Tipping Point
So what else is working in Cleveland’s favor?
For starters, lacrosse reached a tipping point in Ohio in recent years. After decades of striving to become a sport sponsored by the Ohio High School Athletic Association, the state’s governing body for high school athletics, it finally was achieved for this upcoming spring for both boys and girls.
“That’s a big deal,” said Byrne, who coached at Gilmour Academy and later Shaker Heights High School in the Cleveland area. “A lot of it was really driven in Northeast Ohio.”
That, coupled with the presence of Cleveland State’s program, offers tangible progress and provides optimism the grassroots initiative inside the city can be effective.
Cerny is hopeful for a spring 2018 launch of a city program of about 8-10 teams centered around Muny Football. In the interim, his organization will continue to lay the foundation for what has the look of a successful project.
There is talk of getting young players to attend a Cleveland State game or two this spring and have hands-on clinics afterward. Training of coaches and officials — many of which are likely to be drawn from the pool already working in area youth football — is also pivotal.
“The biggest hurdle is going to be equipment and helmets,” Cerny said. “It’s going to cost $300 a kid. We’ll look to do fundraisers and seek foundation grants. I’m confident we can grow the base.”
A major part of US Lacrosse’s investment will come in the form of a new turf field, a green space initiative that should make a positive impact in the community almost immediately.
“It just fits right into the Ohio City area,” Cerny said.
So, too, does the prospect of lacrosse’s growth in the years to come.
All In
The Lacrosse Communities Project is a US Lacrosse initiative to grow the sport in culturally segregated neighborhoods — starting this spring with a pilot program on Cleveland's West Side.
US Lacrosse will provide equipment assistance for players, train coaches and officials, deploy its PE curriculum and soft-stick grants at schools and recreational centers, help underwrite a local coordinator and install a first-of-its-kind small-sided lacrosse field based on the Lacrosse Athlete Development Model (LADM) of teaching the sport.
"The Lacrosse Communities Project will bring together athletes of different races, ethnicities and income levels who might otherwise not have much contact with each other," said Joshua Christian, managing director of sport development and hall of fame at US Lacrosse. "Our goal is to develop pathways for young people to grow in the sport."
Help US Lacrosse grow the game at uslacrosse.org/donate.