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Differences Between Box Lacrosse and Hockey.

Referees on the Floor
• Both referees on the floor have the same
level of authority.
The
more senior of the 2 officials will face off
the ball at the beginning of each period,
conduct any requested measurements, and make
any final decisions during the game.
• There may also be an official who handles
the operation of the shot clock, but there
will only ever be 2 officials on the floor
at once.
The Rink
• Box lacrosse is played in a rink having
the same dimensions as hockey, except there
is only 1 face-off circle, at center, and
there are lines running across the floor
tangent to that circle.
• There is a crease area, which runs 9 feet
in radius around the front of the goal.
• Around the goal, there is a semi-circle,
24 feet in radius, where contact can be made
between players, whether they are with or
without the ball.
• Unlike hockey, box lacrosse goals are a
little bit larger – they are 4 feet by 4
feet.
Time of the Game
• Since there is no need to clean the ice
between periods, breaks between periods in a
box lacrosse game are traditionally shorter
than in a hockey game.
In
Major lacrosse, breaks are normally 10
minutes, and in Minor lacrosse, breaks are
normally 2 or 3 minutes, depending on the
league, and the amount of floor time
remaining.
Dead Ball
• In Minor lacrosse, the game clock is
stopped for any dead ball (goals, penalties,
or time-outs, whether called by either
team), or by 1 of the referees on the floor.
For
possession calls, ball out of bounds, etc.,
the clock shall continue to run.
• In Major lacrosse, the game clock will
stop for every stoppage in play.
Scorekeepers/Timekeepers
• In box lacrosse, there should be 3 minor
officials ready to help out in the
timekeeper’s box – 2 are provided by the
home team, and the visiting team provides 1.
1
person will be responsible for keeping the
game time, remembering to only stop the
clock for goals, penalties and time-outs in
Minor lacrosse.
1
person will be responsible for filling out
the game sheet as required, and notifying
either on-floor official if any player has
already accumulated four penalties in that
game.
1
person will be responsible for operating the
30-second shot clock.
• The Head Referee will ensure each minor
official is comfortable with his or her role
prior to the game starting.
The Game Sheet
• Similar to hockey, all Captains and
Assistant Captains shall be marked on the
game sheet, as well as the goalkeeper(s).
If
the team has 2 goalkeepers, they must
indicate on the game sheet which of the
goalkeepers is starting, and which is the
alternate.
• Unlike hockey, there is no requirement to
have the proper starting lineup on the floor
to match what is written on the game sheet.
• On the bottom of the game sheet, there are
spaces for the following:
Goalkeeper saves, by period and team
(optional).
Scoring by period and team.
Time-outs by period and team (remember, only
1 time-out is allowed per team in Minor
lacrosse, and 2 are allowed per team in
Major lacrosse, provided 1 team does not
call 2 time-outs in the same period).
Spare Goalkeeper (S.G.) entering the game,
by period and team (this is recorded,
because the backup goalkeeper is only
allowed a warm-up the first time they make a
change).
• In the event of an incident requiring a
write-up, there is space in the middle for
writing up a summary of the incident, and
mentioning to refer to the Official’s Game
Report for more information.
Similar to hockey, a full report of the
incident must be written in an Official’s
Game Report and sent to that city’s
Referee-in-Chief within 24 hours of the
completion of the game where the incident
occurred.
• At the top of a box lacrosse game sheet,
the required information is similar to what
is required on a hockey game sheet (i.e. the
teams, the date and time of the game,
officials’ and minor officials’ names,
etc.).
• Unlike hockey, once a coach or team
representative has finished entering the
team roster onto the game sheet, they must
sign their name, where required, to certify
the information filled out is correct.
• For penalties, the player’s number and
name must be entered. The reason this is
done is so it is easier for the on-floor and
minor officials to track who is coming close
to receiving their fifth penalty in a game.
