I eventually got used to it as I got older. It didn’t scare me away from the game, because I enjoyed it too much to let something like that get in my head.
My dad was very good at making me a tough person when it comes to things of that matter. My dad would preach that to me. I may be the only black kid out here, but I can score just like any other kid, or I can score more goals than anybody on the field. That was preached to me a lot as a kid, and it still is now.
There were jokes. When I was younger, maybe at a late practice and the stadium lights would turn off, one of my friends would be like, “Oh, where did he go?”
But honestly, I don’t really think much about the race involved with lacrosse. I just try to be myself on the field.
When I first started playing lacrosse in Dallas, nobody really knew what lacrosse was except for the white people who knew about lacrosse. Maybe they lived in the north before they moved down to Dallas. It has since grown in Texas. It’s becoming a hotbed. There are a lot of recruits coming out of Texas.
If lacrosse has a chance to grow in America, then eventually, it won’t be an all-white sport.
It’ll just be a sport.