You can guess what the results said about the recruiting experience for lacrosse players.
Of the sports measured, lacrosse had the second lowest level of satisfaction with the recruiting experience. Only 67 percent of men’s lacrosse players agreed or strongly agreed that it was a positive experience, ahead of only football. Women’s lacrosse had a 62 percent satisfaction rate, ahead of only field hockey.
Another downfall is what happens when they get to campus.
Less than 70 percent of men’s and women’s lacrosse players felt the accuracy of their expected role of the team was conveyed during recruitment. Not surprisingly, the highest ranking sports in this category had later commitment periods – swimming and diving (late junior year) on the men’s side and cross country (senior year) on the women’s side.
It will be interesting to see the evolution of this data in subsequent years with the new recruiting calendar. The recruiting legislation passed this spring forbids contact between college coaches and prospective student-athletes until September 1 of their junior year of high school.
A summary of the preliminary report from the survey is available here (PDF).