If
a player has received their fourth penalty
in a game, the timekeeper should notify one
of the on-floor officials of this. This
should be covered with the minor officials
prior to the start of the game.
If
a player has received a Double Minor
penalty, the penalties will be recorded as 2
separate minor penalties, not as a single
4-minute penalty. This is because both
penalties count towards the player’s
5-penalty limit in one game.
The Teams
• Each team can have up to 20 players in
uniform (including 2 goalkeepers), instead
of the maximum of 19 players in uniform in
hockey (including 2 goalkeepers).
• Players arriving late are marked on the
game sheet with asterisks, and crossed off
if they do not show up.
• Similar to hockey, each team may have a
Captain and no more than 2 Alternate
Captains.
• Unlike hockey, there is no requirement to
have the proper starting lineup on the
floor, matching what is written on the game
sheet.
Signals
• Most signals between the two sports are
the same, except for a few which are
specific to box lacrosse
Signals unique to box lacrosse include
crease violation, wrap around, delay of
game, 10-second violation, back over, free
hand, minor interference, and too many men
on the floor.
Change of Players
• Similar to hockey, there is an area
outside of each bench area designated for
changes.
The
player coming on the floor cannot
participate in the play until the player
coming off has both feet in the exchange
area.
• If the team with too many men is in
possession of the ball, they will lose
possession of the ball to the other team,
and no penalty will be assessed.
If
the team with too many men is defending,
they will be penalized with a Bench Minor
penalty for too many men.
• Similar to hockey, a too many men penalty
in the last 2 minutes of the game will
result in a Penalty Shot, under one
condition, different from hockey – there
must be no regular overtime pending.
• On a delayed penalty, if the goalkeeper is
not in the exchange area before the extra
attacker comes onto the floor, play will be
stopped immediately, and no penalty will be
assessed.
• Because box lacrosse is more of a
possession game than hockey, the goalkeeper
will come out more often for an extra
attacker.
• In box lacrosse, the first time the
goalkeepers change, the replacement
goalkeeper is allowed a 2-minute warm-up.
On
any subsequent goaltender change, no warm-up
will be permitted.
Crease Violation
• In box lacrosse, upon gaining possession
of the ball, the defensive team has 5
seconds to get the ball out of their own
crease.
• Players on the attacking team cannot reach
into their opponent’s crease to retrieve the
ball or receive a pass, but they can fake a
shot into the crease.
• When a player is shooting on goal, their
feet must remain outside of the crease. If
their feet break the plane in the act of
shooting, the play will be called for a
crease violation, and the defending team
will restart with the ball.
• No goal is allowed if an attacking player
is intentionally in the crease when the goal
was scored.
• In box lacrosse, an attacking player can
run through their opponent’s crease, subject
to the following exceptions:
If
a player cuts through their opponent’s
crease to gain an advantage on a loose ball,
possession shall be awarded to the
non-offending team.
If
a player cuts through their opponent’s
crease to check their opponent, he or she
will be penalized by a 2-minute Minor
penalty for crease play.
• When the goalkeeper is in possession of
the ball in his or her crease, no attacking
player can make contact with his or her body
or stick.
This will be penalized with a 2-minute Minor
penalty for crease play.
Time-outs
• In Minor lacrosse, each team is allowed 1
30-second time-out per game. In Major
lacrosse, each team is allowed 2 time-outs
per game, but only 1 can be called in any
one period of a game.
The
30-second shot clock operator shall time the
time-out by running the shot clock down
once.
• The time-out must be called by a player on
the floor on the team in possession of the
ball.
• When the team in possession of the ball
calls a time-out, they will retain
possession of the ball, without the shot
clock being reset.
• If a team calls for a time-out, and they
have no time-outs remaining, they will lose
possession of the ball to the non-offending
team.
