Annese said he never detected any rust in Bernhardt, despite him not playing football since 2015, when he starred as a Class 8A All-State quarterback for Lake Brantley (Fla.) High School. Racking up more than 4,000 all-purpose yards and 30 touchdowns in his final two scholastic seasons sparked an offer from Navy to play option quarterback, but he chose to follow in the footsteps of his brothers, who both played lacrosse at Maryland.
“I think for anybody that’s been around that family, when the Bernhardts put their minds to something, I wouldn’t bet against them,” Maryland men’s lacrosse coach John Tillman said. “They’re going to look at every way they could do that well, whether it’s studying film, lifting weights, training, the way they eat, the way they sleep. They’re just a group of guys, and Jared is no different than Jake and Jesse. If they’re going to do it, they really only know one way.”
Catherine Bernhardt noted that both of Jared’s brothers also considered football following Maryland lacrosse careers, but an injury took away Jake’s potential year of eligibility and Jesse went directly into playing professional lacrosse. Seven years younger than Jesse, Jared grew up attending Maryland lacrosse games.
“It’s kind of funny how it’s come full circle,” Jesse Bernhardt said. “Sometimes we look at him in awe. He’s really good. It’s cool to see it kind of come full circle.”
Bernhardt rarely touched a football at Maryland, particularly in his first three years. He played in the lacrosse team’s annual Turkey Bowl games, but he played more receiver in them than quarterback. When he committed to Ferris State for his final year of eligibility, he started cross training for football on Maryland lacrosse off days. Midfielder Anthony DeMaio accompanied him on occasion.
“I would tell him to go to spots, and we’d go out there right in Maryland Stadium and throw it around a little bit,” Bernhardt said. “That was probably the extent of it.”
Bernhardt switched gears completely to football after Maryland fell to Virginia in the national championship game on Memorial Day. He can’t recall touching a stick since then, and he didn’t even pack one for Ferris State. He’s poured his energy into adjusting to the speed of college football and processing the higher level of play, a similar adjustment to jumping from high school to college lacrosse at Maryland.
“I’m trying to get my bearings; I’m trying to pick up things really fast,” Bernhardt said. “There’s a lot going on, especially at the quarterback position, you have to know a lot of things. Being one of the older guys, I would say having some of that experience is a little different than my freshman year at Maryland.”