Category: Players

Wisconsin 2019 Boys’ All American

US Lacrosse announced the boys’ and girls’ players selected as 2019 US Lacrosse High School All-Americans and All-Academic Team members. Over 1,200 boys and 1,300 girls players were recognized for their efforts on and off the field.

A US Lacrosse All-American is a player who exhibits superior skills and techniques and possesses exceptional game sense and knowledge. A US Lacrosse All-American is one of the best players in the United States, while also embodying excellent sportsmanship.

A US Lacrosse All-Academic honoree is a player who exhibits exemplary lacrosse skills, good sportsmanship on the field, and represents high standards of academic achievement in the classroom.

2019 Boys’ High School All-American

Player  Graduation yr  Position  High School
Caleb Hotchkiss 2019 Attack Kettle Moraine
Christopher Bender 2019 Attack Kettle Moraine
Kaden Brunson 2019 Midfield Sun Prairie
Karson Sutton 2019 Goalie Sun Prairie
Nathan Kapp 2019 Midfield Middleton
Nolan Rappis 2021 Attack Kettle Moraine
Ryan Hensien 2019 Defense Marquette University
Will Lauterbach 2020 Attack Arrowhead

2019 Boys’ High School All-Academic

Player Graduation yr  Position  High School
Bryce VanHemelryk 2020 Attack Bayport
Haakkon Anderson 2020 Midfield Verona
Jarett Wulf 2019 Attack Waunakee
Joseph Birch 2020 Defense Grafton
Logan Akre 2019 Defense Catholic Memorial
William Gerew 2019 Attack Homestead

2019 Boys’ Coach of the Year

Michael Stefan Kettle Moraine

2019 Bob Scott Award

Will Condon 2019 Defense Homestead

In addition to players named as All-Americans and All-Academic honorees, US Lacrosse selects winners of the Coach of the Year, as well as the Bob Scott Award for boys and the Jackie Pitts Award for girls. These awards recognize one player from each area who go ‘above and beyond’ in service to his/her team, school, and community.

Classic 8 Girls Lacrosse Programs Face Off Against Cancer

The Classic 8 Conference is one of the most competitive leagues in Wisconsin girls lacrosse. But this year, the squads have joined forces to take out a common foe.

Led by Mukwonago head coach Shelly Schumacher 20 teams from the Classic 8 Conference have come together to fundraise for Lacrosse vs. Cancer in support of childhood cancer research. Each squad aims to raise $2,000 to donate to Gold in September (G9), the childhood cancer nonprofit launched by former Arrowhead lacrosse player Annie Bartosz, who founded G9 when she lost her twin brother, Jack, to cancer.

“Having teams that would otherwise be rivals all join together for such an important cause is encouraging, but not surprising based on what I know of this amazing group of coaches and players,” Schumacher said.

Schumacher joined G9 in October as public relations and marketing director. This year, she challenged Classic 8 rival Arrowhead to a fundraising contest since Bartosz played for Red coach Tom Truttschel. (Bartosz is not playing lacrosse this year to focus on field hockey now that she has committed to play for Penn on an athletic scholarship.)

Along with their mutual connection to G9, Truttschel instantly agreed to the challenge because cancer has affected him and his family personally. His nephew, Kevin Boeckenhauer, is in the midst of a five-year battle with bone cancer, so Truttschel named him honorary captain of the Lacrosse vs. Cancer’s kickoff game between Mukwonago and Arrowhead. Although Boeckenhauer couldn’t make it to the game Tuesday night, he called the coin toss for Mukwonago via a FaceTime call.

“I just think it’s a cause where everybody has somebody they know among their family or friends who has been affected by cancer,” Truttschel said.

An honorary captainship was one of a handful of ceremonial events Tuesday night at Taraska Stadium. There also were announcements of the new initiative throughout the game. And at the end of Arrowhead’s 17-1 victory, the teams came together for a group photo with the new traveling trophy, designed and built by Mukwonago senior Paige St. Clair. At the end of the initiative, the team that raises the most money will win the trophy — a gold lacrosse stick with every participating program’s name listed — until they are dethroned.

