This article appears in the Northeast version of the May/June edition of US Lacrosse Magazine. Don’t get the mag? Join US Lacrosse today to start your subscription.
It wasn’t so long ago that Matt Facchine was a fourth-grader just trying out lacrosse.
Now the Delbarton (N.J.) School freshman midfielder is organizing a three-day clinic through his Community Lacrosse organization to introduce others to lacrosse.
“My youth coaches gave me that little bit of encouragement and that spark that made me really play the game and enjoy it,” said Facchine, 15. “If I could do that for a couple kids in the clinic or all of them and give them that spark and really change them, that’s what I want to do.”
Facchine came up with Community Lacrosse (communitylax.org) for his freshman project at Delbarton. It focuses on how lacrosse can develop strong characteristics in youth.
“It isn’t just a game that you throw the ball around and put it in the net,” Facchine said. “It’s a lot more than that. We all learn from doing different things, like in basketball or football. I thought from lacrosse there are three main points you learn from it. It’s not only a game you play for fun or with your friends. It’s something to grow you as a person.”
Community Lacrosse promotes the acronym LAX with L standing for Leadership, A for Academics, and X for eXercise.
“You always want to keep going, keep on pushing yourself and be the leader,” Facchine said. “Be the leader of your own life and go and find the answers. Ask the questions, take your chances, take your opportunities and keep healthy. Keep moving.”
Facchine will explain these ideas to boys grades 4-6 in Dover, N.J., a nearby town that does not have a lacrosse program, over three Mondays from April 30 to May 14. Sessions are free, and he is collecting equipment to be used at the clinic.
“A couple years back, my hometown of Mahwah, they ran this clinic and they brought me in to help coach because it was young kids, like kindergarten,” Facchine said. “It was the most fun I’ve ever had, seeing how much fun they had and their smiles. The only person that had more fun than them was me. Just throwing the ball around with them and showing them what I knew is what made me really enjoy it.
“When I got this opportunity, this platform with the freshman project, I thought,‘This is my chance to bring this to more people — to bring this game that I love and made me the person I am to so many people I think could benefit from it.’”
Facchine will enlist teammates and friends to help teach beginners the basics and try to progress to live action by the third meeting of the clinic, conducted in partnership with the Dover Recreation Department and New Jersey Lacrosse Foundation.
“It’ll be good to keep it with kids around my age. It’ll be more of a fun time and really relaxed,” Facchine said. “That really helps them enjoy it.”
Facchine has gotten more excited about the potential for the clinic and Community Lacrosse’s future as he has put more time and energy into it.
“I really do think it could be something that could continue. I could work with other communities and do it for boys and girls,” Facchine said. “Right now, it’s just my freshman project, but I think it could be something special. I’m looking to spread the game and light up that spark in some kids that some youth coaches did in me. That really grew me into the person I am today.”