“Not that he didn’t want us there, but he didn’t want us to stop doing what he loved doing,” Jake said. “He didn’t want what he was going through to fall on us. He was adamant about us going to get to a game or practice. That’s just who he was, and he didn’t want us to worry about him. He wanted us to live our lives, with all three of us pretty committed to what we do.”
And they listened to his advice. Once their college seasons were over, Jesse and Jake joined their respective leagues. The only difference was that this year, they wouldn’t be facing off twice during the season.
Jesse has remained with MLL’s Chesapeake Bayhawks, the franchise that drafted him. Jake decided to take the plunge into the newly established PLL, where he stars for the championship-bound Whipsnakes.
In between games and practices, Jesse and Jake take the time to watch each other’s games.
But it wasn’t long into the season that Jim Bernhardt lost his battle with lymphoma. He passed away June 21 with his family by his side.
As tough as it was for the Bernhardts to lose their father, the lacrosse family stepped up in support. Throughout the community, messages of support were sent their way. At the funeral services were members of the Whipsnakes, the Bayhawks, Vermont men’s lacrosse, Maryland men’s lacrosse and plenty more.
Each person shared a different story of how their father impacted their lives. Many couldn’t ignore the aspects of Jim Bernhardt that existed in Jesse and Jake.
“People tell me that I look exactly like him,” Jake said. “I would get caught off guard. I’d see pictures and whatnot, but people would say I was just like him. Through this whole process, I would hear people tell stories about my dad and it was like I was listening to myself, the way he was committed to his work. And that’s why he was so adamant prior to his passing that we live our lives, because he had been so committed to coaching and doing it at a high level that maybe he somehow put the blinders on certain things.”
When the Bernhardts returned to their locker rooms, teammates offered the same amount of support. For two brothers that grew up in locker rooms, it provided comfort to return to that environment.
“For my teammates, it’s not easy either just because, ‘How do you approach that guy? How do you talk to him? How’s he going to be out there?’” Jesse said. “It’s not easy, and people are very delicate asking about it. Now I just use it as an opportunity to talk about my dad, and I could talk about him for a long time. It’s a good way to reflect and remember him.”
With their father still fresh in mind, the Bernhardt brothers are both chasing professional lacrosse championships. Jake and the Whipsnakes have advanced to the PLL title game Sept. 21, while Jesse and the Bayhawks are headed for the MLL playoffs.
At the same time, Jared is preparing for his senior season at Maryland — recently taking the steps to start his recruitment for a fifth year in college football, a sport where his father made a living. Jared and his father had been planning his fifth-year football experience up until his passing this summer. Jesse and Jake have pledged to help Jared in his recruitment process.
All three brothers are living out the lives that their father would have wished for them. Sports, specifically lacrosse, have become second nature for Jake, Jesse and Jared.
And they’ll continue to pursue their passion, fully focused, for as long as they can. In doing so, they’ll make their father proud, which is what they’ve always tried to do.
“Everything he told us has worked,” Jesse said.