News - England Lacrosse

England Lacrosse launches university lacrosse players survey

Team huddle at BUCS 6s Championships

England Lacrosse is delighted to, once again, launch our bi-annual survey for all university lacrosse players designed to monitor and measure the personal well-being and social outcomes of lacrosse participants at university.

The survey will enable us to evidence the impact lacrosse participation has on students' well-being, mental health and future prospects.

The anonymous information provided will enable England Lacrosse to understand the impact participating in lacrosse has on an individual’s well-being and social outcomes in the university environment and how we can adapt and develop the lacrosse offer at university to better serve the university lacrosse community.

Deadline | Sunday 13 April

Berkhamsted bring home Under 13 National Schools Championship

Berkhamsted brought home the final silverware of the 2025 National Schools Lacrosse Championships by storming to the Under 13 crown on the final day of competition.

They produced a dominant display to defeat Guildford High 6-2 in the final and round off a superb day of lacrosse that saw them dominate the competition from start to finish.

Despite this being the first time out at the National Schools Championships for our Under 13 teams, Berkhamsted took to it straight away with an emphatic performance in the pool stages, winning all four games, scoring 23 and conceding none.

Wins against North London Collegiate (6-0), Benenden (2-0), Godstowe (8-0), and Godolphin (7-0), put Berko in pole position to be competing for silverware come the end of the day.

However, they were really tested in their first knockout match against St Pauls with a 2-2 scoreline seeing them advance on the ‘first goal scored’ rule.

However, that would be by far the closest any opposition team would come to stopping Berkhamsted’s run as an 8-1 quarter final win against Claremont Fan Court was then followed by an equally impressive 6-1 semi final victory over Birkenhead.

The final opponents Guildford High had a strong start to the day too, beating Habs Girls 5-0, Downe House and St Helen & St Katharine 3-1, and St Albans 7-1, though they did lose a tight match against Putney High 0-1.

Their knockout games were tight contests, defeating Wycombe Abbey 2-1 in Last 16 and St Catherine’s 3-2 in the quarter final, before a big 5-1 win against St George’s Harpenden gave them confidence going into the final.

However, Berkhamsted continued their formidable goal scoring form right through to the final and despite Guildford’s best efforts it was the Hertfordshire school that ran out 6-2 winners and 2025 champions.

Other Day 4 Finals:

U14 Championship: St Catherine’s 1-0 Downe House
U14 Division 1: St Helen & St Katharine 4-1 Godolphin
U13 Division 1: Haileybury 2-1 St Helen & St Katharine

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St Catherine's secure Under 14 National Schools Championship

St Catherine’s claimed the Under 14 National Schools Championship title after defeating Downe House 1-0 in a tense final on Day 4 in Aldershot.

The Surrey school were extremely free scoring throughout the group stages, defeating Queen Margaret’s (10-0), Stowe (4-0), Heathfield (8-0), and Withington (4-3) for a +23 goal difference.

Their form continued as they advanced through to the knockouts with a 5-0 win over St Pauls in the Last 16, followed by a 2-1 win over previously unbeaten St Albans in the quarter final.

A professional 3-0 semi final win set St Cat’s up for a meeting against Downe House in the final who had been equally impressive in their run to the Championships game.

A perfect pool play record matched that of St Cat’s, beating Abbots Hill (6-0), St James (8-0), Bedford (6-0) and St Pauls (5-2) to enter the knockouts with the best record and a +24 goal difference.

A rematch against Bedford in the Last 16 was no trouble with a 4-0 win, before a much tougher quarter final against Queen Anne’s finishing 3-3 and going to overtime, both teams were still unable to be separated, and Downe House were able to advance by virtue of scoring first.

Downe House’s momentum was carried into a tough semi final against Putney High, this time managing to just come out on the right side of a 3-2 scoreline to take on St Cat’s

The final was an extremely tight contest and, with a scoreless first half, it looked as though the match could be decided by a single goal, and that proved to be the case.

A lovely passing move finally cut open the Downe House defence and St Cat’s took with the lead with only a few minutes remaining.

Downe House did have chances to tie the game and take it to overtime but a mix of a resolute defending and good goalkeeping kept them out and St Catherine’s were able to see the game through to the end leading to well-deserved celebrations.

