As CONNY expanded, it opened more opportunities for better lacrosse. Jack Reid played for Glastonbury Lacrosse Club in one of the towns that benefited from its CONNY membership.
“It was a great opportunity to learn a new sport with friends and classmates and kids in town,” Reid said. “As you progressed through CONNY, the competition kept ramping up. It had a regional feel, but there was also town pride in it.”
When Reid was a senior, he led Glastonbury High to a state title before becoming a three-time All-American defenseman for UMass and playing in MLL.
“It all starts with Glastonbury Lacrosse Club and parents sharing their passion with kids, boys and girls,” Reid said.
CONNY added a girls’ program 2010. In some towns, participation has grown at a faster rate than the boys, according to Couch.
“The girls’ programs themselves were on an upward climb all around the state,” said Lisa Hurst, director of the Greenwich girls’ program for eight years. “Pulling them into CONNY didn’t take a whole lot of muscle power. The girls’ programs were flying. I remember sitting on my computer with lots of schedules. It wasn’t a problem having teams commit to the first CONNY event.”
Being associated with CONNY helped girls’ programs develop more quickly and sparked better play in the region overall.
“The Connecticut teams are traditionally much stronger than the Westchester towns,” said Joanie Berkery, Bronxville Youth Lacrosse Association girls’ director for 11 years. “Being able to tap into that league and play those teams had a huge impact on how we were able to grow and get better. Those teams are the gold standard in the area. A lot of what we did was mimicking what they were doing.”
Bronxville High School has become a New York power thanks to the growth of BYLA. Lilly Grass is Bronxville’s all-time leading scorer and the first from her school to garner US Lacrosse All-America honors. She was Michigan’s second-leading scorer a year ago, and the senior attacker started playing BYLA when it was just gaining popularity and has admired the town’s growing interest.
“It was more popular with boys than girls,” Grass said. “I started playing in third grade. Now it’s so much earlier. Girls that are just starting to walk are playing lacrosse. It’s totally grown.”
Broxville High School coach Sharon Robinson sees players like Grass matriculating with far more skill and experience than in her first seasons.
“When I first started, I was coaching a bunch of athletes, soccer and field hockey players,” she said. “Now I’m coaching lacrosse players.”
CONNY requires training for its coaches through US Lacrosse and Positive Coaching Alliance. Coaches attend a US Lacrosse Coach Development Program clinic and must be working toward CDP Level 1 certification. They must also complete CONNY’s rules examination to be able to be on the sidelines. Strong coaching and long-standing volunteers in well-run community programs have kept attracting players to CONNY.
“Typically, a youth organization is very transient,” said Amanda Gerich, who became CONNY’s president in January 2019 after serving with the Stamford Lacrosse Association. “Those people that want to stay to see the success and growth of lacrosse is huge.”
Eugene Miller is one of those long-time volunteers. He predates CONNY. He’s in his 34th year coaching in Greenwich and has remained long after coaching his own children to pass along his knowledge.
“Most importantly, from the top down to the bottom, everyone is held accountable,” Miller said. “We want the kids to have a positive experience. We want to teach good fundamentals and more than anything else, we want these kids to get some life lessons out of it. Winning and losing is part of the game. Some want to win more than others, but we all do the right thing.”