1. Finish toward the goal
The most common mistake Costabile sees younger players make is running away from the goal both as they wind up and finish their shot. The effort to generate more power often leads them, literally, in the wrong direction.
“I always like teaching that when you’re taking a shot, even if you take a few steps away, you always have to end up running at your target,” Costabile says. “Almost every time you shoot an on-the-run shot, you should be able to go to exactly where your ball went and touch it right after pretty much running in a straight line towards the goal.”
Think north to south instead of east to west.
2. Shoot like clockwork
Part of Kasemeyer’s principles involve thinking about your shot release and finish as the hands on a clock. For Costabile, a natural righty, starting at 11 and ending at five is the most powerful and efficient plane. Being able to hit a range of spots on the goal with the same overhand motion also adds a level of deception. “It really helps not only drilling the proper form, but it’s more about getting the most out of your shot,” Costabile says. “You can shoot high, you can shoot low, you can bounce it — you can do whatever and the shot looks the same the whole way through.”
3. Generate power from the ground up
“It’s not all arms,” Costabile says. “It takes your whole body to generate that torque.”
That starts with your legs. Concentrate on your footwork. As you’re about to release the ball, start transferring your weight from you back foot to the front to increase the velocity.
To practice this, Costabile takes on-the-run shots using only three steps. Left, right, left.
“The momentum coming from your legs comes through and then you’re able to snap across and get lot more power on your shot,” he says.
4. Keep your head on the goal
The desire to get as much power on your shot as possible, and the extra movement that comes with it, inevitability sacrifices accuracy. To guard against this, Costabile focuses on keeping his head still and eyes toward the target.
Against Canada, he added an extra layer of deception, dipping his shoulder down in the fractions of a second after he released the ball. “That’s actually something I’ve been working on with Coach Kasemeyer recently,” he said.
It worked to perfection.
This article appears in the January 2022 edition of USA Lacrosse Magazine. Join our momentum.