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Men's Lacrosse
Positions
Attack:
The attackman's responsibility is to score
goals. The attackman generally restricts his
play to the offensive end of the field. A good
attackman demonstrates excellent stick work with
both hands and has quick feet to maneuver around
the goal. Each team should have three attackmen
on the field during play.
Midfield:
The midfielder's responsibility is to cover
the entire field, playing both offense and
defense. The midfielder is a key to the
transition game, and is often called upon to
clear the ball from defense to offense. A good
midfielder demonstrates good stick work
including throwing, catching and scooping. Speed
and stamina are essential. Each team should have
three midfielders on the field.
Defense:
The defenseman's responsibility is to defend
the goal. The defenseman generally restricts his
play to the defensive end of the field. A good
defenseman should be able to react quickly in
game situations. Agility and aggressiveness are
necessary, but great stick work is not essential
to be effective. Each team should have three
defensemen on the field.
Goal:
The goalie's responsibility is to protect the
goal and stop the opposing team from scoring. A
good goalie also leads the defense by reading
the situation and directing the defensemen to
react. A good goalie should have excellent
hand/eye coordination and a strong voice.
Quickness, agility, confidence and the ability
to concentrate are also essential. Each team has
one goalie in the goal during play.
Men's Lacrosse
Equipment
The Stick:
The stick (lacrosse stick) is made of
metal, composite or wood, with a shaped net
pocket at the end. The stick must be an overall
length of 40 - 42 inches for attackmen and
midfielders, or 52 - 72 inches for defensemen.
The head of the stick must be 6.5 - 10 inches
wide, except a goalie's stick which may be 10 -
12 inches wide. The pocket of a stick shall be
deemed illegal if the top surface of a lacrosse
ball, when placed in the head of the stick, is
below the bottom edge of the side wall.
The Ball: The ball must be made of
solid rubber and can be white, yellow or orange.
The ball is 7.75 - 8 inches in circumference and
5 - 5.25 ounces.
The Helmet:
A protective helmet, equipped with face
mask, chin pad and a cupped four point chin
strap fastened to all four hookups, must be worn
by all men's players. All helmets and face
masks must be NOCSAE (National Operating
Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment)
approved.
The Mouthpiece:
The mouthpiece must be a highly
visible color and is mandatory.
The Glove: All players are
required to wear protective gloves. The cutting
or altering of gloves is prohibited.
Protective Equipment: All players,
with the exception of the goalkeeper, must wear
shoulder pads. Arm pads and rib pads are also
strongly recommended and often required, as are
athletic supporters and protective cups for all
players. The goalkeeper is required to wear a
throat protector and chest protector, in
addition to a helmet, mouthpiece and gloves.
Men's
Lacrosse Rules
Men's lacrosse is a contact game played
by ten players: a goalie, three defensemen,
three midfielders and three attackmen. The
object of the game is to shoot the ball into the
opponent's goal. The team scoring the most goals
wins.
Each team must keep at least four players,
including the goalie, in its defensive half of
the field and three in its offensive half. Three
players (midfielders) may roam the entire field.
Collegiate games are 60 minutes long, with
15-minute quarters. Generally, high school games
are 48 minutes long, with 12-minute quarters.
Likewise, youth games are 32 minutes long, with
eight-minute quarters. Each team is given a
two-minute break between the first and second
quarters, and the third and fourth quarters.
Halftime is ten minutes long.
Teams change sides between periods. Each team is
permitted two timeouts each half. The team
winning the coin toss chooses the end of the
field it wants to defend first.
The players take their positions on the field:
four in the defensive clearing area, one at the
center, two in the wing areas and three in their
attack goal area.
Men's lacrosse begins with a face-off. The ball
is placed between the sticks of two squatting
players at the center of the field. The official
blows the whistle to begin play. Each face-off
player tries to control the ball. The players in
the wing areas can run after the ball when the
whistle sounds. The other players must wait
until one player has gained possession of the
ball, or the ball has crossed a goal area line,
before they can release.
Center face-offs are also used at the start of
each quarter and after a goal is scored. Field
players must use their crosses to pass, catch
and run with the ball. Only the goalkeeper may
touch the ball with his hands. A player may gain
possession of the ball by dislodging it from an
opponent's stick with a stick check. A stick
check is the controlled poking and slapping of
the stick and gloved hands of the player in
possession of the ball.
Body checking is permitted if the opponent has
the ball or is within five yards of a loose
ball. All body contact must occur from the front
or side, above the waist and below the
shoulders, and with both hands on the stick. An
opponent's stick may also be stick checked if it
is within five yards of a loose ball or ball in
the air. Aggressive body checking is
discouraged.
If the ball or a player in possession of the
ball goes out of bounds, the other team is
awarded possession. If the ball goes out of
bounds after an unsuccessful shot, the player
nearest to the ball when and where it goes out
of bounds is awarded possession.
An attacking player cannot enter the crease
around the goal, but may reach in with his stick
to scoop a loose ball.
A referee, umpire and field judge supervise
field play. A chief bench official, timekeepers
and scorers assist.
Men's
Lacrosse Personal & Technical Fouls
There are personal fouls and
technical fouls in boy's lacrosse. The penalty
for a personal foul results in a one to three
minute suspension from play and possession to
the team that was fouled. Players with five
personal fouls are ejected from the game. The
penalty for a technical foul is a thirty-second
suspension if a team is in possession of the
ball when the foul is committed, or possession
of the ball to the team that was fouled if there
was no possession when the foul was committed.
Personal Fouls
Slashing: Occurs when a player's
stick viciously contacts an opponent in any area
other than the stick or gloved hand on the
stick.