“Every year we try to do a service project, but this one we’re able to incorporate our whole conference,” St. Clair said. “And we’re able to raise money for something extremely meaningful and impact a ton of people.”

Getting an entire conference together to raise funds is a monumental task, but Schumacher wants to aim higher next year. In 2020, she hopes every girls program in Wisconsin participates in Lacrosse vs. Cancer.

To help out you can donate at the Lacrosse vs Cancer web site

 

Lacrosse vs. Cancer

 

Wisconsin Lacrosse Community Comes Together to Bring the Sport to Milwaukee

There’s no question lacrosse has experienced meteoric growth throughout Wisconsin. The participation numbers on the boys’ and girls’ sides of the sport grow exponentially season to season, and new programs sprout every year at every age level. Geographically, lacrosse’s allure has touched just about every part of the Dairy State.

However, as prominent as the sport has become, lacrosse has yet to truly take hold in within Milwaukee’s borders.

On Sunday, the Wisconsin Lacrosse Federation (WLF) led the charge to rectify that situation by hosting the Sankofa Clinic, a diversity and inclusion initiative backed by U.S. Lacrosse aimed at exposing lacrosse to underpriviledged and economically challenged communities.

Courtesy  James Ninomiya

Created in 2013, the Sankofa Lacrosse Alliance (SLA) focuses on supporting efforts to expand the reach of the sport. The SLF draws from its network of players and coaches, including many of the nation’s top current and former African-American players.

Spearheaded by Randy Kohn, a past president of WLF, the clinic was an overwhelming success. A picture-perfect day, weather-wise, saw over 60 athletes interacting with over 50 volunteers at Journey House Packers Field in Mitchell Park on Milwaukee south side.

“To start here and see the number of kids here is kind of overwhelming,” said Erin Ennis, president of the WLF. “The event itself, I think, is fantastic to increase the participation rate down here. The volunteers that have come down from the universities and the various high schools shows the outreach and the willingness to give back to the game and give back to the community that we have here in southeast Wisconsin.”

WLF may be the governing body of lacrosse in Wisconsin, but many organizations came together to make the Sankofa Clinic a reality. Journey House – a not-for-profit focused on empowering families on Milwaukee’s near southside neighborhoods – provided Packers Field for the occasion and had roughly 20 athletes participate in the clinic. PeppNation – another nonprofit that offers after-school programs, summer camps and other events throughout southeastern Wisconsin – also brought the event to the attention of its athletes while donating t-shirts for the occasion.

Courtesy  James Ninomiya 

A handful of Marquette University men’s and women’s lacrosse players dedicated their Sunday morning to the cause, as well.

Marquette University High School boys coach Rich Pruszynski brought a handful of coaches and players to help run the clinic for the boys’ side. University School of Milwaukee girls coach Sam Adey brought coaches and athletes to volunteer, as well.

As the nationwide governing body, US Lacrosse works with the local organizations to plan and implement thee clinics. Sankofa-affiliated players serve as the instructors.

Bryce Woodson, Midwest regional manager for US Lacrosse, was one of a handful of former players leading drills for the athletes at Packers Field. He said he has run Sankofa Clinics and similar events throughout the region, but seeing so many people from different parts of the Wisconsin lacrosse community join forces for this initiative is what stood out Sunday morning.

Courtesy  James Ninomiya 

“I think the fact there’s multiple organizations coming together is incredible,” said Woodson, who played collegiate lax at Ohio State. “Having all this collaboration and group effort for one goal is amazing.”

Spreading the Word

Exposing athletes to the sport is just one of the many barriers to entry underprivileged communities encounter with lacrosse. Once the excitement is in place, a myriad of costs – registration fees, equipment, uniforms, etc. – often stand in the way, as well.