Short-handed Situations
• In box lacrosse, when a team is
short-handed, a number of different rules
apply:
The
short-handed team, upon gaining possession
of the ball, has 10 seconds to advance the
ball past their attack line. Failure to do
this will be called as a 10- second
violation, and the other team will be
awarded possession of the ball.
Once the short-handed team has advanced the
ball over their attack line, they must keep
the ball past this line. Failure to do this
will be called as “back over”, and the other
team will retain possession of the ball.
The
only exception to back over is when the team
in possession of the ball has taken a shot
on goal, and as a result, the ball rolls
back over the attack line.
The
shot clock shall run when either team is
short handed.
30-second Shot Clock
• Upon gaining (or regaining) possession of
the ball, that team has 30 seconds to make a
shot on their opponent’s goal. Failure to do
this will result in a loss of possession to
the other team.
Unlike hockey, if, on a shot, the ball hits
either post or the crossbar, this will be
considered a shot on goal, and the 30-second
shot clock shall reset.
• The shot clock shall not be reset in the
following instances:
A player has the ball trapped in their
stick.
The team in possession of the ball has
called a time-out.
• The shot clock will run at all times,
regardless of the number of players on the
floor for each team.
Injured Players
• Similar to hockey, if a player becomes
injured, the play currently happening will
finish, unless the player is hurt seriously.
• If the team with the injured player is in
possession of the ball, there will be a
face-off.
If
the other team has possession of the ball
when a player of the other team is hurt, the
team without the injured player will retain
possession of the ball.
The Stick
• A box lacrosse stick can be
between 40 and 46 inches in length, and
between 4½ and 8 inches inside width at the
head. The depth of the pocket cannot be such
that it prevents the free movement of the
ball.
In
the leagues of Peewee and below, the stick
can be anywhere between 34 and 46 inches in
length.
• The goalkeeper stick can be of any length,
but the inside width of the head of the
stick cannot exceed 15 inches.
• Only 1 stick request is allowed per
stoppage, and the team requesting the
measurement must specify what they would
like to have measured.
• If a referee considers a stick as
dangerous, the stick can be removed for
safety reasons.
• Just like hockey, the butt-end of the
stick must be covered so as to prevent
injury.
Goalkeeper Equipment
• The goalkeeper can wear suitable chest,
shoulder and arm pads that must conform to
the shape of the body.
• The goalkeeper can use regulation box
lacrosse leg guards, but no material can be
added beyond the edge of these pads.
• If a measurement is requested by the
Captain or Alternate Captain from one team,
the goalkeeper and both officials, as well
as a Captain from each team, will go to the
referee dressing room to verify the
equipment is correct in all dimensions.
Similar to what is done in hockey, the team
requesting the measurement, if everything is
found to be legal, will be assessed a
2-minute Bench Minor penalty for delay of
game.
Mandatory Player Equipment
• In box lacrosse, helmets cannot be
modified from the form in which they were
bought, and the mask cannot have any space
in it, which would allow either the stick or
ball to enter.
• The player must wear a suitable chinstrap.
If the player has bought a 4-point cup
chinstrap, they must be wearing both the new
chinstrap as well as the old strap (the cup
chinstrap is bought separately from the
O’Neill mask).
Similar to hockey, the chinstrap must be
tightened so no more than a finger’s width
can go between the chinstrap and the
player’s chin.
• Similar to hockey, the helmet must have a
sticker of approval from the CSA.
• In box lacrosse, players will also use
field helmets (referred to in the rule book
as cascade helmets), which are traditionally
used in American field lacrosse.
The
major difference between box and field
helmets is that they have a brim on the
front.
These helmets must have a sticker of
approval from NOCSAE, the equipment approval
organization for American field lacrosse.
These helmets must not have a brim that
sticks out. If they do, they cannot be used
in box lacrosse for safety reasons.
• In Alberta, in the leagues of Midget and
below, it is mandatory for players to wear
mouth guards while playing.
• Players may cut the palm out of their
gloves, but their fingers must be encased
inside the individual fingers of the gloves.
