Imagine you get the takeaway. You looking to pass to a middle or the goalie. You just played through like 3 shot clock resets. Time to get some payback.
Then all of a sudden. The guys you've been poking and slapping all turn around with OMEGA HEADS those ECD shafts(totally not product placement) and they all start rushing you. So you shovel it to the goalie. They start rushing him. He passes it to some middie who is getting chased by an shortie. God... what a nightmare
Love this account but you need to watch Isaac Paparo Highlights, UMass alum, whipsnakes draft pick. guy has unmatched transition play with a pole and relentless hustle
Is it just me or do some of the decisions by the clearing teams seem puzzling? Virginia did a great job but the decisions made by the clearing teams in a few of these I just shake my head at. You're a D-1 coached player?? C'mon, man!
Marist and Princeton definitely had the hardest time clearing against UVA out of anyone in this video. I think a lot of teams just weren't prepared for getting the ball over the mid-line in 20 seconds, which sounds like a lot of time but when you're facing an extremely athletic UVA team, it can be difficult especially as the game goes on
@@LacrosseAnalytics Again, the credit certainly goes to the 'Hoos for riding hard . . . but when I see the Lehigh goalie gesturing to his Mids to come down and NO ONE is even in the frame for the first few seconds then that's a Takes No Talent play. To me; just my perception. 20 seconds or not, against a press ride you don't even step into the frame to help your goalie? And to your point, how about how SLOWLY #24 for Princeton and the defender for Richmond got back into the hole. The Richmond kid - my goodness! You turn the ball over right in front of the bench then JOG (with seemingly ZERO sense of urgency) back into the hole. If that's how hard you work to get back in to defend, no wonder you got scored on! Small sample size? Perhaps. But it goes back to my original post - the decisions made were sometimes very puzzling. The flip to the small sample size is that - all other aspects being equal - if you needed one possession back then the clip shown in this video was the one you needed and therefore shows how and why one needs to play hard every time . . . . just like the riding team. ;) ;)
Thank you so much for creating this! It is so great to learn from some of the best players, your efforts are appreciated. Love the channel
Thanks, I genuinely appreciate !
lacrosse analytics with the daily uploads! love to see it. best lax channel out there
ayyy thank you so much I appreciate it
Another great vid.
thanks man, I appreciate it
And he pulls through!!! Thank you. Looks like you already had it in the works
haha yeh, I'd been meaning to get to it for a long time
awesome video
Thanks man, I appreciate it!
Love a hard ride! And the clearing clock has made it better.
Shot clock changed everything. I think we're going to see a lot more teams putting pressure on the ride with what UVA was able to do last year
Good idea, you should do one on a stud defensive unit
Ooh I'd say that'd undoubtedly be Duke, thanks for the idea
Lacrosse Analytics haha exactly what I was thinking, Syracuse is a deep defense too
As a defenseman, this video scares me
Imagine you get the takeaway. You looking to pass to a middle or the goalie. You just played through like 3 shot clock resets. Time to get some payback.
Then all of a sudden. The guys you've been poking and slapping all turn around with OMEGA HEADS those ECD shafts(totally not product placement) and they all start rushing you. So you shovel it to the goalie. They start rushing him. He passes it to some middie who is getting chased by an shortie. God... what a nightmare
Kind of irrelevant but you should do a defensive video about Johnny surdick from army
Love this account but you need to watch Isaac Paparo Highlights, UMass alum, whipsnakes draft pick. guy has unmatched transition play with a pole and relentless hustle
Ugh, I would if I could find enough UMass film. Unfortunately there's just not enough out there to make a video for him
Is it just me or do some of the decisions by the clearing teams seem puzzling? Virginia did a great job but the decisions made by the clearing teams in a few of these I just shake my head at. You're a D-1 coached player?? C'mon, man!
Marist and Princeton definitely had the hardest time clearing against UVA out of anyone in this video. I think a lot of teams just weren't prepared for getting the ball over the mid-line in 20 seconds, which sounds like a lot of time but when you're facing an extremely athletic UVA team, it can be difficult especially as the game goes on
@@LacrosseAnalytics Again, the credit certainly goes to the 'Hoos for riding hard . . . but when I see the Lehigh goalie gesturing to his Mids to come down and NO ONE is even in the frame for the first few seconds then that's a Takes No Talent play. To me; just my perception. 20 seconds or not, against a press ride you don't even step into the frame to help your goalie?
And to your point, how about how SLOWLY #24 for Princeton and the defender for Richmond got back into the hole. The Richmond kid - my goodness! You turn the ball over right in front of the bench then JOG (with seemingly ZERO sense of urgency) back into the hole. If that's how hard you work to get back in to defend, no wonder you got scored on!
Small sample size? Perhaps. But it goes back to my original post - the decisions made were sometimes very puzzling. The flip to the small sample size is that - all other aspects being equal - if you needed one possession back then the clip shown in this video was the one you needed and therefore shows how and why one needs to play hard every time . . . . just like the riding team. ;) ;)