach Mike has over 30 years of experience with Boys Lacrosse, the 2007 US Lacrosse Coach of the Year in Georgia, a member of the Lacrosse Industry Council, and a former DI Player. He shares his experiences from State Championship games through coaching U13 in a community of lacrosse coaches getting better at coaching. This unique site www.laxcoachmike.com features nationally recognized NCAA and HS Coaches sharing their secrets with Podcasts, articles, DVDs (Coaching U15 Lacrosse with College Drills), eBooks (Changing Philosophies in Coaching Lacrosse) and download tools to help all lacrosse coaches improve.

 Laxcoachmike

I am a lacrosse coach just like you, well maybe a little older… I love and respect lacrosse. And the more kids we get involved to share the love of lacrosse the better. This is not a site for players but exclusively for Lacrosse Coaches who are helping kids fall in love with lacrosse and improving at every level from Youth Lacrosse to High School Lacrosse and beyond.

I played both in High School and College Lacrosse for top rated programs and many great lacrosse coaches as well as some not so great lacrosse coaches. I have coached lacrosse at the U10 through U15 levels, coached High School JV and Varsity.

I have coached lacrosse travel teams in summer lacrosse tournaments all over the country , coached in numerous lacrosse camps and been blessed to experience coaching in a State Lacrosse Championship. I have been through tough seasons, as well as received Lacrosse Coach of the Year recognition. This does not make me a great lacrosse coach, simply an older coach who has seen a lot and most importantly realized how much more there is to learn.

Again, I am not in any way prophesying to be a great lacrosse coach, but over the last four or five years taken great steps to help our kids be more successful by listening and learning at lacrosse clinics, lacrosse conventions, lacrosse camps and lacrosse conferences. Two things have amazed me, first how willing even the biggest names in coaching are, to honestly share their lacrosse drills and ideas. And second, whether it is the IMLCA or the US Lacrosse Convention the same lacrosse coaches, the ones with championship rings are still there learning to get better. While many lacrosse coaches with not as much passion or dedication or wins… are at home or in the lounge.

The idea for this membership website, laxcoachmike.com is simply an extension of this philosophy. We want you to join our community of Lacrosse Coaches Getting Better Together. For the cost of renting two or three videos a month, on our site, laxcoachmike.com, we will offer you ideas and help from the best of the best lacrosse coaches. You will receive updated podcasts (35 to 50 minutes each) a few times each month. These unique lacrosse coaching podcasts will be customized for you to listen on your computer, via teleconference, or to download and listen on your IPod or mp3 player. We have a current library of articles designed to make you think about the way you coach lacrosse. We continue to add lacrosse articles each month as well as lacrosse coaching interviews, lacrosse eBooks, lacrosse videos and would love to encourage you to write lacrosse coaching articles for us and contribute your thoughts. There are also specific lacrosse tools for Rec Youth Lacrosse Coaches as well as HS Varsity Lacrosse Coaches.

Check us out. We understand the only way you will stick with us is if the content on the site, laxcoachmike.com, is extremely valuable to helping all of us be better lacrosse coaches. We are committed to bringing you the best. Already up on the lacrosse coaching site for members are unique lacrosse interview podcasts with lacrosse coaches from Salisbury University, Syracuse, Upper Arlington HS, and Ohio Wesleyan University, Butler Kent Denver High School as well as others. All of these lacrosse coaches understand you, the specific audience, and have directed their comments to help you improve, or at the very least, think about changing the way we all coach lacrosse.

These are tools direct from my toolbox, and tools I (lax coach mike) currently use each I coach a team. I’m sure you will find them as useful as I do. You’ll also get FREE access to an exclusive MP3 audio interview I did with my friend, Head Coach Jim Berkman, the winningest lacrosse coach in NCAA Lacrosse history. Catch his unbridled passion and love of coaching and tips to improve all FREE for simply checking us out. I really hope you will visit us, and be part of this project, simply, Coaches Getting Better Together… At laxcoachmike.com.

Southern Californa High School Lacrosse: CIF Southern Section High School Sports Budgets Cut As Tax Revenues To Districts And Schools Fall

"...Parents also have stepped up to fund new athletic programs such as lacrosse, a sport that is booming amid the recession. According to statistics released by the CIF, participation in boys' and girls' lacrosse was up 45% from two years ago. "Usually the last sport to be added is the first to get cut," Simmons said. "But because parents have stepped forward and are funding these sports, they've found a way to keep them."

"...Parents also have stepped up to fund new athletic programs such as lacrosse, a sport that is booming amid the recession. According to statistics released by the CIF, participation in boys' and girls' lacrosse was up 45% from two years ago. "Usually the last sport to be added is the first to get cut," Simmons said. "But because parents have stepped forward and are funding these sports, they've found a way to keep them." Photo of 2009 CIF Southern Section Lacrosse Championship Game submitted to LaxBuzz

(From LATimes.com article)   Coaching stipends are being slashed. Vice principals are being forced to double as athletic directors. Trainers’ salaries are being eliminated.

