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3 minute read
Same game, new method
Wheelchair Lacrosse Athletes Push Sport With Colorado Roots
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The sun is burning on a Sunday morning at Wheel Park in Aurora. The Colorado Rolling Mammoth wheelchair lacrosse team have unloaded their equipment and are strapping in for another intense practice in one of the facility’s roller hockey rinks.
The athletes roll onto the cement rink with helmets on, padded up, and lacrosse sticks in hand.
About a dozen players go through passing and shooting drills to warm up. After whipping a few practice shots on goal, the real fun begins.
Using half of the rink, two teams scrimmage.
BY TONY GORMAN,
The wheelchairs crash and clank against each other and smash into the wooden boards lining the rink. Sticks clack and strike against wheelchairs. Players fire the lacrosse ball from all directions. It’s the size of a small orange, but made of dense rubber.
And it moves — fast.
Fast enough to catch this reporter in the mouth once, to the laughs of many. (Yes, it hurt. Yes I was paying attention — it really is fast.)
For Daniel Hersh, it was that speed that attracted him to the game. He was used to it. He needed it.
“I watched the game and I noticed the high speed of it, the pace, and the physicality.”
Hersh had been looking for a new way to find that speed.
“I was racing competitive motocross and had a spinal cord injury, A T6 injury is my level. So, I have no feeling or movement or control of my body from about my sternum down,” Hersh said.
“Got home and started looking around to see if there was wheelchair lacrosse.”
Hersh never played lacrosse before his injury. But, like many, wheelchair lacrosse gave him a second chance to play and compete at a high level.
Hersh’s search led him to Wheelchair Lacrosse USA, which was just getting started at the time. He brought the sport to Colorado and founded the Rolling Mammoth. Hersh says the team began to recruit through youth camps and clinics — like Craig Hospital which specializes in neuro-rehabilitation.
The team gave new people a chance to play lacrosse and gave people like Shawn Maloney a second chance.
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“I was out of the game for a while. I didn’t know this existed,” Maloney said. “I attended a clinic and was hooked. It’s the same game I’ve always played. We just use wheelchairs.”
Maloney overlooks practice and shouts out coaching tips while propped up on a cane. Maloney is a lacrosse lifer. He played in high school and captained Colorado College’s field lacrosse team. But his playing days came to an end when a bad fall broke his back and left him paralyzed from the waist down.
So he had to adapt his life, including adapting his sport.
“There’s not a ton of adaptive team sport options out there. Wheelchair basketball is really popular, wheelchair rugby is really popular,” Maloney says, “But we feel like wheelchair lacrosse can kind of hit a nice niche in between those where it’s still a contact sport, but it’s not quite rugby.”
— Wheelchair lacrosse was invented in San Diego in 2009.
Lacrosse is the oldest sport in North America. It was invented by Eastern Woodlands Native Americans in the United States and Canada centuries ago. Today’s version more closely resembles Indigenous stickball.
The sport has two versions, field lacrosse, which is played outside, and box lacrosse, which is played indoors.
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But, the idea of wheelchair lacrosse was conceived in Colorado.
Ryan Baker is one of the sport’s creators. On the day after his high school graduation in 1991, he and his family were moving from San Diego to Steamboat Springs when they were involved in an automobile accident. The accident left Baker paraplegic.
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“It was kind of like a baptism by fire thing,” said Baker, who spent ten years living in Steamboat Springs and another ten in Denver before heading back to California.
“Being new to the injury and then living where there’s going to be snow on the ground seven or eight months a year is pretty good,” Baker said with a healthy amount of positivity ”It was a good place for me to recover and assimilate.”
While in Denver, he took up wheelchair tennis and through his trainer happened to meet the lacrosse coach at Regis High School.
“I just thought how interesting, the lacrosse stick shouldn’t really be that different than a tennis racket,” Baker said. “It’s a little longer of course but the mechanism and mechanics are the same.”
“I just thought how interesting would it be if there was a wheelchair lacrosse element or an offering for disabled athletes.”
Back in San Diego, Baker and his friend Bill Lundstrom started tossing the ball around.
Soon, others joined and the sport was born. They began to hold clinics around California to teach others the rules and technique of the game.
The game is played on a roller hockey rink or hard surface lacrosse rink. Each team fields eight players — one goalie, two defenders, three midfielders, and two attackers. Each team must keep three players in the defensive half and two players in the offensive half at all times. Game time is four 15-minute quarters.