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Lacrosse
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Lacrosse is even becoming popular in Norway. In 2004 Norway's first lacrosse team was established by the Norwegian Business School in Bergen. The other major business school in Norway, BI, soon followed. BI Lions was established in 2005. The first Lacrosse game on Norwegian soil took place in April 2006.
Lacrosse is in Francie Thayer's blood -- just like it is for any good Marylander. Connecticut. Throughout her life, Thayer has helped spread the good news about [L]acrosse wherever she's been, whether it was Colorado or Lancaster. Lancaster? Lacrosse in Lancaster?
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2005 NCAA Women's Lacrosse Championship where the Virginia Cavaliers lost to the Northwestern Wildcats Lacrosse traditionally had many different purposes. Conflict resolution and training of young warriors was only one part of the game. Games could be played on a pitch over a mile wide and sometimes lasted for days. Often players were gravely injured or even killed. Early balls were made out of deerskin, clay, stone, and sometimes wood. Lacrosse has played a significant role in the community and religious life of tribes across the continent for many years.
By the late 1850s and early 1860s Lacrosse had its foothold in the sporting society of the time and the first non-native Lacrosse clubs were being formed. This quickly led to the formation of inter-city rivalries and challenges, and the competitive base of the sport of Lacrosse was born.
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Lacrosse was played by the Six Nations of the Iroquois in what became upper New York state and lower Ontario long before Christopher Columbus landed in the New World. The sport was then much rougher than it is today. Among some tribes as many as a thousand players took part on each side, goals were miles apart, and a game could last as long as three days.
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Lacrosse was first declared the National Game of Canada in 1859. Although the original government records have never been located, hundreds of references cite this event, from renowned encyclopediae, books on Canada's history, government communications and educational textbooks to newspaper and other media accounts dating back in history.
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