COACHES CORNER: Staying in Canada for an Ivy League education at McGill
By Tim Murdoch
(reprinted from Sticks & Stones Newsletter, Vol.4, No.2)
Canadian Lacrosse Association
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Why has the Ï㽶ÊÓƵ men's field lacrosse team been
successful in recruiting student-athletes? The answer is that
McGill sells itself. Ranked among the world's top 25 universities,
McGill delivers a world-class education at half the cost of its Ivy
League counterparts, where annual costs can soar above
US$50,000.
Founded in 1821, McGill is located in Montréal, a historic city
with an exciting nightlife and countless social activities.
McGill's rich history of sport includes the first football game
(1874 - McGill vs. Harvard), the invention of basketball (by McGill
grad Robert Naismith) and the birthplace of university
hockey.
Yet Canada's national sport of lacrosse arrived late on the scene
in 2001, when a club lacrosse team was formed by an ambitious
McGill freshman, Sachin Anand. McGill's lacrosse team rose from
obscurity in 2001 to its inaugural appearance at Canada's
university championship in 2008.
Lacrosse at McGill is a natural fit: Montréal is the birthplace of
our national summer game, played for centuries in Canada's Mohawk
communities as 'bagattaway' in nearby Akwesasne and Kahnawake.
Students at nearby Collège Jean-de-Brébeuf have played lacrosse for
centuries in Montréal.
McGill plays in the 12-team Canadian University Field Lacrosse
Association founded in 1985. Surprisingly, many Canadian
student-athletes are unaware that it is actually cheaper to attend
McGill or another CUFLA school, than to accept many NCAA
scholarships at US colleges.
Many Canadian lacrosse coaches are eager to promote athletes to
NCAA coaches, often overlooking CUFLA. This is understandable,
since NCAA lacrosse is appealing and CUFLA has limited resources to
promote itself. However, fulltuition NCAA lacrosse scholarships are
rare and NCAA men's lacrosse is expanding very slowly due to Title
IX that requires NCAA colleges to field both men's and women's
teams in any sport.
In Canada, CUFLA has tripled in size since its origins as a
four-team Ontario league. CUFLA is poised to expand again in 2012
with two new university teams being added in Québec. The Maritime
University Field Lacrosse League (MUFLL) also fields a league,
giving Canadians university lacrosse players more than just one
option.
At McGill, we encourage Canadian players to consider staying in
Canada versus making a bee-line to the NCAA. We've found this
message to be very effective. In fact, McGill's geographically
diverse roster has featured scholar-athletes from five provinces
(Alberta, BC, Manitoba, Ontario and Québec) and 20 US states.
Paradoxically, American-born student-athletes are quick to
appreciate outstanding value in heading north for McGill's
lower-cost education in Canada - attracted to Montréal and the
chance to play competitive college lacrosse. In the years to come,
we hope to see more Canadians looking in their own backyards and
applying to McGill or another appealing Canadian university in
CUFLA.
-- A dual US and Canadian Citizen, Tim Murdoch is Head Coach of
Ï㽶ÊÓƵ's Redmen lacrosse team. He played four years of
NCAA varsity lacrosse at Princeton University and has coached the
McGill Redmen for nine seasons, including 2008 when McGill reached
the national championship and CUFLA named McGill as Canada's
Coaching Staff of the Year.