• If a player loses a required piece of
equipment, they will be given the option to
pass or shoot, but they must then go to the
player’s bench to change.
If
this does not happen, the player will be
assessed a Minor penalty.
• If the player has lost their equipment in
the middle of a crowd of players, or in a
potential checking situation, play shall be
stopped immediately.
• Players in box lacrosse are not allowed to
wear any jewelry – this is penalized as a
10-minute Misconduct.
Penalties
• Similar to hockey:
A
penalty can be called if contact was not
made, but the attempt was vicious enough.
A
Major penalty can be called for any
infraction, which causes injury.
A
Match penalty can be given if a player was
deliberately attempting to injure their
opponent.
Someone who was on the floor at the time the
infraction was committed must serve
goalkeeper penalties.
• In box lacrosse, fighting and roughing are
treated similarly to hockey, with two
exceptions:
A
player identified as either the instigator
or aggressor will be assessed a Game
Misconduct penalty, not an additional Minor
penalty.
In
box lacrosse, a player does not receive an
additional Game Misconduct penalty for
participating in 2 fights in the same
stoppage of play. The player will only
receive any penalties that relate to the 2
individual fights themselves.
• Most of the other ways fights are
handled are similar:
The
first player off the bench from either team
shall be assessed a Game Misconduct penalty.
If the first player off of the bench cannot
be identified, the Captain of that team must
identify the player.
The
third player involved in an altercation,
even if in a peacekeeping role, will be
given a Game Misconduct penalty for third
man in.
If
a player returns to participate in an
altercation after being separated, the
player will receive a Game Misconduct
penalty.
• Similar to hockey, checking from behind is
called as a 2-minute Minor penalty plus Game
Misconduct.
• In box lacrosse, an attempt to butt-end,
spear or kick is penalized with a Major
penalty plus Game Misconduct, not a Double
Minor penalty like in hockey.
Similar to hockey, any of the above, if
contact is made, is penalized with a Match
penalty.
• Boarding in box lacrosse is an automatic
5-minute Major penalty, and can be called as
a Match penalty if the player had no means
to protect him or herself.
• In box lacrosse, players occasionally use
a check called the “spike check”, where the
player holds the head of the stick with one
hand, and comes down with the butt-end of
the stick on a player. This is classified as
and penalized as a butt-ending penalty.
• In box lacrosse, players in the act of
shooting cannot “follow through” on a shot
and slash their opponent. Anyone using this
follow-through slash will be penalized for
slashing accordingly, and play will be
stopped immediately.
• In box lacrosse, charging is called
similarly to hockey, with a couple of
differences:
“Blindsiding” is where the goalkeeper will
come out of his or her crease and make
contact with a player having their head
turned to retrieve a pass. If the goalkeeper
is stationary when making contact, he or she
will be assessed a Major penalty. If the
goalkeeper is still moving when he makes
contact, he will be assessed a Match penalty
for attempt to injure.
A ball carrier can be penalized for charging
– this is where an offensive player, with or
without possession of the ball, deliberately
ducks their head down and runs through an
opponent.
• In box lacrosse, an intentional high stick
above the height of the shoulders is not an
automatic Major or Match penalty as it is in
hockey.
• In box lacrosse, there is also a penalty
for what is called “wrap around”. This is
where the opponent places both hands around
his opponent’s shoulders to restrict the
player from moving; this is just a variation
of the holding penalty.
• In box lacrosse, there is no such thing as
a hip check – anyone committing, or
attempting to commit, a hip check on an
opponent will be assessed a 2-minute Minor
penalty for tripping.
• Similar to hockey, stick to stick contact
is not considered a slash.
• A penalty will be assessed if an attacking
player makes contact with the goalkeeper
while they are in their own crease.
• The defending team is allowed to make
contact with their opponents off of the
ball, provided contact occurs within the
24-foot radius semi-circle in front of their
goal.