Other Day 4 Finals:

U14 Division 1: St Helen & St Katharine 4-1 Godolphin
U13 Championship: Berkhamsted 6-2 Guildford High
U13 Division 1: Haileybury 2-1 St Helen & St Katharine

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Ireland and Czechia join GB as final World Games 2025 places secured

Ireland squad photo at EuroLax Sixes Cup

Ireland and Czechia secured their places at The World Games 2025 with semi-final wins at the 2025 EuroLax Sixes Cup in Vila Real de Santo António, Portugal over the weekend.

With USA, Canada, Australia, and Great Britain having already qualified for the Games by finishing in the top four at the 2022 competition, China qualifying as hosts, and Japan as the Pan-Asia regional qualifiers, there were just two spots up for grabs as 12 European teams came together for the EuroLax Sixes Cup.

And after six days of competition, Ireland confirmed their place at August’s World Games by defeating Israel in an over-time thriller that finished 11-10 while Czechia booked their spot with a huge 15-5 win over Germany.

Ireland claimed the 2025 EuroLax trophy with a tight 12-11 win against Czechia but the big prize was already won with both teams heading Chengdu, China to take part in The World Games from 7-11 August.

Czechia will make their second appearance at The World Games after competing in the sixes competition in 2022 in Birmingham, Alabama.

Ireland will make their debut in the event after a strong year for its various women’s teams, participating in the European Women’s Lacrosse Championship, the World Lacrosse Women’s U20 Championship and the World Lacrosse Women’s Box Championship.

Great Britain will feature in the competition for the third time after finishing fourth in both 2017 and 2022.

For more information about The World Games 2025, click HERE.

National Schools Lacrosse Championships Day 4: LIVE

Day 4 of the 2025 National Schools Lacrosse Championships is underway!

Follow all the action online with the event scoring system, powered by Macoocoo, keeping you right up to date with all the latest results as they happen throughout the Championships and will be the quickest place to find updates on your team.

Download the Macoocoo App to your phone from your App Store and follow your chosen team to keep updated with their progress throughout the competition or visit the web version below.

We've gone digital! For 2025, we’ve taken the National Schools programme online, giving you the opportunity to get a good read wherever you’re following the Championships from and soak up all the useful information to make your Championships experience even better.

Where can I park? Where is my team playing? What can I buy on site? All the information you need at your finger tips through our online event programme, being updated regularly as we move towards the Championships! 

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Brilliant Berkhamsted seal overtime win to earn Under 15 Championship

Berkhamsted came through a nailbiting overtime final against Putney High to claim the Under 15A National Schools Championship.

Berko were made to battle back though as after going into a 2-0 lead in the final, Putney looked like they were on course for a comeback victory as they went 2-3 ahead in the closing stages.

However, a late equaliser sent the match into overtime and three tense OT periods followed before Berkhamsted finally broke the deadlock to win the Championship in dramatic fashion.

Berkhamsted were victorious in the U14 competition last year, with the cohort now managing to repeat that success at Under 15 level for this year.

The Hertfordshire school recorded three wins out of four in the pool stages, defeating St Pauls (4-0), Wycombe Abbey (3-2), and Abbots Hill (9-0), with a close defeat against Moreton Hall (2-3) leaving them 2nd in Pool A.

However, they then stormed through the knockout rounds with convincing wins against St Helen & St Katharine in the Last 16 (6-0), Downe House in the quarter final (5-1), and the previously unbeaten St Swithun’s 4-2 in the semi final.

Meanwhile, Putney were five out of five through the pool stages with wins against St Helen & St Katharine, Marlborough College, St George’s Harpenden, Bedford, and Godolphin.

They then came through against Lady Eleanor Holles in the Last 16, Westonbirt in the quarter finals, and Birkenhead in the semi final to set up the meeting with Berkhamsted.

The final was a real back and forth contest with the momentum swinging one way and then the other before the dramatic overtime periods that brought the Cha,pionship to a thrilling conclusion that ultimately went in Berkhamsted’s favour.