Pruszynski believes once kids are ready to join an organized team in Milwaukee city proper, there is plenty of money to be found to make sure the infrastructure is in place to give them a place to play lacrosse.

Courtesy  James Ninomiya 

“The big key here is, we have to eliminate the barrier to entry, which is money,” said Pruszynski, who also is a senior manager for the Positive Coaching Alliance. “We can continue to get the word out to kids here today to make sure we capture that excitement from today. Once we get these kids saying ‘yes’ to lacrosse, we can continue to work with US Lacrosse and write some more grant requests for more equipment and opportunities.

“If we can get over that hurdle by US Lacrosse assisting with donations, then we’ll be fine,” Pruszynski adds.

Starting from Scratch

Charles Brown knows a thing or two about launching athletic programs. As deputy director of Journey House, he plays a major role in the organization’s youth athletics programs, which include baseball, football and basketball. He knows what it takes to build the infrastructure of a youth sports program.

Courtesy  James Ninomiya 

He also knows what it’s like to get in on a new sport at the ground level. Brown’s love of lacrosse started in the 1970s when his high school in Baltimore launched a program. He played in the first two seasons of a new program his junior and senior years.

He brought his passion for the sport with him to Milwaukee, and ever since joining Journey House 15 years ago, he has wanted to bring lacrosse to his athletes.

Brown knows it will take a lot of work to launch a new program, but it starts with exposing more kids in Milwaukee to the excitement of lacrosse. On Sunday, about 20 of his 100 football players attended the clinic.

“But you got to start it if you’re going to expose them to it, and the clinic provides that,” Brown said. “We’re going to get a program, we’ll have a team, and more kids will see

Catching Lax Fever

The excitement was palpable throughout the morning as kids learned the very basics of the sport from Sankofa’s instructors, elite players themselves. Athletes were taught how to cradle the ball in the nets of their sticks, how to fire a shot at the goal with force and accuracy, and how to position their entire body to ensure they catch the ball in the air.

Most of all, they learned that a sport they hadn’t given a second thought before participating in the Sankofa Clinic was more fun than they could have imagined. Take it from Roseana Mendez, an 11-year-old pioneer in her own right who tried lacrosse for the first time Sunday morning. She already plays football and baseball on all-boys teams, often as the only girl on the squad.

“I really didn’t know anything [about lacrosse] other than from movies and shows that I’ve seen,” Mendez said after the clinic. “Then I came here and started understanding the sport. It’s an interesting sport, it’s new to me, and I would like to try it.”

Marquette 5v5 Fright Fest

Marquette’s  5v5 Fright Fest is right around the corner! This year’s Fright Fest will be on Sunday October 28th and is open to 8th graders and up! You can expect lots of competition, costumes, tons of fun! You can sign up with a team or sign up as an individual to be placed on our House Team.  If you have any questions, please reach out to Caitlin Fifield at 414-810-8537 or caitlin.fifield@mu.edu .

Link to Register:https://goo.gl/forms/LWHtvAkUVWIjCkZ83
Date & Time: Sunday October 28th 7:30am-12pm
Cost: $530/team or $90
Age: 8th-12th graders
Roster Maximum: 10 players; 5 field players + GK on field 
4 teams maximum per program/club
8 minute games, approximately 8-10 games per team

*When registering a team— Coach registers team under “Full Team” and posts payment on link. Please have your players register on “Individual Player (on Registered Team).”  
* When registering as a House Team member, follow the link for “Individual Player- House Team”

Boys 2018 All State Awards

All-State

Chris Bender                    Junior                 Attack                 Kettle Moraine
Ian Edwards                    Senior                 Attack                 Verona
Will Lauterbach               Sophomore        Attack                 Arrowhead
Quintin Arnett                 Senior                 Defense              Arrowhead
Elijah Gash                       Senior                 Defense              Bay Port
Declan Makuch               Senior                 Defense              Verona
Johnny Estrada                Senior                 Goalie                 Marquette
Erik Horman                    Senior                 Midfield              Appleton
Caleb Hotchkiss               Junior                 Midfield              Kettle Moraine
Will Vincent                     Senior                 Midfield              Marquette
Andrew Brooks               Junior                 FOGO                  Homestead
Ian Laatsch                      Junior                 LSM                     Appleton

