Men's Lacrosse Equipment

Equipment for the men's game - full contact, position-specific, and with a longer required gear list than almost any other field sport. Everything here is selected for men's lacrosse specifically, from protective gear and stick parts to coaching tools and training equipment.

Men's lacrosse is a full-contact sport, and the equipment list reflects it. Body checking and stick checking are legal at every level, which means protective gear isn't optional - it's required, and what you need varies significantly by position.

The most important thing to understand about buying gear for the men's game is that position shapes almost every equipment decision beyond the basics.

Attack players absorb the most stick contact and typically want maximum arm protection and offensive-shaped stick heads with deeper pockets.

Midfielders balance protection and mobility using versatile heads that can do both ends.

Defensemen prioritize movement and reach: elbow pads over full arm pads, longer shafts, heads built for ground balls and clears rather than cradling.

Everyone needs shoulder pads, gloves, a helmet, and a mouthguard to step on the field legally.

Stick setup is the other major consideration. Men's lacrosse allows a deeper pocket than the women's game, which is why mesh and stringing kits are gender-specific - men's mesh is designed for the pocket depth the rulebook permits. Heads are also position-specific: attack heads are narrow and stiff for accuracy, defensive heads are wider and more durable for checking and scooping.

Men's Lacrosse Equipment FAQs

Every men's field player needs the same base kit: helmet, shoulder pads, arm pads, gloves, and mouthguard. Where position starts to matter is in what's optional and how gear is sized. Defensemen use longer shafts - up to 72 inches - while attack and midfield shafts run 40–42 inches. Rib pads are optional but far more common among attackers and midfielders than defensemen, since those positions absorb more body contact. Goalies are a category unto themselves with a completely separate required equipment list.

Yes, heads in men's lacrosse are genuinely position-specific, not just marketed that way. Attack heads are narrow with a tight throat and stiff sidewalls, designed for accuracy on shots and passes where ball security matters most. Defensive heads are wider and built to withstand the physical abuse of stick checks and scooping ground balls under pressure. Using an attack head on defense or a defensive head on offense isn't illegal, but it's a real performance disadvantage. For youth and newer players, a mid-spec universal head is a reasonable starting point before committing to a position-specific option.

Men's lacrosse allows a deeper pocket than the women's game - the ball can sit fully below the sidewall when viewed from the side. Men's mesh is designed and strung to produce that deeper pocket legally. Women's mesh is built for the opposite: a shallower pocket where the ball stays above the sidewall. Using women's mesh on a men's head would produce a pocket that's too shallow and perform poorly. Using men's mesh on a women's head would produce an illegal pocket. Stick to men's-specific mesh and stringing kits for any men's or boys' stick.

There's no fixed timeline, but the right approach is inspection before each season rather than replacement on a schedule. Compressed or cracked foam in arm pads and shoulder pads no longer absorbs impact effectively. Gloves with torn padding or broken thumb protection should be replaced immediately - hands take constant checks and a gap in coverage is felt right away. Helmets are the exception: any helmet that has taken a significant impact or shows structural damage should be replaced regardless of age, and helmets should be recertified or replaced according to manufacturer guidelines.

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