Other Final Results:
Under 15A Division 1: Wycombe Abbey 3-0 Bedford
Under 19C Division 1: St Swithun’s 3-2 Guildford High (OT)
Under 19C Division 2: St Catherine’s D 3-2 Marlborough College (4OT)

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National Schools Lacrosse Championships event preview

The anticipation is building for the 2025 National Schools Lacrosse Championships as we are almost ready to kick off this year’s competition and welcome thousands of players and supporters to Aldershot for four days of top level lacrosse.

Aldershot Garrison Sports Centre is the venue once again for this year’s Championships across Saturday 8 - Tuesday 11 March.

Competitors from the Under 13s experiencing the event for the first time, right through to the U19s competing for the top honours will be putting on a real spectacle of lacrosse as over 200 teams take to the field across the four days.

The National Schools Lacrosse Championships, first held in 1944, is a hugely historic event and one of the marquee moments of the lacrosse season.

Event Information

We've gone digital! For 2025, we’ve taken the National Schools programme online, giving you the opportunity to get a good read before the day and soak up all the useful information to make your Championships experience even better.

Where can I park? Where is my team playing? What can I buy on site? All the information you need at your finger tips through our online event programme, being updated regularly as we move through the Championships! 

The smartest move you can make before arriving is to save yourself time on the day by purchasing your tickets for entry in advance and get priority access at the entrance tent.

The event schedule and scoring system is powered again by Macoocoo, keeping you up to date with all the latest events as they happen throughout the Championships and will be the quickest place to find updates on your team.

Download the Macoocoo App to your phone from your App Store and follow your chosen team to keep updated with their progress throughout the competition.

Head to the event schedule page linked below to see the daily schedule for each of the competitions via Macoocoo, or head to the App.

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Registration for 2025 Stockport September Sixes opens

Stockport men's players celebrate a goal

Registration for the 2025 edition of the annual Stockport September Sixes competition is now open with teams able to sign up until September.

Taking place on Saturday 20 and Sunday 21 September at Stockport Lacrosse Club, Greater Manchester, the Stockport September Sixes is now in its fifth year and will once again feature senior men’s and women’s competitions alongside a full junior tournament with sections from U12 to U18 level.

Following the successful launch of the competition in 2021, the event has grown year on year with the 2025 edition set to be the biggest and best yet with teams from all over the country welcomed.

With The Fly Sixes Lacrosse League showcasing some of the world’s best Sixes Lacrosse players, the Stockport September Sixes competition allows everyone of all abilities to try their hand at the exciting, fast-paced format of the game that will be showcased at the LA28 Olympic Games.

Over the past four years, the September Sixes has welcomed teams from the north of England and the Midlands, as well as university teams from all over the country.

Last year’s competition saw Stockport lift the men’s trophy and University of Nottingham claim the women’s title.

Teams can enter the competition for an early bird price of £50 up until 23:59 on 31 July, with prices rising to £60 from 1 August.

Tournament Schedule 

Saturday 20 September | Senior men’s and women’s tournament (from 11am)
Sunday 21 September | Junior tournament (U12, U13, U14, U15, U16, U18 from 9am)

Any questions should be directed to Stockport Lacrosse Club via email at stockportlacrosseclub@gmail.com.

Walt Christianson names 23-player England squad for 2025 E-Box Invitational

England men’s box lacrosse team Head Coach Walt Christianson has named his 23-player squad heading to Prague, Czechia for the 2025 E-Box Invitational from 2-4 May.

The squad features four players who represented England at last year’s World Lacrosse Box Championships, including captain and most capped player Tom Roche, all-time top goal-scorer Lyndon Bunio, Elliot Leonard, and Ollie Allsop.

Will Allsop and George Dury return to an England squad for the first time since the E-Box Invitational last year after narrowly missing out on final spots in the World Championship squad; Allsop has 17 caps and a European title to his name while Dury has won five caps during his career so far.

Ben Stowe will add to his three England caps during the 2025 E-Box Invitational as the only goalie in the squad after also last featuring for his country at last year’s E-Box Invitational.

Christianson and his coaching team see this year’s E-Box Invitational as the perfect opportunity to help develop the wider England box playing pool as preparations tentatively begin to defend the European Championship title next year with 16 of the 22-strong squad having never played a competitive game for England before.

England will take on long-term European rivals Czechia B/U20 and Germany during the three-day tournament as well as a first competitive fixture against Japan.

