Originally Posted by Anonymous
Originally Posted by Anonymous
Fair points, and I don't know either. The revenue possibilities here are pretty limited to college coaches, events guys, club owners, prep school programs and to a much lower extent advertising billboards on the website. I seriously doubt college coaches pay for this in lacrosse, but some do in other major sports. The only way this could possibly work is some events guy or prep school program wants coverage and pays his way to come and to cover the events and games. That is certainly fraught with conflicts of interest but is what it is.


How is that a conflict of interest? Works for himself and reports a bunch of fluff. Any different than Newsday or other rag paper? You make it seem like he is the all knowing all telling. Funny thing is I was standing next to him at a PA event and he was writing down verbatim what was being told to him on the phone.


I think you and the earlier commenter are in agreement. There isn't any real dough being a lacrosse blogger, and what little there is comes from hyping kids and collecting what he can for it. And come on, you think some 3d guy is going to not write up the owner's son (who happens to be a good player) most at their events? Frankly I don't care much, but he has over 11K followers who do care and this seems to make them happy to be in a lacrosse social media sewing circle. My own son follows him on Twitter and so be it, he's 13. The good thing about 13 year olds is they get older and care less and less about things like this. Good for the kids who do get recognized and for them that is exciting and neat. Like getting some ice cream. Next...