Summer of Crotty

October 16, 2010

Ned Crotty

By Mark Kitchin

After one of the best summers that any men’s lacrosse player has ever had, it looks like Ned Crotty is already looking to the future as well as embracing the present. Crotty seems to be combining his ability to play and his acquired business acumen in order to stay involved in the sport he loves far beyond a time when his playing days are over.

In late September, it was announced that Crotty was being hired as Sales and Marketing Manager of Trilogy Lacrosse, a Manhattan-based lacrosse business that holds camps and clinics across the country. There are New Jersey ties in this as well. The five-year old company was founded by former Princeton lacrosse players Ryan Boyle and Rob Lindsey.

 Crotty has emerged as a star and is arguably the best lacrosse players ever to come out of the Garden State. No one can deny that the lacrosse summer of 2010 could be renamed the “Summer of Crotty”.  Although he didn’t always dominate the games he played, Crotty seemed to be everywhere a lacrosse stick was raised.

 The New Vernon resident and Delbarton School graduate’s busy season started in March when Duke was preparing for their 16-4, national championship season. The 6-foot-2, 190-pound athlete was truly sensational. He led the nation in assists with 63 and was fourth in total points. His efforts were rewarded with NCAA Lacrosse’s highest honor, the Tewaaraton Trophy.

Crotty was selected by the Chicago Machine of Major League Lacrosse. He would eventually score 11 goals and 13 assists in seven games for the squad which worked as a traveling team and didn’t play a game in Chicago. He would eventually be selected as the league’s Rookie of the Year.

On July 6, he signed a multi-year endorsement deal with Brine Lacrosse for an undisclosed salary. By mid-July, he was off to Manchester, England playing for the U.S. team in the FIL World Championships. He didn’t dazzle during the tournament until it mattered most. He tallied the game’s tying and go-ahead goals in the U.S. team’s 12-10 win over Canada in the title game on July 24.

In August, the 3-time collegiate All-American earned another extremely rare honor, that of All-Atlantic Coast Conference Male Athlete of the Year. Only two men’s lacrosse players have been recognized in the 56 years the award has been given. Next Crotty was chosen by the National Lacrosse League’s Colorado Mammoth in their lacrosse draft.  He was the first pick in the second round, the 11th pick overall and the first American college player to be chosen. As of now, he has not signed a contract yet with the indoor league team which begins its season in January.  

The summer of success probably wound up on September 13 when all the NCAA champion teams visited the White House on Champions Day. He had the honor of attending the special event which included a speech from President Obama and celebrating with his teammates one last time.

Always a team player, both at Delbarton and Duke, he finished his NCAA career with 92 goals and 147 assists. The soft spoken athlete seems to go about his business, often helping his teammates as much as himself. Wherever he goes from here, Crotty seems to be readying to make an impact in the sport of lacrosse whether that happens on the field or off.


Olympic Lacrosse by 2020? It’s Possible.

October 1, 2010

By Mark Kitchin

It’s one of those questions that fans of lacrosse can never quite understand. If synchronized swimming and team handball can become Olympic sports, why isn’t lacrosse a part of the worldwide event as well?

It’s not like the Olympics had never heard of the sport. Lacrosse was in fact contested in the 1904 and 1908 Olympics, albeit between only three countries, Canada, U.S. and England. It was also listed as an exhibition sport at several more Olympic Games.

Surely, it’s as competitive a sport as most of the events in the Olympics. It has to have a bigger following than some events which only arouse interest during the event.

Well maybe in terms of sheer numbers but not in terms of status around the globe. Although the sport does have its areas of rabid interest, there are still parts of the world that have never seen a lacrosse game. Lacrosse has made great inroads in the last decade, but on the continents of South America and Africa rarely has a stick been lifted or a goal scored.

However, that is changing and the reason Lacrosse may one day take its place again in the Olympic Games may be because of better organization within the sport on the International level. In 2006, the men’s and women’s international lacrosse entities merged into the Federation of International Lacrosse (FIL). The merger may prove to be the most important development for the sport in the last decade.

Along with fostering the growth of both the men’s and women’s games, it has put together a realistic blueprint outlining the steps needed to be taken in order to make lacrosse an Olympic sport once again.

It’s not surprising that someone with New Jersey ties is part of this endeavor. For years, Tom Hayes coached lacrosse and Rutgers University in New Brunswick. After the long time coach left the Scarlet Knights program, he got more involved on the international level and has been at the forefront of helping lacrosse move beyond the countries in which the sport already enjoys success.

The FIL currently has 25 full-fledged members and 14 associate members with footholds in many more countries. There are organizational structures in place in countries as varied as Bulgaria, Costa Rica, Finland, India and New Zealand. There has also been communications in 37 additional countries including Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Iceland, Israel, Jamaica, Jordan, Mongolia, the Philippines, Qatar, Singapore and Tibet with sports-minded individuals looking to start up the sport in their country.

There will probably be enough interest and development by next year to allow FIL officials to attend the SportAccord Conference which is being held in London, England in 2011. Among SportAccord’s goals is to recognize, assist and represent International Federations with Olympic aspirations.

Once this is achieved, the FIL may apply to the International World Games Organization for World Games membership by 2013 and eventually start asking for Olympic consideration from the International Olympic Committee by 2014.  The World Games, which is next scheduled for 2013 in Cali, Colombia, is held every four years and is always held the year after the Olympic Games. The World Games are held under the patronage of the IOC. It is basically an Olympics for sports that have a measure of worldwide recognition but are not contested in the Olympic Games. It also serves as a way for the IOC to determine the viability of future Olympic sports.

Among the 32 sports federations currently recognized by the International World Games Association, are ones that cover Bowling, Fistball, Korfball, Netball, Orienteering, Squash, Surfing, Tug of War and Water Skiing. Lacrosse had been a member of the World Games at one time but the last time the sport was contested was in 1989. Under the FIL, the timetable lists the earliest year for lacrosse to become an Olympic event is 2020 with 2024 a more realistic possibility. That’s the plan anyway.

One could hope interest in lacrosse will only snowball as more countries pick it up. Certainly it’s in the interest of lacrosse equipment manufacturers to establish relationships in different parts of the globe as well as players and coaches looking to broaden their horizons while passing on the sport knowledge to athletes of all ages from different countries. As always economics will play a role in its growth.

It can be argued that lacrosse doesn’t necessarily need Olympic recognition. Tennis and Golf survived for years without it. American football and rugby have never been part of it. Baseball and softball enjoyed Olympic status only to have it taken away, but that does not seem to have dampened their overall popularity.

However, many believe making lacrosse a global sport can only enhance the image of what many already consider a successful and entertaining pastime. It may be just another logical progression in its history. Does lacrosse belong in the Olympics? It would certainly give dedicated athletes another prize to contest and more reasons to play.


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