The England squad has two training sessions on Sunday 6 April in Sheffield and Sunday 27 April in Oxford before the squad leave for Prague on Thursday 1 May. Players not within the E-Box squad are welcome to attend the sessions with 50% off the entry fee for non-squad players.

Founded in 2015, the annual E-Box Invitational aims to provide international box lacrosse teams with the opportunity to play full, competitive games against various opponents from across the continent outside of major international tournaments.

There are no winners, no points, and no trophies with the goal being the games themselves as well as gaining experience and making new friends.

England has entered a team into the E-Box competition at three of the past three editions (2019, 2023, 2024).

Previous editions of the event have been live streamed and can be re-watched HERE.

England 2025 E-Box Invitational Squad (caps)

Ollie Allsop (5)
Will Allsop (17)
Lyndon Bunio (20)
Archie Carr
Oliver Dawson
Sebastian Di Siena
George Dury (5)
Harry Edwards
Nathan Edwards
Joseph Hodgkins
Ollie Lee
Elliot Leonard (19)
Ryan Martin
Oscar McCarthy
James McIlhagger
George Medd
Jack O’Mahoney
Travis Payne
Tom Roche (39)
Jack Robinson
Ben Stowe (3)
Finn Ward
Kristien Warren

Reserves
Kyle MacQueen (3)
Tyler Rodberg

Staff

Walt Christianson | Head Coach
Rob Ingham Clark | Assistant Coach
Cai Jefferies | Assistant Coach
Pete Wilson | Assistant Coach
Merrisa Heraldson | Physiotherapist
Rob Gooch | Team Manager

England 2025 E-Box Invitational Schedule (all times UK)

Friday 2 May | England v Czechia B/U20 | 3pm
Saturday 3 May | England v Germany | 6pm
Sunday 4 May | England v Japan | 5pm

World Lacrosse reveal 2025 World Lacrosse U20 Men's Championship logo

World Lacrosse Men's U20 Championship logo

World Lacrosse has revealed the logo for the upcoming 2025 World Lacrosse U20 Men’s Championship set to take place from 15-25 August on Jeju Island, Korea.

Featuring the taegeuk and the trigrams - Geon, Don, Gam, and Ri - based on the national flag of the Republic of Korea, the design incorporates many of Korea’s traditional symbols.

The taegeuk is the half blue and half red circle in the centre of Korea’s flag and symbolises harmony and balance while the trigrams are the series of black rectangles that surround the taegeuk.

Each trigram represents an element of nature - sky, Earth, water, fire - and they embody Korea’s aspiration to bring its lacrosse spirit to the global stage.

The blue background of the logo is inspired by the ocean that surrounds Jeju Island off the south coast of Korea.

Korea is hosting a World Lacrosse championship for the first time in its history, having been a World Lacrosse member since 1995 and helping to found the Asia-Pacific Lacrosse Union in 2004. 

England will head to Korea in August off the back of a second-placed finish at last year’s 2024 ELF Men’s U20 Championship in Wroclaw, Poland with a final squad set to be announced in due course.

England star Katie Greenwood to coach at 2025 Triple Arrow Camp

Katie Greenwood headshot

Triple Arrow Camps has announced that England field and box star Katie Greenwood will be a Lead Coach at the 2025 Cheltenham Ladies’ College Plus+ Camp, taking place from Tuesday 8 to Friday 11 April.

Greenwood brings a wealth of experience to Triple Arrow Camps having played in three major tournaments with England across two disciplines: she was England’s field goalie at the 2019 ELF Women’s Championship and 2022 World Lacrosse Women’s Championship and appeared in the offence at the 2024 World Lacrosse Box Championships.

An experienced Sixes Lacrosse player, Greenwood is also a part of the British Lacrosse training squad, representing them at the 2022 World Games, and has appeared in two seasons of The Fly Sixes Lacrosse League (2021 & 2024).

Initially a midfielder, the 33-year-old transitioned to the cage during high-school which continued through to college, first at St. Mary’s College before taking a year off during her sophomore year and transferring to Florida Southern.

It was at Florida Southern that Greenwood really honed her goal-keeping skills and was named a two-time NCAA DII All-American and Goalie of the Year.

