To really grow lacrosse in greater LA, local leaders say, you must create a pathway to play. Kids who discover the sport at the county level could feed into a US Lacrosse partner league like the Pacific Edge Lacrosse Association. Founded in 2014 by Stephen Fossati, the girls’ league offers community-based teams a chance to play each other while representing their towns.
“The idea behind it was if you build it, they will come,” Fossati said. “The first year, there were literally 70 girls total. We would all share players. It was a pretty small season. We made it bigger and formalized it the following year. Once there was a legitimate and regular place for girls to compete, the programs that already existed as boys’ programs decided to start girls’ programs. Now we’re at almost 700 girls six years later.”
The (good) problem then becomes producing qualified coaches and officials.
Brian Eisenberg, who has been coaching in the area since 2000, has experience at every level of lacrosse from youth through college. He started So Cal Youth Lacrosse for boys in 2005 and North Orange County Lacrosse for girls in 2012. A US Lacrosse First Stick Program grant helped the latter get off the ground.
Eisenberg hopes he can use US Lacrosse Coach Development Program resources to help parents learn the game before they coach. US Lacrosse training and funding also helped the PELA improve umpire training to promote safety and higher-level officiating. The USC women’s lacrosse coaching staff and notable U.S. national team players like Kylie Ohlmiller, who will pen “Kylie’s Korner” for the PELA this spring, run clinics and offer role models.
When LA County offered girls’ lacrosse for a short period of time starting in 2014, it boosted both programs. Now they’re trying to bring it back.
“My vision has always been to grow the game,” Eisenberg said.
US Lacrosse hopes that the growth initiatives at various levels — youth, high school and college — in greater Los Angeles will keep the sport on the radar of the International Olympic Committee. Lacrosse became a provisionally recognized sport by the IOC in November 2018.
Estrada’s vision sees beyond 2028, however.
“lt’s our mission to have it keep going,” he said, “and be sustainable past the Olympics.”