It was a rare but welcome sight during the game between Westminster, an NCAA Division II men’s lacrosse team, and Utah, which is playing in the MCLA, but hoping to make it to NCAA Division I in the near future.
Westminster coach Mason Goodhand, who started the Utah Chapter of US Lacrosse in 1996, realized that all three referees grew up playing lacrosse in Utah. Each was part of the first generation of Utah lacrosse players, willing to give back to the next generation in a variety of ways.
“We’re now seeing dads of little league and high school teams who played the game locally when they were kids,” Goodhand said. “That’s an exciting transition for us to get experienced people involved in the organization of teams and running games.”
Goodhand has witnessed the beginning of a lacrosse movement in the state of Utah, and with the help of US Lacrosse, was able to create a sustainable league structure for the future. Now, as coach of a successful Division II program, he’s watching as the sport continues to sprout in his state, which now features approximately 500 youth boys’ teams.
“Lacrosse is growing like wildfire,” he said.
Members of the Utah Lacrosse Association staff have attended the US Lacrosse Convention each of the last two years, and many, including former Westminster player Colin Madsen, were impressed by the recent Lacrosse Athlete Development Model presentation by T.J. Buchanan, US Lacrosse’s technical director for athlete development.
Madsen and fellow coaches and administrators were inspired to implement LADM into leagues as soon as they could. In a state where programs sometimes struggle to find the number of players to play a full a 10v10 league, the model’s small-sided elements provided an easier way to get children involved.
“Since that point on, I started spreading the word about it,” said Madsen, who now serves as ULA’s boys’ program coordinator. “I looked at it more from a logistical standpoint. Now that we’re cutting the game down, it’s like we have so many more teams, which means less travel and more scheduling options.”
“Colin has totally bought into what we’re doing,” Buchanan said. “He’s doing a great job of telling everybody in the area about it.”
Goodhand is already a certified Coach Development Program trainer, and Madsen is currently training to become the same. Goodhand is leading the charge to get coaches around the state Level 1-certified.
Madsen, like Goodhand, believes that as more first-generation Utah lacrosse players become parents and coaches, the quality of the game will increase. That process should play out over the next decade. In addition, both said the potential addition of a Division I program at Utah could generate more interest.
“We’re on the cusp of a couple very significant breakthroughs,” Goodhand said.