Honorable Mention All-State

Austin Bartel                   Senior                 Defense              Sun  Prairie
Jeremy Werner               Senior                 Midfield              Waunakee

All-American

Quintin Arnett                 Senior                 Defense              Arrowhead
Andrew Brooks               Junior                 FOGO                  Homestead
Ian Edwards                    Senior                 Attack                 Verona
Elijah Gash                       Senior                 Defense              Bay Port
Caleb Hotchkiss               Junior                 Midfield              Kettle Moraine
Will Lauterbach               Sophomore        Attack                 Arrowhead

All-Academic

Sam Collins                      Senior                 Attack                 Oregon
Zach Davis                       Senior                 LSM                     Catholic Memorial
Ryan Gerner                     Senior                 Defense              Homestead
Vincent Haight                Senior                 Defense              Catholic Memorial
Quinn Link                       Senior                 Midfield              Stoughton
Graham Sticha                Senior                 Midfield              Verona

Bob Scott Award

Vincent Haight                Senior                 Defense              Catholic Memorial

Coach of the year

Michael Stefan                Kettle Moraine

Girls 2018 All State Awards

First Team All-State

Attack

Grace Black             Brookfield     Senior

Brook Uihlein *         USM             Senior

Brooke Weber           WNS            Senior

Midfield

Emily Becker             Kenosha       Junior

Grace Berrien           USM             Senior

Abbey Lippold*         Arrowhead    Senior

Eleanor Mackey      Middleton       Senior

Aubrey McLaren*    WNS               Junior

Defense

Ayorkor Aryeetey*   USM              Junior

Lauren Lex*           WNS                Junior

Sarah Ernst         Arrowhead        Senior

Goalie

Lia Oren*            WNS                  Senior

Honorable Mention All-State

Jacklyn Batley     Arrowhead                   Midfield           Junior

Reilly Pfeiffer       Waunakee                     Attack Senior

Amanda Wachter  Franklin                         Defense            Senior

*Unanimous First-Team Selection

All-American
Emily Becker – Kenosha – M – ‘19

Grace Berrien – USM – M – ‘18

Abbey Lippold – Arrowhead – M – ‘18

Aubrey McLaren – WNS – M – ‘19

Lia Oren – WNS – GK – ‘18

All-Academic
Katie Andrews – Brookfield – M – ‘18

Lexi Basel – Middleton – M – ‘18

Anna Davis – Waunakee – M – ‘19

Eleanor Mackey – Middleton – M – ‘18

Coryn Tormala – Arrowhead – M – ‘19

Jackie Pitts
Amanda Wachter – Franklin – D – ‘18

Girl’s Rule Changes

US Lacrosse announced the 2018 rule changes and points of emphasis for youth and high school girls’ lacrosse. The US Lacrosse Rules Committee worked in collaboration with the National Federation of State High School Associations to develop the rules and points of emphasis.

The points of emphasis for 2018 highlight safety and the quality of the game:

  • Illegal Defensive Positioning: Emphasize the three second and shooting space rules to ensure that offense has the ability to create safe shooting opportunities.
  • Contact in the Midfield: Deliberate illegal contact (cross-checks/pushing) made to the body on players in a defenseless position must be carded.
  • Crosse in the Sphere: Stress that it is the responsibility of the defender to keep her stick out of the sphere and throat area of the ball carrier. Violations are a major foul, and repeated violations may be carded.
  • Professionalism: The rules committee continues to encourage all coaches, players, officials and administrators to conduct themselves in a professional manner before, during and immediately following all contests.

