ICC
World Cup is over ~ soon the Nation would get hooked to IPL, cheering for club
teams ….. the non-performers would be forgotten. Meantime, I have never heard of this earlier,
touted as the ‘fastest sport on two feet’ – sometimes shortened to wlax or lax,
a sport played with 12 players on each
team.
The game is “Lacrosse”, a team
sport played using a small rubber ball
and a long-handled stick called a crosse or lacrosse stick. It is
often played as a contact sport. The head of the lacrosse stick is strung with
loose mesh designed to catch and hold the lacrosse ball. The objective of the game is to score by shooting
the ball into an opponent's goal, using the lacrosse stick to catch, cradle,
and pass the ball to do so. Defensively, the objective is to keep the opposing
team from scoring and to gain the ball through the use of stick checking and
body contact or positioning.
Wlax
is ‘women lacrosse’ - originally played by indigenous
peoples of the Americas, the modern women's game was introduced in 1890. The rules of women's lacrosse differ
significantly from men's field lacrosse.
In nascent stages, geography and tribal customs dictated the extent to
which women participated in these early games.
In USA, the news is
that Cleveland State University will discontinue funding its 52-year-old
wrestling program in fall 2016. The world's oldest sport will be replaced by
men's lacrosse - the fastest growing college sport in the last decade. Its
first season will start in the spring of 2017. The moves are a result of a
"program prioritization process" led by Athletic Director that
explored factors including funding, competitiveness and national trends, the
university said in a statement.
~ and
in another, a move in the name of safety sparks debate in Girls lacrosse !
Worried about the
risk of serious head injuries in a sport where the players wield reinforced
sticks and rifle shots with a hard, unyielding ball, Florida last month became
the first state to require high school girls lacrosse teams to wear protective
headgear. Again, this is not new or unique - Boys lacrosse teams nationwide
have worn hard-shell helmets for many years. Girls, who play by vastly
different rules that generally forbid contact, have historically spurned most
protective gear. In Florida, where lacrosse is a new sport, state officials
instead reasoned that all lacrosse players are at risk for head trauma and
defied the sport’s traditionalists by mandating a soft form of headgear for
everyone in a girls lacrosse game or practice.
But in a volatile
example of how thorny and tangled the debate can become as communities
nationwide implement new rules to protect the brains of young athletes,
Florida’s mandate has created a combative firestorm that has reverberated
across the country. Ann Carpenetti, vice
president of lacrosse operations at US Lacrosse, the sport’s national governing
body, called Florida’s decision “irresponsible” and said the headgear decision
could make the game more hazardous because it might embolden players to be more
aggressive. Coaches across the state have panned the new rule. “It serves no
purpose, other than being a costly distraction to parents and the players,”
said Nikki Krakower, the coach of the girls team at Gainesville High School.
“It’s ridiculous.”
Opponents of the
mandate said the new rule was especially flawed because the Florida-approved
headgear — the type used most commonly is a 10-millimeter-thick headband — is
flimsy. “A headband is only going to prevent minor contusions and abrasions if
they happen in the two inches the headband covers,” said Lynn Millinoff, the
coach of the girls team at Buchholz High School in Gainesville. “But Florida
officials seem to think they’re smarter than the entire rest of the
lacrosse-playing world.” An online petition denouncing the new rule garnered
more than 3,500 signatures.
Proponents
of the rule point to data that shows that girls lacrosse has the fifth-highest
rate of concussions in high school sports — only football,
ice hockey, boys lacrosse and girls soccer rank higher. As the Florida High
School Athletic Association board of directors was deliberating on whether to
approve headgear, it heard emotional testimony from a mother whose daughter had
sustained a devastating head injury while playing lacrosse.
Helmets, while
universal in many contact sports, are a frequent source of controversy because
of misconceptions about their protective value. Studies have generally
indicated that helmets do not protect against many kinds of concussions,
although they can help prevent certain kinds of concussions, as well as skull
fractures. Most of the concussions in girls
lacrosse occurred when players were struck by the ball or a stick, a finding Comstock
said was highly relevant and helmets are very good at preventing direct
transfer-of-force injuries. It certainly
does not sound a good logic to say that protection will create a gladiator
effect !
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
Photos and news
inputs from : NYtimes.com