Following college, and after turning down offers to try out for the American professional women’s league and the USA national side, she began coaching at her old school St. Mary’s College before eventually moving to England.

In 2017, after that year’s World Lacrosse Women’s Championship in England, Greenwood was persuaded by a friend to try out for the England senior national team and since then has never looked back becoming an integral part of the national team set-up and helping to mentor up-and-coming goalies like Emilie Chandler and Dylan Whittington in the process.

Greenwood is the first coach to be announced on the 2025 Triple Arrow Camps programme and will have an all-round coaching focus, although any goalies attending the camp will have the opportunity for one-to-one time with her.

The 2025 Triple Arrow Plus+ Camp is for the true lacrosse lovers and allows campers to be immersed in a full lacrosse learning environment.

In addition to the typical top-class coaching you would expect from a Triple Arrow Camp administered by the National Governing Body, the Plus+ Camp is specifically tailored to help young athletes improve their game with expert sessions around strength & conditioning (S&C), nutrition, and recovery using the state-of-the-art health and fitness facilities at Cheltenham Ladies’ College.

Plus+ offers campers a range of sessions delivered by our experienced coaches including small-sided games, positional skills, transition and overload, inside S&C, and much much more.

In addition to access to both grass and artificial playing surfaces on site, Cheltenham Ladies’ College boasts two sports halls, a climbing wall, a refurbished 25m swimming pool, a multi-purpose activity studio and 58-station fitness gym with free weights, spin, and rowing areas for camp access.

For the Triple Arrow Plus+ Camp, there are both residential and day places available from £402.50 with residential campers having access to all the available facilities at Cheltenham Ladies’ College alongside scheduled activities following their evening meal each night.

"The largest school-girl event in the calendar year" | National Schools Lacrosse Championships

Two players embrace

During last year’s National Schools Lacrosse Championships, our England Lacrosse Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Mark Coups spoke to local radio station Radio Victory about the competition, lacrosse, and Olympic inclusion.

Read the transcript below and don’t forget to purchase your tickets for this year’s 2025 National Schools Lacrosse Championships from just £15 by clicking the buttons in this piece.

Presenter: Now, Aldershot in the north of our broadcast area has just hosted the National Schools Lacrosse Championships. Schools from all over the UK came to Hampshire and Winchester were one of the success stories. Well, our breakfast man cut his teeth in sport for the likes of Team Sky and the BBC and he finds it hard to resist going off to investigate. So, Gary Champion went to the muddy playing fields of Aldershot to experience the game for the first time and to chat to the Chief Executive of England Lacrosse, Mark Coups.

Mark Coups: It’s our female Nationals Schools Championships and it’s the largest school-girl event in the calendar year, not just for us but for female sport. We’ll have just shy of about 2,000 school-girls playing here over the four days.

We do have options for everyone to play; we actually have quite a vibrant mixed game which is used for inclusivity and ensuring everybody has got the opportunity to play and it’s also played by adults as well as young people.

Presenter: And for people who don’t know what lacrosse is, how would you describe it?

Mark Coups: Lacrosse is really quite a simple game. It’s a game that’s played with a stick and a ball where you try to get the ball into a goal. So, in normal P.E. terms it would be termed as an invasive, goal-scoring sport but it has its origins way back in North America; it was a game that was played by Native American tribes.

We’ve had a period of growth over the last 25 to 30 years where the sport has been taken around the world and we’re really delighted to be included in the LA28 Olympic Games. We got the news in October 2023 that we would be in that and that’s the first time we’ll be in those games for nearly 100 years and we’re over the moon about that. Fantastic news!

Presenter: How good are Team GB?

Mark Coups: Team GB are pretty good! We are currently fourth in the world in both women’s and men’s categories so we’re very hopeful that we will be able to perform well and hopefully get a medal in LA.

But what’s exciting about the National Schools Lacrosse Championships being here in Aldershot over this weekend and into the beginning of next week is that we’ve got some young players who’ll have been playing who may well be on that team and possibly on an Olympic podium with a medal round their neck in 2028.

The 2025 National Schools Lacrosse Championships is taking place from Saturday 8 to Tuesday 11 March at Aldershot Garrison Sports Centre with U19A & U19B competitions on Saturday and Sunday, U19C & U15A on Monday, and U14 & U13 tournaments on Tuesday.