Tripping: Occurs when a player
obstructs his opponent at or below the waist
with the stick, hands, arms, feet or legs.
Cross Checking: Occurs when a
player uses the handle of his stick between his
hands to make contact with an opponent.
Unsportsmanlike Conduct: Occurs
when any player or coach commits an act which is
considered unsportsmanlike by an official,
including taunting, arguing, or obscene language
or gestures.
Unnecessary Roughness: Occurs when
a player strikes an opponent with his stick or
body using excessive or violent force.
Illegal Crosse: Occurs when a
player uses a stick that does not conform to
required specifications. A stick may be found
illegal if the pocket is too deep or if any
other part of the stick was altered to gain an
advantage.
Illegal Body Checking: Occurs when
any of the following actions takes place:
a. body checking an opponent who is not in
possession of the ball or within five yards of a
loose ball.
b. avoidable body check of an opponent after he
has passed or shot the ball.
c. body checking an opponent from the rear or at
or below the waist.
d. body checking an opponent above the
shoulders. A body check must be below the
shoulders and above the waist, and both hands of
the player applying the body check must remain
in contact with his stick.
Technical Fouls
Holding: Occurs when a player
impedes the movement of an opponent or an
opponent's stick.
Interference: Occurs when a player
interferes in any manner with the free movement
of an opponent, except when that opponent has
possession of the ball, the ball is in flight
and within five yards of the player, or both
players are within five yards of a loose ball.
Offsides: Occurs when a team does
not have at least four players on its defensive
side of the midfield line or at least three
players on its offensive side of the midfield
line.
Pushing: Occurs when a player
thrusts or shoves a player from behind.
Screening: Occurs when an
offensive player moves into and makes contact
with a defensive player with the purpose of
blocking him from the man he is defending.
Stalling: Occurs when a team
intentionally holds the ball, without conducting
normal offensive play, with the intent of
running time off the clock.
Warding: Occurs when a player in
possession of the ball uses his free hand or arm
to hold, push or control the direction of an
opponent's stick check.
Men's Lacrosse
Skills
Catching: The act
of receiving a passed ball with the stick.
Checking: The act of attempting to
dislodge the ball from an opponent's stick.
Poke Check: A stick check in which
the player pokes the head of his stick at an
opponent's stick through the top hand by pushing
with the bottom hand.
Slap Check: A stick check in which
a player slaps the head of his stick against his
opponent's stick.
Wrap Check: A one-handed check in
which the defender swings his stick around his
opponent's body to dislodge the ball. (This
check is only legal at the highest level of
play.)
Cradling: The coordinated motion
of the arms and wrists that keeps the ball
secure in the pocket and ready to be passed or
shot when running.
Cutting: A movement by an
offensive player without the ball, toward the
opponent's goal, in anticipation of a feed and
shot.
Feeding: Passing the ball to a
teammate who is in position for a shot on goal.
Passing: The act of throwing the
ball to a teammate with the crosse.
Scooping: The act of picking up a
loose ball with the crosse.
Screening: An offensive tactic in
which a player near the crease positions himself
so as to block the goalkeeper's view of the
ball.
Shooting: The act of throwing the
ball with the crosse toward the goal in an
attempt to score.
Glossary of Men's Lacrosse Terms
Body Check: Contact with an
opponent from the front - between the shoulders
and waist - when the opponent has the ball or is
within five yards of a loose ball.
Box: An area used to hold players
who have been served with penalties, and through
which substitutions ""on the fly"" are permitted
directly from the sideline onto the field.
Check-up: A call given by the
goalie to tell each defender to find his man and
call out his number.
Clamp: A face-off maneuver
executed by quickly pushing the back of the
stick on top of the ball.
Clearing: Running or passing the
ball from the defensive half of the field to the
attack goal area.
Crease: A circle around the goal
with a radius of nine feet into which only
defensive players may enter.
Defensive Clearing Area: The area
defined by a line drawn sideline to sideline 20
yards from the face of the goal. Once the
defensive team gains possession of the ball in
this area, it has ten seconds to move the ball
across the midfield line.
Extra man Offense (EMO): A man
advantage that results from a time-serving
penalty.
Face-Off: A technique used to put
the ball in play at the start of each quarter,
or after a goal is scored. The players squat
down and the ball is placed between their
crosses.
Fast-Break: A transition scoring
opportunity in which the offense has at least a
one-man advantage.
Ground Ball: A loose ball on the
playing field.
Handle (Shaft): An aluminum,
wooden or composite pole connected to the head
of the crosse.
Head: The plastic or wood part of
the stick connected to the handle.
Man Down Defense (MDD): The
situation that results from a time-serving
penalty which causes the defense to play with at
least a one man disadvantage.
Midfield Line: The line which
bisects the field of play.
On-The-Fly Substitution: A
substitution made during play.
Pick: An offensive maneuver in
which a stationary player attempts to block the
path of a defender guarding another offensive
player.
Pocket: The strung part of the
head of the stick which holds the ball.
Rake: A face-off move in which a
player sweeps the ball to the side.
Riding: The act of trying to
prevent a team from clearing the ball.
Release: The term used by an
official to notify a penalized player in the box
that he may re-enter the game.
Restraining Box: The area defined
by a line drawn sideline to sideline 20 yards
from the face of the goal. Once the offensive
team crosses the midfield line, it has ten
seconds to move the ball into its restraining
box.
Stick: The equipment
used to throw, catch and carry the ball.
Unsettled Situation: Any situation in
which the defense is not positioned correctly,
usually due to a loose ball or broken clear.
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