As long as Bronx Lacrosse is in their lives, it seems the players will stay on the right path. There’s a waiting list. Players know that if their grades drop, there will be another waiting to take their place. Program mentors are in the school all day, making sure players keep up with schoolwork.
“It was awkward,” Krubally said. “Because someone was making me do the work.”
Krubally, whose family comes from Ghana and Jamaica, hadn’t heard of lacrosse growing up.
“I thought it looked dumb,” he said. “They just had a stick and ball. I was into basketball.”
He changed his mind the first time he got to hit someone. Krubally was recently able to play with Columbia University’s club team. The college players towered over him, but his favorite part was getting to hit them. He doesn’t think lacrosse looks so dumb anymore.
“You can’t go down the hall without seeing someone with a stick,” Krubally said.
PHOTOS COURTESY OF BRONX LACROSSE
Former Tufts player Dan Leventhal (left), placed at Highbridge Green School through Teach For America, formed a lacrosse program that advocated for success in the classroom, a formula that has worked for current Cardinal Hayes standout John Pena (right).
The idea behind going to places like Columbia is to get the players exposed to new experiences. Leventhal recently took players to his hometown, Chappaqua, N.Y., the Westchester County suburb where the Clintons live. For some, it had been the first time they’d ever left the South Bronx. One player told Leventhal he thought he needed to go to Alaska to see that many white people.
They haven’t made it to Alaska yet, but they did camp in the Adirondacks.
“It’s funny,” Leventhal said. “But it shows how they haven’t been exposed to the things that other kids have. We’re just showing them that these things can be very attainable if they work hard in the classroom.”
The Highbridge Green players are passing these lessons to a younger generation. At first, Voyd’s mother didn’t want him to play lacrosse. She thought he’d get hurt. He begged until she gave in. Now he plays with his sister and younger cousin in the backyard. His cousin’s school doesn’t offer lacrosse, yet. That doesn’t mean lacrosse isn’t in his future.
“He knows how to catch. He just needs to know how throw,” Voyd said. “When he gets to high school, I’ll convince him to play.”
The Highbridge Green School in the South Bronx has benefitted from multiple US Lacrosse offerings, including First Stick Program and National Diversity grants in 2017 and acceptance into the Urban Lacrosse Alliance in 2018. To support these initiatives, visit uslacrosse.org/donate.