Vacancy | England women's box team Head Coach

England Lacrosse is looking to appoint an inspirational and highly professional individual as the second-ever women’s box lacrosse team Head Coach following last year’s inaugural World Lacrosse Box Championships.

As the organisation seeks to build on the incredible achievements of our women’s box team at the 2024 World Championships in Utica, New York, where the team placed fifth, the next major assignment will be to consolidate our unofficial position as Europe’s leading team at the inaugural Women’s Box European Championship scheduled for summer 2026.

The successful Head Coach candidate will have the opportunity to shape and evolve a performance culture providing players with an environment in which they can thrive in pursuit of individual and collective excellence.

They will be responsible for leading the coaching strategy and delivery, along with the development and implementation of plans for a programme to prepare athletes to compete on the international stage and perform consistently to the highest standards required.

Comfortable working with elite athletes, the ideal candidate will also be adept at managing and working collaboratively with a team of staff to achieve maximum output from available resources. 

The Head Coach will work closely with the England Lacrosse National Performance Manager in overseeing the strategy, standards, and ongoing direction of the programme and ensuring the overall culture of the programme is aligned with England Lacrosse’s vision and values.

For more information about the role, download the role description HERE.

Please note, this role is voluntary with reasonable and necessary expenses provided.

How to apply:

To apply for this position please email the following documents to Abi Merrill at a.merrill@englandlacrosse.co.uk:

· Cover Letter highlighting your motivation for the post and relevant experience (500 words max.).
· Up to date CV.
· Complete Equalities monitoring form, via this link: Equalities Monitoring Form

Responsible to: National Performance Manager

Application closing date:  Sunday 9 March

Vacancy | England women's box team Team Manager

England Lacrosse is looking to appoint a dedicated and hard-working individual as the women’s box Team Manager following last year’s inaugural World Lacrosse Box Championships.

As the organisation seeks to build on the incredible achievements of our women’s box team at the 2024 World Championships in Utica, New York, where the team placed fifth, the next major assignment will be to consolidate our unofficial position as Europe’s leading team at the inaugural Women’s Box European Championship scheduled for summer 2026.

The Team Manager will work closely with the England Lacrosse National Performance Manager and England women’s box team Head Coach in overseeing the planning, logistics and financial monitoring of the programme and ensuring the overall culture of the programme is aligned with England Lacrosse’s vision and values.

They will be responsible for providing the highest quality of communication to players to ensure that they are at all times informed regarding the expectations of the programme.  They will execute planning and delivery of the operational/logistical needs of the programme whilst monitoring and reporting the ongoing finances for the squad. 

They will also hold responsibility towards ensuring the welfare and wellbeing of individual players is a priority to this programme.

For more information about the role, download the full role description HERE.

Please note, this role is voluntary with reasonable and necessary expenses provided.

How to apply:

To apply for this position please email the following documents to Abi Merrill at a.merrill@englandlacrosse.co.uk:

· Cover Letter highlighting your motivation for the post and relevant experience (500 words max.).
· Up to date CV.
· Complete Equalities monitoring form, via this link: Equalities Monitoring Form

Responsible to: National Performance Manager

Application closing date:  Sunday 9 March

Joe McEwan speaks to Gabby Logan's The Sports Agents podcast

Last week, we wrote about Cheadle Lacrosse Club’s Joe McEwan who has been walking the length of New Zealand over the past four months in support of Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY) after suffering a cardiac arrest while playing lacrosse in September 2023.

Joe appeared on the latest episode of Gabby Logan and Kelly Cates’ The Sports Agents podcast to continue raising awareness of his condition and CRY’s heart screening for those aged 14 to 35.

Kelly Cates: Joe McEwan, who suffered a sudden cardiac arrest playing lacrosse aged 22, joined us as he walks the length of New Zealand to raise money for heart screenings.

Joe McEwan: Basically, the circumstances couldn’t have been better for me to survive unless I was in a hospital itself. So, it was any normal day for me, I was going to a lacrosse tournament. I was playing and someone took a shot and the ball hit me in the back of the neck and that triggered a cardiac arrest. As I say, I got ridiculously lucky, the referee was a firefighter. It was a big tournament as well, I think maybe three or four doctors spectating, two defibrillators on site, ambulance came within three minutes, air ambulance came within 10 I think. So even though it was a really scary thing to happen - I think, I was in a coma for a few hours - by the time I was at hospital, they knew I’d be fine.