Several changes to the rules concern the draw, including the draw setup, which will require players to keep their crosses parallel to and above the center line. Players on the draw circle and the restraining line will be allowed to have their sticks touch the ground, making the draw consistent with other elements of play. Early starts by players not taking the draw will result in the ball going to the non-offending team at the spot of the ball, not the spot of the foul. An illegal draw by a player will result in a free position at the center line with the offending player placed four meters away and illegal draws by both players will result in a redraw.

Other changes include allowing the optional use of a 120-yard unified field for both boys’ and girls’ lacrosse to allow schools the option of lining one set of shared field markings, disallowing stick checks during timeouts and allowing table personnel to use a horn to notify officials of a timeout request by a coach.

At the youth level, rule changes include requiring pelvic protection for goalies, establishing guidelines for a goalkeeper free clear, and clarifying language that allows for legal contact during play, as long as the contact does not physically force an opponent off of her position or path.

 

A complete overview of all girls’ rules is available here 

Tryouts for the WI National Girls Youth & HS Team

WI National Lacrosse Classic Tryout Saturday, January 13

9:00am – 12:00pm 

Uihlein Soccer Complex

7101 W Good Hope Rd

Milwaukee, WI 53223

Tournament to be played  – National Lacrosse Classic Tournament – July 16-19, 2018   Frederica, Delaware

Youth Team 2022/2023 (7-8 graders)  

The National Lacrosse Academy provides a holistic approach to educating middle school players on specific sport skills, human performance, sport psychology, nutrition and sportsmanship.  The Academy youth teams are each assigned an NCAA coach for the tournament and go through skill clinics and tournament games with that coach.

Register for youth:  http://www.nationallacrosseclassic.com/events/wisconsin-girls-21-22

High School Team 2019/2020/2021 (9-11 graders)

The National Lacrosse Classic enables student athletes with an opportunity to gain exposure to the college admissions and athletic recruitment process. Due to NCAA regulations the high school girls do not have a clinic/skills portion of the event.  The HS team will be coached by two WI coaches.

Register for HS:  http://www.nationallacrosseclassic.com/events/wisconsin-girls-18-19-20

Wisconsin 2017 HS Team

2017 Boys All State Honors

2017 Boys All State Honors

All-State

Ian Edwards                       Junior                   Attack                  Verona
Johnny Langenfeld           Senior                   Attack                  Marquette
Kevin Maxey                      Senior                   Attack                  Wauwatosa
Quintin Arnett                   Junior                   Defense               Arrowhead
Matthew Kuhn                  Senior                   Defense               Marquette
Dmitri Roth                        Junior                   Defense               Hudson
Adam Kasper                     Junior                   Goalie                  Madison Eastside
Jacob Cieszynski               Senior                   Midfield               Wauwatosa
Erik Horman                      Junior                   Midfield               Appleton
Jordan Schmid                  Senior                   Midfield               Kettle Moraine
Nathan Kapp                      Sophomore         Specialist               Middleton

All-American

Quintin Arnett                  Junior                   Defense               Arrowhead
Jacob Cieszynski               Senior                   Midfield               Wauwatosa
Ian Edwards                       Junior                   Attack                  Verona
Nathan Kapp                      Sophomore         Specialist               Middleton
Kevin Maxey                      Senior                   Attack                  Wauwatosa
Jordan Schmid                  Senior                   Midfield               Kettle Moraine

All-Academic

Eric Drake                           Senior                  LSM                      Waukesha
Conner Finnegan              Senior                   Midfield               Madison Westside
Aaron Keech                      Senior                   Midfield               Brookfield
Evan Ryser                         Senior                   Defense               Wauwatosa
Jordan Schmid                  Senior                   Midfield               Kettle Moraine
Noah Ven Roy                   Senior                   Midfield               Mukwanago

Bob Scott Award

Tanner Gornick                 Senior                   Attack                  Hudson

Coach of the year

Bennett West                    Sauk Prairie