It’s no secret. Idaho is not a hotbed for lacrosse.
“It’s a challenge because nobody knows the game out here like they do back east,” said Maggie Williams, co-founder and treasurer of the Treasure Valley Youth Lacrosse League. “It’s not a staple.”
But that doesn’t mean there’s a shortage of success stories.
Kaden Lewis of Meridian, Idaho, who attended Mountain View High School, picked up the sport in the TVYLL before being recruited to play at Boise State in the MCLA.
“He came in as a second grader when we were only doing third and fourth,” Williams said. “His parents begged me to let him play because his best friend was playing and we allowed it. He was a tiny kid who was just a spitfire.”
Since becoming a Bronco, Lewis returned home to join the youth league in its mentor-coach program, in which college-level players are paired with a new coach, or “a dad-coach” as Williams described it.
The results are two-fold.
“We’re developing a coach that way, but also developing the college kid to become a coach,” she said. “Once the guys get coaching bugs, they come back. They love it because the kids adore them. They’re gods in their eyes.”
Providing knowledge to parents who want to coach is just one way the TVYLL is unique in its mission of growing the game regardless of experience. It also boasts an equipment rental program.
“We want every kid that wants a chance to play to be able to play – and pay-to-play is only for the kids that can afford it,” said Williams, whose day only gets better when she hands out gear to first-time participants. “They’re so bright-eyed and enthusiastic about playing the game and they’re so excited. They feel like warriors when they put their equipment on and it’s so much fun to see their big ol’ smiles.”