I grew up on a wall, and I truly believe that all of the reps and eye-hand coordination were the biggest assets to my development as a lacrosse player I used to think that a cement wall was the best practice partner possible...it never misses, it always gives you the ball back, and you have to catch everything you throw.

BUT NOW, I think the Practice Wall is the best partner, because you can't bring a wall to your field/back yard, and you can't move a wall to make it part of practice. The reaction time that our players are developing as a result of multiple reps, is a truly transferable game skill. It demands your focus and reaction. Our ability to work on stick skills in a concentrated way, has our players asking for extra work on softening their hands, perfecting their grip on the stick, and even foot preparation in shooting. During practice, our injured players have been able to train their sticks in the most efficient way possible, and they are narrowing the skill gap that widens when sidelined from practice.

You know a product is good, when:

  1. you want to buy one for a family member
  2. you don't want to tell the opponents about it, and
  3. it makes you think about coming out of retirement!

The Practice Wall is fun, challenging, versatile, and creative. We've used it for simulating quick feeds for the goalkeepers, reaction to ground balls, and all kinds of stick work.

Some of the key attributes about the Practice Wall, honestly, I could attribute to any bounce back. BUT some of the truly outstanding assets about the Practice Wall are the goal sized target area, and the ease it takes to set up, move, adjust, and store them. It's one of the most respectful tools on the market.

You, or your team, should own at least one. We have 6 on the field. If you have a back yard, and play lacrosse, I think it's one of the best investments that you can make.

Michele Uhlfelder
Head Women's Lacrosse Coach
Stanford University