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The boys’ lacrosse team at Martinsburg High School was undoubtedly West Virginia’s best in 1977, but they weren’t exactly feared by the other teams in the Mountain State.
That’s because, in 1977, Martinsburg was the only high school lacrosse team in West Virginia.
“Those guys will be quick to tell you, ‘Yeah, we won the first state championship in West Virginia,’” said Martinsburg’s current coach Neil Troppman, a former army brat who learned the game 70 miles away in Columbia, Md. “But they’re the only team that ever played.”
Back then, Martinsburg played mostly against schools from Maryland. But local interest waned, and within a few years, mighty Martinsburg lacrosse disappeared. For the next three decades, the largest city in West Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle had no lacrosse program at all.
That changed in 2010, when the Panhandle Pride youth program started through the city’s Parks and Recreation department. Troppman became involved when he signed up his 5-year-old son. He was eager to pass on the sport that he learned to love during his younger days in Maryland. His son was not as enthused.
“I had to trick him to get him there,” Troppman said. “But once he started playing, he was hooked. There was no looking back.”
He wasn’t the only one. Spurred by commitment from volunteers, word of mouth and a grant from USA Lacrosse, the youth program took off. The seeds that were replanted a decade ago finally bloomed this spring. In 2021, Martinsburg, once the default most dominant team in West Virginia, finally had a high school team again.
The lacrosse landscape has changed, but not by much. Martinsburg is one of only about 20 high school teams in West Virginia. But in a move that those state champions of the ‘70s may have found detrimental, Troppman’s goal is to get more teams in the state, targeting schools in Berkeley and Jefferson counties.
“Getting the game into more high schools in this area gives the kids in the youth program something to look forward to,” Troppman said. “They’re not just playing a youth sport. They know they can have something to play in high school.”
The youth program grew, as is often the case, by plucking the kids — and parents — who were bored by baseball.
“It’s a lot more exciting,” Troppman said. “The parents at these youth games seem to be a lot more enthusiastic. You’re not melting in the summer heat of a little league game. You’re watching an exciting game.”