Kelly Cates: It’s such an extraordinary situation to be in and when I’ve heard other people talk about recovering from a cardiac arrest and particularly when you hear sportsmen talk about it for everybody around you - what I think [ex-footballer] David Ginola said, “I don’t know because I didn’t see it happen, I wasn’t there really”.

Joe McEwan: So this is the thing when I tell people about the collapse, they’re always like “oh that must have been absolutely terrible” and I’m like well not really. I feel like the hard part is surviving it. But I don’t remember any of it. When people ask me about it I always say it was so much harder for my parents because they’re the ones who had to go through getting the call that their son had collapsed. They were in a different country when they got the call and my brother was down in London and they all thought for a good hour or so that that was it that I’d be gone. For me, I just woke up in hospital and they told me you’ve had a cardiac arrest. I was like oh well that’s not great is it?

Gabby Logan: Because of course you had no prior warning of the condition that you’re now managing and a lot of young people especially under the age of 35 who are fit and well and playing sport wouldn’t think to even go and get their hearts checked because they don’t associate their healthy lifestyles with a cardiac condition. Every week in the UK 12 people under the age of 35 die because of an undiagnosed cardiac condition which is 624 people every year so it’s not an insignificant number of young people who just seem to be at the start of great lives and active lives as well. So what you’re doing is not just raising money, you’re raising awareness about more screening that potentially could save lives especially for young active people. Had you ever been offered any kind of screening through your sporting life?

Joe McEwan: No, so the only time that I’d heard about things like this happening is what everybody heard like Christian Eriksen, Fabrice Muamba, things like that. It sounds stupid but it’s true like you never expect it to be able to happen to you until it happens to you. The tragic thing is once it has happened to you the likelihood is that you won’t survive it and the odds of surviving an out of hospital cardiac arrest are like 7%. It is definitely something that there should be wider knowledge of and it should be more widely accepted to get heart screenings in like schools ideally.

Gabby Logan: I think what’s changed since my brother died of a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 1992 when he was 15 and what’s changed since then – he was a very high level performing athlete, he was a footballer and he’d signed for Leeds United – is that young athletes of his calibre now are offered screenings. My son was in the rugby academy systems at Wasps and we had a letter home to say that he was going to be screened when he was 16 which was quite a moment for us as a family because you realise that something has changed at least for high performing young sports people. If you’re in a system of professional sport that is often now offered but obviously not if you’re more recreationally involved in sport so what CRY are doing as I understand is offering subsidised ECGs and screening to young people between 14 and 35 and I think Kelly as a mum of young people who play sport when you hear stories like Joe’s it makes you realise that something really simple, like it’s not an MRI it’s a really simple screening that can help to identify potential issues, you’d take it up wouldn’t you?

Kelly Cates: Absolutely and Joe as you said it’s just a series of circumstances that mean that you’re here and that you’re able to raise money for CRY at the moment and it’s about trying to reduce all those elements that could lead to a worse outcome.

Gabby Logan: Has it changed your outlook on life at all going through this?

Joe McEwan: Oh 100%. I’ve had a few people commenting on my social media saying “oh is this a good idea you’re doing this?” and to be honest I feel more capable than before I had the cardiac arrest! I feel incredibly healthy and it’s definitely given me a new outlook on life and it’s revealed to me that I have a lot more will-power than I thought I had.

Gabby Logan: I think that’s the thing as well Joe that a lot of people, when my brother died we tried to console ourselves thinking that well if you told him he couldn’t play football again he would have thought that wasn’t a life worth living, you know, if he’d been told about his condition in the weeks before. But actually I’ve met young footballers since who’ve been screened and found they had a condition and have gone on to play professional football and gone on to play professional sport and Christian Eriksen has proved that you can come back from something like that and keep playing professional sports and so what you’re proving and what Christian’s proved is that there is a life that you can live with as Kelly pointed out those things inside you whether it’s a monitor whether it’s a defibrillator and obviously the screening that continues to go on around your life. I think that’s really important to show young people that it’s not that you’re going to have to stop everything if something is found, life goes on and you can live a really great full active life.