And that’s just in the Manhattan Beach Unified School District.

The sagging economy is pummeling high school athletic departments throughout Southern California, with nearly every school being hit in some way.

cif southern section logo“It’s a bad deal for everybody,” said Thom Simmons, a spokesman for the California Interscholastic Federation’s Southern Section, the governing athletic body for 571 local schools. “When tax revenue is down, the level of services has to go down. And any time you have to cut services, whether it’s for drama, band or athletics, it’s just a bad deal.”

Simmons described the cuts as cyclical and recalled similar crises in 1978, when the passage of Proposition 13 severely curtailed the amount of real estate taxes collected in the state, and during a downturn in the housing market in the early 1990s.

The 104 schools in the cash-strapped Los Angeles City Section are being pinched particularly hard this time around.

Among the changes being made for the 2009-10 athletic year, junior varsity playoffs are being eliminated; baseball and softball teams must shave five games off their league schedules to reduce travel costs; and 75 fewer buses will be provided for wrestling tournaments.

Also, freshman-sophomore basketball schedules are being moved to the winter to consolidate travel expenses, and efforts will be made to combine teams from a single school going to the same destination to use fewer buses.

The measures are expected to save $448,000, City Section Commissioner Barbara Fiege said — and that might not be enough. Officials are discussing the possible implementation of a transportation fee for athletes in 2010-11.

“For the current year, we were able to make the necessary reductions,” Fiege said. “However, we also realize that more cuts may be made next year.”

Not all of the news is bad when it comes to the effect of a slumping economy on high school sports.

Attendance was up “across the board” last year at Southern Section playoff events, Simmons said, primarily because high school sports provided an inexpensive entertainment option for budget-conscious families. As a result, some athletic departments received a small financial bonus through their profit-sharing arrangement with the section.

“…Parents also have stepped up to fund new athletic programs such as lacrosse, a sport that is booming amid the recession. According to statistics released by the CIF, participation in boys’ and girls’ lacrosse was up 45% from two years ago. “Usually the last sport to be added is the first to get cut,” Simmons said. “But because parents have stepped forward and are funding these sports, they’ve found a way to keep them.”

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-high-school-cuts7-2009aug07,0,6047834.story

College Lacrosse Recruiting: Only One Official Visit To Each Institution

www.victoryrecruiting.com 610-620-3189 www.collegerecruiting.tv

www.victoryrecruiting.com 610-620-3189 www.collegerecruiting.tv

How can I prepare best for the official visit?

 
I suggest doing your homework before taking any official visit. You are allowed only one official visit to any particular institution and you want to make it count. By “boning up” before the trip (gathering general information about the school, academic programs, majors requirements, team statistics etc), you will come in as an educated consumer. This will impress the coach and the members of the staff.
 
Develop a separate short list of questions for the coaching staff and for the members of the team. I suggest building your questions around a few general topic areas (Academic support, team philosophy, individual student-athlete expectations, and student-athlete benefits) and then narrow your list from there.
 
Tom Kovic

Lacrosse Training And Conditioning: LaxSpeedTV.com Highlights “Boosting (Lacrosse) Training Intensity” With “Human Motion Inc.”

laxspeedtv

 

Boosting Training Intensity
By Carmon Bott – Human Motion Inc
Friday, Aug 07, 2009 10:38
Carmen Bott – Human Motion Inc www.humanmotion.ca Over the years, people have come to see me for a variety of reasons, whether it is to gain strength and power for sport, to improve conditioning levels, to lose body fat and/or to get back into shape. Whatever, their goals might be; and the exercise prescription to follow, two elements must be present for results to take place:Consistency and IntensityConsistency is the easy one. Be committed, follow the program “x” number of days per week, keep on keeping on. . . It’s really quite simple. Intensity, however, is not so simple. It is the factor that requires the most gumption, the right frame of mind and the willingness to push oneself past what is comfortable. This factor is more critical and of course, it is the one that most individuals need help and more importantly, candid clarification on.I have met many clients that have told me they are ‘hard workers.’ Too be perfectly honest, hard workers are not a dime a dozen. They are much, much, more rare than you think. And being a great athlete does not mean someone is a hard worker either. So, based on this fact, I am going to make an assumption:

YOU are not training as intensely as you can.

I will let you in on one of my biggest coaching secrets: Intensity can be learned. And I am going to provide you with 5 coaching points to help you be the intense trainee you are meant to be. Foundation First As Gray Cook, a world leader in physical therapy and corrective exercise states: “You cannot build fitness on dysfunction.” So, it is imperative that you make sure you have taken care of old injuries and muscular imbalances before you begin an intense strength & conditioning program. The secret to success in physical performance lies in systematic development, through a process called Periodization. Periodization is a fancy term for yearly planning, which means you must plan your training and your physical development, not just jump in with both feet, like many of the fitness programs you see out there suggest. Bootcamps are NOT a recipe for quick fitness, nor do they employ methods of planning. Conversely, they are often a recipe for injury. And injuries result in lost training time. Lost training time means zero consistency.

