Lacrosse Equipment
All players ned full gear for all practices and games!
If you need to purchase equipment there are many online stores to go to. If its your first time and don't want to purchase brand new we work with Play it Again in Waterford CT.
Footwear - (No Metal cleats at any time)
Turf field - Sneakers or Turf Shoes only.
Grass fields - Cleats are recommended. Soccer or football cleats work well.
Boys Equipment
Helmet
Mouthpiece - Mouth Guard
Shoulder Pads
Arm Pads
Gloves
Supporter with cup
Rib pads (optional)
Girls Equipment
Googles
Mouthpiece - Mouth Guard
Lacrosse Sticks
All players will need a Lacrosse stick!
Entry Level -
This is an adult size (40-42") lacrosse stick, and not a "mini" stick. For younger players (3rd grade and below), the metal shaft of the stick can be cut down so that the stick is about 30-36" long, which makes it easier for young kids to handle.
NOTE: Girls and boys use different types of sticks.
Check carefully before buying.
Boys Sticks
A wide range of boys sticks are available. Prices can range widely. Younger and beginning players should learn the game with a wider head, which allows for easy catching and scooping. More advance players might want a more "pinched" head to help hold on to the ball when they have it in their stick.
While there may be some advantages of the higher priced heads for the expert player, most youth coaches agree that the less expensive entry level heads are more than adequate. Heads can be strung with either mesh or traditional stringing. Most youth players use mesh. It is easier to catch with soft mesh, but the harder mesh is easier to throw with. An old stick with new mesh in it can serve a beginner quite well. Lacrosse stores can typically help with re-stringing of sticks.
Shafts, or "handles" for the sticks have become very complex. Premier players in high school and college will talk about the advantages of carbon fiber, titanium or other ultrastrong and ultralight handles. These handles can be very expensive. For young and beginning players, simple aluminum shafts are more than adequate. They also have the advantage with very young players in that they can be cut down to a more useable length and then replaced inexpensively as the player grows.
Girls Sticks
Girls sticks are perhaps a little less complicated, but like the boys' sticks, there are heads designed for beginners and more experienced players. There are an increasing number of novel sticks and stringing becoming available every year, but most young and beginning players usually find the entry level sticks more than adequate (to tell which the 'entry level' ones are, just look for the less expensive ones). Generally we recommend keeping the sticks at the length they are sold to you, as it helps the girls get used to playing with a standard length stick. However, if your daughter is very young/small (K-3rd grade mostly) you can take a few inches off the bottom of the shaft so that it is more manageable for her to handle as she is learning the basics.
Boys have the option to have long sticks when playing in 5th grade and above. No long sticks are permitted for boys in grades 4 and below. All girls sticks are the same length.