Yesterday, after 130 days of walking, Joe finally completed his trek from the northern-most tip of the north island of New Zealand to the southern-most tip of the south island. He has so far raised over £8,500 and you can still donate to his cause by clicking the DONATE bitterns above or below.

To listen to the full episode of The Sports Agents podcast featuring Joe McEwan, click HERE.

England discover 2025 E-Box Invitational opponents

England men's box lacrosse team photo at 2024 E-Box Invitational

The England men’s box lacrosse team has discovered its opponents for the upcoming 2025 E-Box Invitational event taking place from 2-5 May in Prague, Czechia.

In their first competitive fixtures since finishing fourth at the 2024 World Lacrosse Box Championships in Utica, USA, England will take on Czechia B/U20, Germany, and Japan in the annual exhibition of box lacrosse.

Czechia and Germany both boast impressive box lacrosse programmes highlighted by their respective third and second placed finishes at the 2022 Euros in Hanover, Germany.

Over the past 20 years, Japan have had an exponential rise within the world of lacrosse and have finished in their highest ever placings at the recent 2023 World Lacrosse Men’s Championship (field, 5th) and 2022 World Games (sixes, 3rd).

Their box lacrosse programme is still in its fledgling stage but an impressive eighth place finish at last year’s World Championships shows they have ambitions to break the top six in this format of the game too.

Founded in 2015, the annual E-Box Invitational aims to provide international box lacrosse teams with the opportunity to play full, competitive games against various opponents from across the continent outside of major international tournaments.

There are no winners, no points, and no trophies with the goal being the games themselves as well as gaining experience and making new friends.

England has entered a team into the E-Box competition at three of the past four editions (2019, 2023, 2024).

In 2022, a women’s event, entitled ShE-Box, was introduced with five teams from across Europe taking part and in 2023 the first ever English team, SBL Ravens, entered; 2024 saw England’s first ever women’s national side enter where they won four of their five games.

Previous editions of the event have been live streamed and can be re-watched HERE.

2025 E-Box Invitational England Men’s Schedule (all times UK)

Friday 2 May | England v Czechia B/U20 | 3pm | Radotín
Saturday 3 May | England v Germany | 6pm | Malešice
Sunday 4 May | England v Japan | 5pm | Radotín

Cheadle's Joe McEwan walks length of New Zealand for CRY

Cheadle Lacrosse Club’s Joe McEwan, who recently survived a cardiac arrest while playing for Wilmslow in September 2023, is walking the length of New Zealand to raise money for Cardiac Risk in the Young (CRY).

Joe is looking to raise a massive £23,900 for the charity to help them continue to raise awareness of the disease and to assist them in hosting screening days for young people.

Having begun the 3000km trek some 17 weeks ago on 11 October 2024 at the northern-most tip of the north island of New Zealand, Joe is 123 days into his walking challenge and has less than 40km to go before the finish.

So far, Joe has managed to raise almost £7,000 with the first £3,500 of that going towards CRY’s core funding (everything they do as a charity including raising awareness, screening for young people, support for families and individuals, as well as vital research).

All further donations (about £3,500 so far) will be ring-fenced specifically to fund screening days for young people.

According to CRY, 1 in 300 young people screened will be identified as having a potentially life-threatening cardiac condition with one screening day, which can screen up to 100 young people under the age of 35, costing £6,800.

Joe’s initial aim is to raise £10,300 which would cover the initial funding of CRY’s core functions as well as one screening day and any additional money after that would go towards further screening days.

Six young people under the age of 35 lose their life every week due to undiagnosed heart conditions and any money raised by CRY, and Joe during his challenge, will help towards screening individuals and raising awareness of cardiac risk in the young.

Thanks to the quick action of by-standers in 2023, Joe was successfully resuscitated and defibrillated and has made a full recovery and now has an internal defibrillator fitted.

England Lacrosse is right behind you, Joe, and we wish you all the best as you come to the end of your massive journey!

For more information about Joe, his story, and CRY, click HERE and simply click the button below to donate.

You can also follow Joe on Instagram HERE and TikTok HERE.