Before the COVID-19 pandemic, Dox Aitken, Jared Bernhardt and JT Giles-Harris each had a plan — or at least some semblance of one.
The All-American lacrosse players were to finish their senior seasons at Virginia, Maryland and Duke, respectively, before trying their hand at collegiate football as graduate students next fall. Multi-sport athletes in high school who excelled on the gridiron, each of the trio had the athletic chops to pursue such a dream.
But the coronavirus has put an unexpected wrinkle in their intentions — and each player seems to be handling it differently.
Aitken, a USILA first-team preseason All-American midfielder, will play football in the fall at Villanova. A wide receiver, defensive back and punter at the Haverford School, he set the single-season school record for receiving yards (858) and touchdowns (11) as a senior.
But this isn’t the end of his career at Virginia. Thanks to a rather unique precedent, Aitken plans to utilize an NCAA waiver to return to Virginia in the spring to end his collegiate lacrosse career on his own terms.
“There is a 20-year-old rule, not a rule we invented here in Charlottesville, Va.,” Cavaliers coach Lars Tiffany said. “We were stunned when we discovered this 20-year-old statute. It was created in 2000 and reaffirmed in 2018.
“I haven’t spent the time understanding why it’s in there. There’s probably some good justification. To tell you we were surprised is an understatement. We had been talking with our compliance staff and their initial reaction was, ‘Lars, this isn’t going to work.’ It’s like they found this big gold nugget.”
Aitken was admitted to Villanova’s School of Business and will begin his Master’s degree in the fall. The plan, Tiffany said, is for him to return to Charlottesville in January 2021 and study at UVA. In an ideal world, the credits he earns at Virginia will transfer to Villanova’s Master’s program.
Giles-Harris, another standout high school football player whose brother, Joe, plays for the Jacksonville Jaguars, will reportedly put his football plans on hold. A source told US Lacrosse Magazine that Giles-Harris is expected to return to Duke next season to play lacrosse, and it’s not anticipated that he will play football for the Blue Devils.
It’s unclear if he’ll pursue football after that.