MY BROTHER’S KEEPER
Booker’s call to serve extended beyond his coaching duties, as he made major impacts in his players’ lives. A few of his pupils would later become notable recruits making noise nationally.
Incoming Albany long-stick midfielder Jahmeir Warfield and Westtown School midfielder Chrishawn Hunter gained a heartfelt understanding of what mentorship entails. Both players found support and confidence as Booker took them into his home.
While coaching the FCA Upstate program, Booker sacrificed his paychecks to support Roc E6 players like Hunter and Warfield.
Warfield described Roc E6 as a family and brotherhood, as it provided him with opportunities and elevation from a different perspective.
“At times when I first started playing, I was pretty much homeless, and his family took me in,” Warfield said. “I stayed with him for a stretch of time during the school year. Even in college, he would train with me for the entire summer while devoting his time and energy into crafting my game. His dedication struck a fire within me. “
To Hunter, Roc E6 means the world to him. He credits the program for his ascension. He felt empowered by the program's training and mentorship qualities with local youth.
“In the seventh grade, I remember when London asked the team about who wanted to play at the next level,” Hunter said. “Since then, he helped me sign up for school and my driving hours off the field. London has devoted himself to lacrosse and helped grow the game in our inner city. It’s a dream come true to represent Rochester while playing prep school lacrosse.”
As Roc E6 annually struggled to recruit new coaches, it created a solution that benefited its developmental ranks. The organization created the Junior Coaches program, an initiative in which Roc E6’s post-eighth grade graduates volunteer as coaches to guide youth players. Roc E6 provides a stipend to each junior coach committed throughout the spring season. This spring marks the first wave of high school graduates who coached during the initiative.
“We developed this program with the intent of having Black and Brown coaches working with minority players,” Booker said. “It’s important that current coaches of color are being put in a position to earn these executive positions. Far too often, there’s competent and qualified coaches of color who fight barriers of achievement and a foundation of nepotism that is ingrained in this predominantly white sport.”