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It's fast, it's coming to L.A., it's lacrosse.


KNOWN as the "fastest sport on two feet," lacrosse lacrosse (ləkrôs`), ball and goal game usually played outdoors by two teams of 10 players each on a field 60 to 70 yd (54.86 to 64.01 m) wide by 110 yd (100.58 m) long. Two goals face each other 80 yd (73.  combines the rapid pace of basketball, the jarring hits of football, the intricate teamwork of soccer and the stick skills of ice hockey ice hockey: see hockey, ice.
ice hockey

Game played on an ice rink by two teams of six players on skates. The object is to drive a puck (a small, hard rubber disk) into the opponents' goal with a hockey stick, thus scoring one point.
. Until recently, however, lacrosse was considered the ultimate niche game: The North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 indigenous sport was practiced almost exclusively at prep academies and colleges along the Eastern seaboard.

But "lax," as its devotees like to call it, is starting to break out nationally--and coming to L.A.

Major League Lacrosse Major League Lacrosse is a professional outdoor Lacrosse league that is made up of teams within the United States. The league is currently made up of 10 teams in two conferences, Eastern and Western. History
The MLL began regular season play in June of 2001.
, the five-year-old professional outdoors league founded by Jake Steinfeld Jake Steinfeld (born February 21, 1958) is an American actor and fitness personality. He has a line of fitness equipment called "Body by Jake" and also once hosted a "Body by Jake" TV show. He also starred on a sitcom on the Family Channel called Big Brother Jake. , the Brentwood entrepreneur who created the "Body by Jake" fitness brand, is expanding to 10 teams for the 2006 season.

Franchises are slated for Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , Denver, and Chicago, with the L.A. Riptide scheduled to play its inaugural home game June 3 at the Home Depot The Home Depot (NYSE: HD) is an American retailer of home improvement and construction products and services.

Headquartered in Vinings, just outside Atlanta in unincorporated Cobb County, Georgia, Home Depot employs more than 355,000 people and operates 2,164 big-box
 Center in Carson.

"It's the next big thing right now," said Gary Greenbaum Gary Greenbaum (born March 13, 1963 in New York, NY) is a Fairfax, Virginia attorney. He is best known in the law for his defenses of convicted child molester Roland Iliff in 1998 in a case that drew national attention[1], and machete slasher Hector Flores in 2004. , Pacific Coast Lacrosse Association president.

The Riptide is the latest acquisition by sports-entertainment powerhouse Anschutz Entertainment Group The Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) is a sporting and music entertainment presenter and a subsidiary of The Anschutz Corporation. The company owns or operates several major entertainment/sporting venues, including Staples Center and The Home Depot Center and beginning in , which also owns the Kings, the Galaxy, one-third of the Lakers, the Staples Center and Home Depot Center. Privately-held AEG AEG Aeger (Latin: Sick)
AEG Allgemeine Elektrizitäts-Gesellschaft (Common Electricity Company)
AEG Aircraft Evaluation Group
AEG Association of Engineering Geologists
AEG Air Expeditionary Group
 reportedly paid $1 million for the fight to own and operate the Riptide.

Steinfeld said that it was worth waiting "a few years" to be able to team up with AEG. "You gotta be with the big dogs, and AEG is the pre-eminent sports operator in the L.A. market. So we become important by association," he said.

AEG has embraced second-tier sports (including track and field, cycling, and rugby), but introducing an unknown, untested sport such as lacrosse into Southern California's crowded pro sports marketplace presents a different sort of marketing dilemma. One attempt has already failed: the National Lacrosse League's Anaheim Storm, an indoor team that played at the Pond of Anaheim, folded after the 2004-05 season.

"The challenge is exposure," said David Simon, president of the L.A. Sports Council. "After the initial flurry of publicity for a new league and a new team, it's about reaching people who might not know anything about lacrosse."

Emerging sport

Still, it seems there's little, doubt that lacrosse is an up-and-coming sport.

Sports Illustrated recently identified lacrosse as the "fastest-growing game in the U.S. at every level." And in 2006, the California Interscholastic Federation The California Interscholastic Federation (abbreviated CIF) is the governing body for high school sports in the state of California. It mirrors similar governing bodies in other states; however, it differs from others in that it covers most high schools in the state of , the state's governing body of high school sports, sanctioned varsity lacrosse for boys and girls boys and girls

mercurialisannua.
 in southern California.

As for AEG, it views lacrosse as an "emerging sport" that will "complement our programming slate at the Home Depot Center," said AEG Sports president Shawn Hunter, who added that AEG and the Riptide will conduct a "grassroots marketing campaign"--including player appearances at clinics--and advertising.

"Our goal this year is to build a team that will make the final four," Hunter said. "Off the field, if we can build a strong fan base and see our attendance grow' from game to game, that would make a positive statement. We don't think we'll be profitable this year, but we'll be close."

Hunter believes the Riptide will thrive if AEG can tap into lacrosse's growing popularity among youth. Major League Lacrosse has mined that angle successfully in signing sponsorship deals with companies such as Starbucks, Gatorade, Bud Light, and Tommy Hilfiger.

"That challenge is our opportunity," he said. "We're starting with the kids that are already playing, and we hope they'll introduce the sport to their parents. When people see lacrosse in person, they see that it's an enticing, exciting game."

For the Riptide's six home games, single-game tickets are priced from $18-$35, with season-ticket packages ranging from $100-$370. Home Depot Center will also host the league's championship weekend, involving the semifinal and final matches, Aug. 25-27.

Hunter estimates that the Riptide will sell "between 1,250 and 1,500" season-ticket packages--a figure he calls "very respectable" for the franchise's rookie year. Hosting the final four, he added, "will give us a lot of momentum with ticket sales and will showcase the Home Depot Center and our commitment to lacrosse on national television."

Last year, average attendance at league games was about 4,200. Steinfeld hopes that its expansion west will help boost that figure to 5,000 per contest in 2006. "I think that would be gangbusters for us," he said. "Our business plan has always called for 5,000 fans. We've never walked in and said, 'We can do 22,000 fans.'"

Recently, lacrosse received national publicity, but for the wrong reason: the alleged rape at Duke University involving members of the school's top-ranked team. Hunter downplays any connection to the league. "We're doing our best not to let that incident distract us," he said. "We're staying focused on the opportunity we have here."
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Los Angeles
Author:Davis, David
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 29, 2006
Words:790
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