I want you to think of intensity this way: The application of maximal physical effort, systematically applied to a movement or lifting skill you already possess. Meaning, if you do not possess the skill to squat, you may not squat heavy and thus work intensely. You must build your foundation first.

If you are new to training, a suggestion might be to register for a ‘Building a Strong Foundation’ class this Fall. Fatigue versus Failure

Before you can reach your true physical potential, you must also learn to be comfortable being very uncomfortable. You must develop the mental tolerance to push yourself outside and above your current fitness and comfort zone. Elite power athletes and endurance athletes are all too familiar with pushing the limits, both physically and mentally. It is often those who can suffer the most, and recover the fastest that makes them elite. You can certainly take some valuable lessons from this mindset and apply it to your own training environment. But, you must use caution. Pushing oneself does not mean the use of sloppy technique or maximal efforts at any cost.

With respect to exercise and training, pushing oneself means using skilled movements, repeatedly, to cause high levels of muscle fatigue, not failure. Failure can lead to injury or poor motor patterns. Instead, you must practice this fine line of pushing and backing off just enough so you have good form. AND, here’s the kicker:

It takes a great deal of effort to practice perfectly under high levels of fatigue. . .to squat perfectly while your thighs are burning or pull perfectly (with your shoulders packed and spine straight) rep after rep after rep. I challenge you to be ‘perfect’ in every rep you do, even when you feel like quitting. Defining ‘Pain’

If you are still having problems overcoming barriers to intensity, perhaps you need to examine your ability to focus and differentiate between ‘good pain’ and ‘bad pain.’ First of all, let me clarify. Yes, there is such a thing as good pain. It comes in the form of burning muscles, high heart rates and sometimes a bit of nausea. And I hate to break it to you, but it isn’t really pain – it is discomfort. Today, we are bombarded with media and the avoidance of pain – take this pill for this pain, this one for that pain and so on.

Put the pills away and take Lance Armstrong’s advice: “Pain is temporary; Quitting is forever.” If you think I am encouraging that you work through injuries (pain) and push yourself so hard that you have soreness for weeks, you are missing the point. Please go back and read the first two paragraphs again. Science has proven that if we expose ourselves to a certain level of intensity, that is ‘painful’ (uncomfortable), and then we expose ourselves to that same level again within a few days (consistency), we will be able to tolerate it much more handily on the second go around.

The human body is an amazing, adaptive machine. It must, however, be overloaded in order to adapt to a higher level. Thus, if we overload it, we will need a higher level to elicit the same uncomfortable response. Another tip is to expect and welcome some pain/discomfort. Then, shift your mind away from it. Take your mind to the technical aspect of the lift. This is a ‘disassociation’ technique sports psychologists have been using for years. And it can be learned if you practice it. No Fear, No Frustration Some of the biggest differences I encounter between training teenagers and training adults, is the level of fear. Adults, being more set in their ways, have preconceived notions of what they think they can handle and what they are comfortable trying. Meaning, adults, in general have more fear. And that becomes an obstacle for me, as a S&C Coach, to work around. Although there is no substitute for good judgement, adults do need to be reminded that part of ramping up intensity is trying an exercise that is new and more complex. Training intensely begins with the right attitude and the right attitude includes a clean slate – a willingness to try something new, possibly fail and to not become frustrated with the experience. Think of how many levels of swimming kids must go through before they are left to their own devices – usually a few summers worth right? Well, put that into perspective and know that learning takes time and patience. But it is worth it because learning something new is also another effective way to boost up the intensity of your training. Shaking muscles on a new lift is a GREAT sign. It means you are paving a new neuromuscular highway and thus improving coordination. Take some advice from the kids out there: No fear, no frustration OK? Approach your workouts with a willingness to learn. Training is a beautiful opportunity if you view it that way. Actions Must Match Vision

This may sound a bit blunt, but you must sacrifice laziness, unwarranted training habits, crap technique, pain avoidance and pleasure seeking to develop the physical and mental capacity to tolerate hard work. It is fine to have goals, to have a vision of where you want to be.

This is where it all begins, but if that vision is clouded baggage and stubbornness, then you will be stuck right where you are. It is only through a willingness to make this sacrifice and hard work, and nothing short that will lead you to achieve your strength and conditioning goals. You must take responsibility for where you are right now. Your actions must match your goals directly.

I challenge you to do just that! Defeat your fears, leave frustration at the door and face the road ahead with daily conviction. What translates intense physical conditioning into bliss is the victory you will have over YOURSELF.