The NCAA Women’s Lacrosse Rules Committee this week recommended a proposal to allow free movement in the sport.
Committee members, who met Tuesday through Thursday in Indianapolis, want to improve the pace and flow of the game and believe a way to accomplish this goal is to allow players to continue moving after the official blows the whistle. Currently, players must stop on the whistle.
All rules changes must be approved by the NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel, which is scheduled to discuss women’s lacrosse proposals July 20.
Under the proposal, players can keep moving while the player possessing the ball restarts play after a foul or violation. There will be a 2-meter nonengagement area around the player awarded possession of the ball.
Players are free to move outside the nonengagement area. For violations of the nonengagement area or delays clearing out of the nonengagement area, teams will receive one initial team warning and then subsequent violations and delays will result in a green card and immediate one-minute penalty.
Upon a change of possession, if the defensive team commits three fouls before the offensive team crosses the restraining line into its attacking end, the defending team will be assessed a one-minute penalty.
All shooting-space fouls and three-second violations, as well as all other fouls committed in the 8-meter arc, will result in an 8-meter free position for the offensive team.
The committee has recommended a new setup for 8-meter free positions that will permit the defensive team to position players at the hashes adjacent to the 8-meter free position. Excluding the offending player who is positioned behind the 8-meter free position, players will be permitted to move freely outside the 8-meter arc; however, players will not be permitted in the playing area below the hanging hashes to the dots.
The committee believes this will alleviate the concerns of shooting space and dangerous slides from low to high during 8-meter free positions.
For fouls that occur in the critical scoring area above goal line extended, possession will be awarded to the offense at the 12-meter arc, the offending player will go behind the offensive player, and there will be a nonengagement area.
For fouls that occur in the critical scoring area below goal line extended, possession will be awarded to the offense at the dot — located below the goal-line-extended area — the offending player will go behind the offensive player, and there will be a nonengagement area.
Committee members believe changes made the past two seasons, including self-starts and adding a 90-second possession clock, set the groundwork for their new proposals.
“This felt like a natural progression for the game to move toward,” said Jen Adams, rules committee chair and coach at Loyola (Maryland). “We are looking at this through the lens of we are moving to what a lot of other sports have. Instead of having a unique freeze-tag type of rule, we are going in a direction to increase the pace and flow of the game.”
Breaking: NCAA Rules Committee Recommends Big Changes to the Girl’s Game – Ruling Scheduled For July 20th
Written by Lee Roggenburg on . Posted in Across The LAX World, Florida Lacrosse News, Parent’s Corner, Understanding The Rules.
via NCAA press release
Author’s Note: For those who play and follow the Girl’s game these changes are truly revolutionary in finding a balance between keeping the Girl’s game unique and solving some of the more vexing issues with watching the sport grow, particularly the speed of re-starting the game from a blown whistle and the taking away of a clean goal due to a whistle that did not effect the play itself. Hopefully the NCAA Ruling Panel will go ahead with all of these and then we can reflect back two years from now if any adjustments need to be made.