Monday, November 17, 2025

It is not about how much you play as a Freshman, but rather what did you develop into

 

True Cleveland Lacrosse

"I’ve never been asked once, ‘How much did a player play as a freshman?’ It’s what did you develop into? That’s the most important thing." Nick Saban Video of Quote 


Players

Everyone wants to make an impact right away. You want to start, score, and shine from day one. But the truth is, your freshman year doesn’t define you — it starts your journey. What matters is how much you grow, how you respond, and what kind of player and person you become over time.

 

No coach, scout, or recruiter asks how many minutes you got as a freshman. They ask what you became.


What This Really Means

Development beats early playing time — every time.

·         Freshman minutes don’t determine your future. Your progress does.

·         Coaches look for growth, not instant success.

·         What you do in the shadows — training, learning, working — builds the player you’ll eventually become.

 

If you’re frustrated about where you are, remember this: no one’s judging your start. They’re watching your evolution.


Why This Matters

Because your journey is the story that defines you.

·         The great players didn’t peak early — they grew steadily.

·         Early success can fade; steady improvement lasts.

·         The habits you build in the hard years are what make the later years shine.

 

Being a freshman isn’t about proving you’re ready — it’s about preparing yourself to be great when it matters most.


Putting It Into Practice

·         Focus on growth. Each season, aim to be better than the last.

·         Master the fundamentals. The best players don’t skip steps.

·         Stay patient. Development takes time — trust the process.

·         Be coachable. Learn from every rep, correction, and mistake.

·         Keep perspective. Your freshman year is one chapter, not the whole book


The Bottom Line

No one remembers how much you played as a freshman — they remember what you became. Don’t chase early playing time. Chase improvement. The ones who commit to the journey are the ones who make it in the end.

 

Let’s get to work.

Coach Calleri


 

Week 11 Player Development Plans (Emailed Directly To Our Players)


🥍 Shooting Drills – 3x per week 

Set aside time three times a week for structured shooting sessions. Focus on technique, accuracy, and speed. Don’t just count reps—make each one intentional. Over time, your shot will feel automatic under pressure.

🛡 Defense: Footwork – 3x per week

Footwork builds agility and positioning. Do the drills three times per week, and you’ll be more confident in one-on-one situations and stronger in your team defense role.

🛡 Goalie:  & Footwork – 3x per week

Footwork builds agility and positioning. Do the drills three times per week, and you’ll be more confident in the cage.

💪 100, 200, or 300 Pushups a Day

Strength isn’t built overnight, but consistent work pays off. Choose your level (100, 200, or 300) and spread your pushups throughout the day—before school, after practice, before bed. Pushups build not just upper body strength, but also endurance and mental toughness. 

Monday, November 10, 2025

Everyone wants the view — but not the climb to get there.

 

True Cleveland Lacrosse
“Everyone is jealous of what you have. No one is jealous of how you got it. Everyone wants the view — but not the climb to get there.”


It’s easy to admire someone’s success — the goals, the college offers, the spotlight. But what people don’t see are the long practices, early mornings, and setbacks that built it. Everyone wants the outcome. Very few want the process that creates it.

 


What This Really Means

Success isn’t luck, and it’s not handed out. It’s earned through the grind — the extra reps, the conditioning, the film study, the moments when no one is watching. The “view” looks amazing, but the climb that gets you there is steep, uncomfortable, and often lonely.

 


Why This Matters

Too many players want the recognition without the repetition. They want the reward before the work. But the truth is, the climb is what builds your strength, confidence, and identity as a player. Every sprint, every mistake, every time you get back up — that’s where greatness is formed.

 


Putting It Into Practice

  • Show up early. Stay late.
  • Choose consistency over convenience.
  • Take pride in doing the hard things others skip.
  • Embrace the grind — that’s where separation happens.
  • Remember: every rep is part of your climb.

 


The Bottom Line

Everyone wants the view. Champions fall in love with the climb!!!

 

Let’s get to work.

 

Coach Calleri

 

Week 10 Player Development Plans (Emailed Directly To Our Players)


🥍 Shooting Drills – 3x per week 

Set aside time three times a week for structured shooting sessions. Focus on technique, accuracy, and speed. Don’t just count reps—make each one intentional. Over time, your shot will feel automatic under pressure.

🛡 Defense: Footwork – 3x per week

Footwork builds agility and positioning. Do the drills three times per week, and you’ll be more confident in one-on-one situations and stronger in your team defense role.

🛡 Goalie:  & Footwork – 3x per week

Footwork builds agility and positioning. Do the drills three times per week, and you’ll be more confident in the cage.

💪 100, 200, or 300 Pushups a Day

Strength isn’t built overnight, but consistent work pays off. Choose your level (100, 200, or 300) and spread your pushups throughout the day—before school, after practice, before bed. Pushups build not just upper body strength, but also endurance and mental toughness. 

 

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