The 2012 Division I college lacrosse season marks a huge transition in the sport. University of Michigan's inaugural season represents the next chapter in college lacrosse. The expansion of the sport in the Midwest is now in full swing. The inclusion of giant state schools will change the landscape of competition. The days of Ivy League dominance are over; their presence in Division I will continue to wane. Though Ivy League players and coaches have not lost their hunger, they cannot compete with the larger schools. Coach Tierney's departure from Princeton University for Denver marked a turning point in the sport. At Denver, the academic standards for Tierney's recruits and players are not nearly as rigorous Princeton's and it's peers. The search for an LSM who is big, strong, fast, has an amazing stick becomes a little more difficult when he needs to have a 3.5 High School GPA.
Denver and the state schools have something else the Ivy's cant offer the countries top recruits: money. The Ivy's cannot give Athletic scholarships, and while there are ways around it, it's harder to attract student athletes when great programs like Duke, North Carolina, and Ohio State can offer full ride tuition.
With the first Ohio State-Michigan Division I lacrosse game set for April 14, the lax world should be excited. Lacrosse is no longer a small University game but is on its way to becoming a huge, nationally crazed, cash cow like NCAA football and basketball. Schools are starting to realize the advantages of fielding these teams. Schools like Michigan bring millions of dollars of revenue every year from football; tickets, licensing, and most of all television. Lacrosse has the potential to be just as big and Michigan's commitment to their lacrosse program is proof. We should we pumped at the possibility of one day watching one of the best rivalries in all sports duke it out in the Big House in front of 100,000 fans. And who knows, perhaps March Madness could be overshadowed by the Lacrosse Final Four.
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