Box
lacrosse players will tend to use the shaft
of their stick to “cross-check” their
opponent, but they must “place and push”,
instead of making the cross-checking motion,
to drive away an opponent.
• All other penalties are called relatively
the same as they are in hockey, with a
couple of exceptions:
In
box lacrosse, a player having received 5
penalties in the same game shall be assessed
a Game Ejection.
Unlike hockey, in box lacrosse, a player
having received 3 stick infractions in one
game will not receive an automatic Game
Misconduct penalty.
• Unlike hockey, 2 goals cancel out either a
Major or Match penalty.
• Bench Minor penalties are to be served by
any designated player on the offending team.
• Major penalties will always be served in
their entirety.
If
2 goals are scored during the penalty, the
player must still serve the full 5 minutes,
and must wait for the first dead ball,
following the completion the penalty, before
they may return to the floor.
The
team will play full strength upon completion
of the major penalty, and will substitute
from the bench.
• Unlike hockey, if a 10-minute Misconduct
penalty occurs with less than 10 minutes to
go in the game, the player does not serve an
additional game suspension in addition to
the penalties they have already accumulated.
• After a penalty has been assessed, play
will restart with the non-offending team
being awarded possession of the ball behind
his or her own attack line.
Coincident Penalties
• If both teams have received 1 Minor
penalty each, the teams will play 4 on 4 for
2 minutes.
• If Team A has received 2 Minor penalties
(4 minutes total), and Team B has received 1
Minor penalty (2 minutes total), Team A will
play 1 man down for 4 minutes, and Team B
will play 1 man down for 2 minutes. There is
no requirement to have a substitute player
in the penalty box in this situation.
• In a situation where there are coincident
Major penalties, both teams will play full
strength, and the players will return to the
floor on the first dead ball after their
penalties have expired.
In
box lacrosse, a dead ball occurs after a
goal, or after a penalty or time-out has
been called.
• If both teams have received penalties on a
stoppage, the team with less penalty time
will start with the ball, behind their own
attack line.
On
a particular stoppage, if both teams have
the same total penalty minutes (not the same
total number of players in the penalty box),
the team, which had possession of the ball,
will retain possession. If the ball was
loose, the ball will be faced off.
Multiple Penalties
• A player receiving 5 penalties in a game
will be given a Game Ejection
Unlike hockey, in box lacrosse, a player
receiving 3 stick infractions does not
receive an automatic Game Misconduct
penalty.
In
box lacrosse, a Penalty Shot will count as a
penalty toward the player who committed that
infraction, and towards the player’s
5-penalty limit in a game before being
ejected.
A Game Ejection means the player is only
penalized for the balance of that game, with
no additional games served in addition to
this.
• On a delayed penalty, if the
offending team commits a second infraction,
play will be stopped immediately, the
appropriate penalties will be assessed, and
the non-offending team will restart play
with possession of the ball.
• Any player receiving 2 Major penalties in
the same game will also be given a Game
Misconduct penalty.
• Any player receiving a second 10-minute
Misconduct penalty in the same game will
receive a Game Misconduct penalty.
• A designated player must serve any
10-minute Misconduct penalty assessed to the
goalkeeper.
• A player penalized for checking from
behind will also be assessed a Game
Misconduct penalty.
Penalty Shot
• Similar to hockey, all 5 criteria must be
met in order for a Penalty Shot to be
called.
• A defensive player, other than the
goalkeeper, covering up the ball in the
crease, or intentionally playing the ball
with their hands, will result in a Penalty
Shot.
• Similar to hockey, a goal shall be awarded
to a team if the goalkeeper has been pulled
off the floor for an extra attacker, and a
foul has been committed where all 5 criteria
for a penalty shot have been met.
Face-offs
• The ball is placed between the players’
sticks and must touch the ground. Each
player’s open netting must face his or her
own goal.
