or might be a lacroose spider?
10 on each team on the field at once
gymnastics, Track and Field(pole valting) ,lacroose, Baseball, Basketball, soccer, volleyball
Get out and practice for 10 minutes every day or join a team.
The advantages of using a lacrosse stick are a full extended grip and a net to cradle the ball
The game of lacroose was invented by thered Indians of the U.S.A. It is mainly played in Canada and the U.S.A.
lacrosse is different from foot ball because in lacroose you have stixs , you score in a net, you have a spot that you have to stay by, you have a goaly, you dont tackle.ect.
The most popular sport at Duke University is basketball.
The venomous spider is a brown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa).The sports team at Brown University is the Brown lacrosseteam.
It doesn't really we are very similar to America. I am Canadian and I watch both Canadian and American sports. We each call soccer, soccer not football like Europe. Canadians invented sports that Europeans did not know about such as football, lacroose, basketball (invented by a Canadian first played in America), really you could say Canada influences Europe a little bit but niether is a significant influence on the other.
there is a special tool to take it off but i just used a flat head screwdriver... you just have to wedge it in between the door panel and the door so you have enough room to get a good grip on the panel and give it a good tug you will have to use some strength but dont to pull to hard cause you will pull wires out (not good) then from there you use the flathead to pop off the piece of plastic that holds the tweeter (this should be up by the side mirror) from there there should be 3 or so 10mm nuts of what not and the wires (if you got power mirrors) just un hook the clip that connects those and that should be it re assemble who you took it off.
Cheerleading and Soccer are both very difficult sports. They both require a lot of stamina and skill. Cheerleading is more extreme and dangerous than soccer. But, there is no true way to determine if a sport is "harder" than another