Parent Guide explained in plain English for parents learning Lacrosse.
Required equipment varies by format
Lacrosse gear is not identical across boys, girls, box, field, and age groups.
Ask the coach for the required list before buying upgrades. Common items may include a stick, mouthguard, cleats or court shoes, helmet, gloves, pads, goggles, goalie gear, or gender- and league-specific protective equipment.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Equipment
Mouthguards are a must-check item
Many youth leagues require a properly fitted mouthguard for practices and games.
Keep a backup in the bag if the league allows. A missing or chewed-up mouthguard can keep a player from participating until it is corrected.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Mouthguards
Stick checks prevent game-day surprises
Stick length, pocket depth, strings, and head shape may be checked under local rules.
Ask the coach what is legal for your child's division. A stick that works for backyard play may still need adjustment before a game.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Stick checks
Contact expectations should be clear before game day
Youth contact rules vary widely, especially between boys and girls formats and between younger and older divisions.
Ask whether the league allows body checking, stick checking, limited contact, or no-check play. This helps you understand whistles without assuming every format is the same.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Contact
Plan for weather and field conditions
Lacrosse is often played outside in spring weather, so families may deal with cold rain, heat, wind, muddy fields, or lightning delays.
Pack water, layers, sunscreen, and a dry change when needed. Follow league and site decisions about weather stoppages instead of guessing from the sideline.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Weather
Give the sideline room
Lacrosse players, sticks, balls, and substitutions can move fast near the sideline.
Stay behind the required boundary, keep younger siblings clear of team areas, and avoid standing near substitution space or end lines where missed shots may travel.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Sideline safety
How to ask about league rules
Good questions are specific and calm: what format are we playing, what contact is allowed, and how are restarts handled?
Ask coaches before or after practice rather than during live play. Useful topics include checking limits, crease rules, offsides, substitution patterns, required gear, and penalty consequences.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Coach communication
Cheer the work that wins possessions
Ground balls, spacing, passing lanes, defensive support, and smart clears are worth cheering even when they do not lead directly to a goal.
Positive sideline energy helps players keep competing after dropped passes or turnovers. Avoid yelling instructions while players are listening for coaches and officials.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Sideline behavior
Support goalies with perspective
Goalies face close shots, rebounds, traffic near the crease, and quick restarts.
A goal allowed is rarely only one player's fault. Encourage the whole team to clear rebounds, mark cutters, communicate, and reset after a goal.
Age group: All youth levels
Topic: Goalie support
After the game, ask simple questions
Helpful post-game questions focus on learning rather than blame.
Try asking what ground ball felt good, what pass worked, what rule was confusing, and what the coach wants next. Lacrosse rewards steady improvement in small skills.
Age group: Beginner
Topic: Home support