• Players not participating in a face-off
are confined behind either of the
restraining lines (the lines running across
the floor tangent to the center face-off
circle) until the ball comes outside of the
inside circle.
• If the ball goes directly out of bounds
off of the face-off, the ball will be
refaced.
• In box lacrosse, a player is not allowed
to “trap” on a face-off – the player must
make an effort to draw the ball straight
back, and they cannot trap the ball under
the netting of their stick, and freeze the
ball in one place, for any prolonged period
of time. If a player facing off is called
for trapping the ball, they will lose
possession of the ball to the non-offending
team.
Handling the Ball
• In box lacrosse, any player, other than
the goalkeeper, may not handle the ball with
their hands. A player may make contact with
the ball with their glove if their hand is
still on their stick, but no glove passes of
any kind are permitted.
• Players in box lacrosse are permitted to
make contact with, or have possession of,
the ball above the normal height of the
shoulders, provided the stick is kept under
control, and is not making contact with
opponents at this height.
Icing
• In box lacrosse, if any player shoots the
ball down the floor, the play will not be
called for icing. In a short-handed
situation, there is less of an advantage to
shooting the ball down the floor, since the
other team will normally pick up the ball
and quickly pass it back down the floor
again. Since box lacrosse is a possession
game, there is greater advantage in
maintaining possession.
• A pass can be made from anywhere on the
floor to anywhere else on the floor between
players on the same team.
Offside
• In box lacrosse, there are no offside
infractions. If an attacking player happens
to be in front of his or her teammate when
moving the ball up the floor, or when
receiving a pass, nothing will be called.
The
blue lines are not used in box lacrosse.
A
pass can be made from anywhere on the floor
to anywhere on the floor between players on
the same team.
Goalkeeper Privileges
• The goalkeeper, upon gaining possession of
the ball, has 5 seconds to get the ball out
of the crease.
• In Minor lacrosse, when the goalkeeper is
hit flush in the facemask with the ball,
play will be stopped immediately.
The
goalkeeper will then be examined for
injuries, and play will restart with the
goalkeeper receiving possession of the ball.
• No player shall make contact with their
opponent’s goalkeeper while they have
possession of the ball.
If
contact is made, the attacking player making
contact with the goalkeeper shall serve a
Minor penalty for crease violation, and the
goalkeeper will restart play with the ball.
• Similar to hockey, goalkeepers do not
serve their own penalties.
• Unlike hockey, the play does not stop if
the goalkeeper covers the ball and freezes
it.
The
play will only stop if the ball is trapped
in either their equipment or the netting of
the goal. In both of these instances, the
goalkeeper will start with possession of the
ball.
• Once the goalkeeper leaves the crease, he
or she can be body checked, and is treated
like any other player on the floor.
Minor Interference / Illegal Pick
• When pursuing a loose ball, contact is
allowed, provided the contact is not a
deliberate attempt to drive the opponent off
the ball.
• On possession, a non-ball carrier for the
offensive team can use a “pick and roll”,
but they cannot push off of the defensive
player in such a way which provides the
offensive team with an advantage.
Ball Out of Bounds
• The ball is not considered out of bounds
until it actually touches something out of
bounds. This means if a player reaches over
the boards to retrieve a ball before it
touches anything out of bounds, play will be
allowed to continue.
Tied Game
• In Canadian Lacrosse Association
regulation rules, there is a 10-minute
period of overtime, which is not sudden
death.
• Similar to hockey, what is played for
overtime will vary, depending on the league
and tournament.
Mercy Rule
• In Alberta, in Minor box lacrosse, if
there is a difference in scoring between the
two teams of 6 goals or more, the game will
be changed to running time, regardless of if
both coaches agree with it or not.
If
the difference in score between the teams
goes back to within 4 goals, the game shall
revert back to stop time.
• In Major lacrosse, both coaches must agree
to switch to running time before it is
carried out. |