Longmeadow Youth Football
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Home of the Longmeadow Knights

2008 REGISTRATION:
  • Wednesday, May 14th
  • Thursday, May 15th
  • Wednesday, May 21st

7 - 9pm at the Community House

Please note the Park & Rec. brochure dates are incorrect: these are the correct dates

Players new to the program must bring a copy of their birth certificate to leave at registration.

Questions?  Interested in helping the program? Call  Bob Ostrander (567-7266) or    Tom Gerweck (567-8244) 

The LYFA would like to thank Bill McCormick for his voluntary efforts in improving the high school game field and the practice field. We would like to also thank RFL Electric for the installation of timers on the practice field lights as well as lights on the Pee Wee practice field, and Agnoli Signs for the great looking registration signs.

The LYFA is not only your favorite youth sports program, it's also a charitable organization (legally filed with the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 501(C3). Your contributions and donations are tax deductible, but please consult a tax advisor about this.    

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Fans see pumped fists and bumping chests during the game itself, and think football is an event of brute conflict. Obviously, that's a factor. But before the game are extraordinary periods of cooperative work. There's perhaps 1,000 hours of preparation for each hour of play, and almost all the preparation must be done jointly. Football players and coaches spend more hours together, in complex social settings, than the players and coaches of any other sport. The ability to get along with others is more important to football than to any sport. Some star basketball players barely speak to their teammates. In football, even the most renowned star must be a good teammate and must interact constructively with everyone in the locker room down to the lowliest player, or the game simply cannot be won. There's a reason towns view the success of their high school football teams, and cities view the success of their NFL teams, as symbolizing the town's and cities' prospects – because football cannot happen unless large numbers of people get along. And we're entering a world in which it will matter more than ever that large numbers of people get along. Football teaches that very thing.

                            - Gregg Easterbrook ("The Tuesday Morning Quarterback")