ABOUT THREE YEARS AGO, Doug Agnes, Sports Development Director at the Western Maryland Chapter of USA Lacrosse, ran into Barth after a long day of games. Agnes had played for multiple teams that day, filling in when squads lacked enough players to fill a lineup.
While he was physically drained, speaking to Barth for the first time instantly reinvigorated him.
“I was 46, thinking, ‘If I could just play into my 50s …,’ and then I see Roger who’s in his 80s,” Agnes said. “I set new life goals, like I could play longer.”
Playing alongside athletes as young as 19 in the Maryland Lacrosse League, some of whom compete at the collegiate ranks and play in the league for extra offseason reps, Barth consistently holds his own.
The Maryland Lacrosse League, like other post-collegiate lacrosse leagues across the nation, is growing and operates year-round. There are marquee annual tournaments, like the event in Lake Placid, N.Y., happening this weekend.
Maryland Lacrosse League founder and commissioner Colin Fagan said he was blown away when he first met Barth — even more so when he saw the defenseman perform his craft.
“He still hangs with everybody, and he still gets a good check in, so I think it’s pretty cool that he’s still playing defense at this level against former D-I, D-II [and] D-III All-Americans,” Fagan said.
For the past 20-plus years, Barth has typically been the oldest player whenever he steps on the field. He has seen countless teammates walk away and friends retire from the workforce, but he keeps pushing forward in all facets of life.
Both Agnes and Krista Barth said the 84-year-old embodies Isaac Newton’s first law, where an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by an outside force.
But even with several outside forces like the COVID-19 pandemic that could’ve impeded his path — both professionally and on the lacrosse field — Barth’s unwavering determination keeps him moving forward.
“He’s seen enough people stop that he’s never going to stop because you see what happens to people once they [do],” Krista Barth said. “There’s a huge mindset to aging, and my dad just doesn’t recognize that he’s older.”
Barth hits the treadmill at least five days per week, lifts weights, wind surfs, water skis and snow skis during the winter. He said his secret to longevity is simple: stretching and drinking plenty of water.
As for when he’ll be content with walking away from the sport, Barth said he has hardly ever considered putting away his gear for good.
Even with occasional questions posed from his wife that ponder whether he’d be better off coaching, he has issued a similar retort for decades.
“When I’m in a wheelchair, I’ll think about coaching — but I’m just too wrapped up in it,” Barth said. “My family is all used to it. It’s just become part of who I am — not just the athleticism, but the companionship of the guys.”
With what appears to be at least a few more years out on the area’s fields, Barth will continue to push the limits of what many deem possible.
Above all, the husband, father, grandfather, tax lawyer, lacrosse player, businessman and outdoorsman will inspire those close to him, as well as people he merely encounters once, Krista Barth said.
“He is definitely my absolute hero,” she said. “A piece of that is through lacrosse. What he does for something he loves is just a bigger lesson than the game.”