Robur, Honor, Fraternitas
Ave Angele!
It's
Always A good
Day to Be An Angel!
April 12,
2002
By Daniel Rowland
Special to The Denver Post
Since the late
1960s, when Jon Barocas spent his spring afternoons playing for Denver
Country Day, he has exuded nothing but passion for lacrosse.
Barocas began and ended his playing career in Colorado, thousands of
miles removed the sport's hotbed on the East Coast. Since his playing
days ended, Barocas has built a powerhouse program at Denver East High
School.
In a sport in
which coaches come and go nearly as often as the athletes who play for
them, Barocas hasn't strayed from the sideline in almost a
quarter-century. In his 24th season as coach at East, Barocas has
guided the Angels to nine state championships, including one in 2000,
the school's only title since the sport was sanctioned by the Colorado
High School Activities Association in 1998.
But the senior man in the state's coaching fraternity isn't just at the
head of the coaching table, he also is the patriarch of what longtime
East fans affectionately call the "first family" of Colorado lacrosse.
David Barocas, a junior attackman for the Angels, has been at East
games since he was a toddler, hanging out near the sideline his father
patrolled. Andrea Barocas, who plays first home on the
girls team at East has had a similar upbringing. Some might say the two
were born with lacrosse sticks in their hands. Just for good measure,
their father made sure his babies had sticks with
them at the
hospital when they came into the world. With their father's enthusiasm
for the game and proven coaching ability, it comes as no surprise the
Barocas children are excelling on the field. Through Tuesday, David had
14 goals and 14 assists and is drawing interest from a handful of
Division I programs, including Johns Hopkins. Andrea, a sophomore, has
seven goals and 11 assists through six games. Jon Barocas picked up the
paper one morning after East's boys and girls teams had been in action
and realized a dream that has been in the making. "It's something that
I've dreamt about for a long time, to see the box scores with both
their names in there," Barocas said. "It's something that as a father
I'd want to see anyway, but as a coach it's so gratifying." But for
Barocas, whose will to win and intensity on the sideline is matched
only by the volume of his voice during games, coaching offered a new
challenge when David became a starter on his team. "It's hard sometimes
to be the coach's son," said David, who found himself reacting to his
coach's criticism in ways other players wouldn't dream. "We had a lot
of problems last year. I would disagree with him and talk back like I
was his son. Now, we kind of know our boundaries." But like Andrea, who
experiences the more tranquil version of her father - the fan, not the
coach - at her games, David always knew he would suit up for the Angels
when the time came. "East is pretty much in their blood," their father
said. "All through the time that they were old enough to walk they've
been around the players and the game, and both of them have excelled in
it in their own right, out of my shadow."
Others have
excelled as well, and the talent level across the state is growing
steadily. "We've seen the play get so much better, individuals and
teams, over the last three years. It's just incredible," Barocas said.
David has noted the improvements as well. "I think that lacrosse in
Colorado has gotten so much better," he said. "The improvement and the
depth of the teams from when I was growing up is a lot better." Jon
Barocas also likes having better competition and the exposure
sanctioning has brought, but said he believes it will take a few more
season for parity in the league to set in. "It's very difficult because
the competition in a lot of the conferences is not real good under the
first two teams," Barocas said. East is the only team in the Southern
League considered a contender this year, and Cherry Creek has similar
status in the Centennial League.
Competition between David and Andrea, however, never has been lacking.
"We are pretty competitive when it comes down to everything," Andrea
said. "Boys and girls kind of compete about whose game is harder and
what game is rougher. I'm on the girls side about that kind of stuff,
but I enjoy boys lacrosse just as much as I do women's."
The East girls,
who fell to 6-2 after losing Monday night to top-ranked Cherry Creek,
are looking for their first state championship. The Angels lost 12
seniors from last year's team. "I hope by the time I'm a senior, we'll
be good enough to get up there," said Andrea, who is not ruling out her
current team. "From the amount of seniors that we lost we are a really
good team this year. I have really high expections and I think that
we'll
do pretty well." David knows his team, which is 5-2 after defeating
George Washington 9-1 on Wednesday night, always will be in the hunt as
long as his father is running things. "He made this team," David said.
"A lot of people come to East just to play for him." David and Andrea
get all the time with the coach they need, and growing up in the "first
family" certainly hasn't hurt their games. "It's fun," Andrea said. "If
we have nothing better to do then the three of us can just go out and
play. And now my little brother too can come out and pass it around."
Yes, there is another. Eight-year-old Benjamin Barocas is an East
standout in the making. He plays for the Redhawks, a competitive
organization that fields teams for 8- to 14-year-olds. He also appears
with his dad in the Angels' team picture every year, just like his
brother and sister did before they were old enough to don the uniforms.
Lacrosse simply is a way of life in the Barocas family. And seeinghis
children embrace the sport he loves so much gives coach Barocas more
joy than any of his nearly 300 wins at East. "I've tried to say, 'You
want to play baseball, play baseball,' but Lacrosse has always been
their love," he said. Passion breeds passion.
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