With his wife’s blessing and encouragement, he decided to start taking classes this semester toward a degree in organizational leadership with a minor in media marketing. He became the only goalie on UNT’s 14-man roster when another missed the registration deadline, and he was determined to prove that he belonged even as a middle-aged rookie.
“I think you can train an old dog new tricks, if they practice,” Sanders said. “And if they work at it.”
Sanders fits in a small niche of middle-aged college student-athletes. Ray Ruschel was 49 when he joined the North Dakota State College of Science football team in 2022. Debbie Blount was 61 when she joined the Reinhardt University women’s golf team in Georgia in 2020.
“My biggest concern through the process is making sure it wasn’t treated as a gimmick,” Sanders said. “This isn’t a PR stunt. I wanted to play. They made me work at it.”
Charles Corcoran, who graduated from UNT with Ethan and Bonham last year, is the Mean Green head coach. He was plenty familiar with the family’s athleticism and work ethic, and that gave him confidence that Sanders might do well.
“He is a very fast learner,” Corcoran said. “His biggest thing is he wants to learn, and he wants to get better. He was telling me that last night when I was making a few corrections. I told him good job, and he said, ‘I just want to get better, that’s all I want to do.’ He strives for it more than anyone else out there. As long as he keeps wanting to get better and it shows every day at practice, he’ll keep growing at an exponential rate.”
The Mean Green have been lifted by what they have seen of their rookie goalie. Sanders has emerged as reliable in cage.
“His footwork, his hand speed, everything has gotten better,” Wes said. “He started from a zero, so the only way he could go was up. He’s still progressing. It’s just more time in the goal and more time at practices. He’s pretty solid for being a first-year guy.”
Sanders has endeared himself to his teammates by insisting on being treated the same as every other player. Corcoran had him running sprints with the team on his birthday Wednesday. “I wasn’t last,” said Sanders, whose attitude has been a positive influence on the team while also filling a huge hole.
“He’s gotten over the fear really quick of getting a shot fired at you,” Corcoran said. “That’s one of the first and biggest steps for a goalie that’s just starting out is getting over that fear and getting over the pain of getting hit in the shin or anything like that. He’s stepped up fast with that, gotten over the fear, and he’s willing to push the other people on the team. You have 18-year-old freshmen out there, and he’s saying, I’m 45, I’m 46 and I can do it.”
“I’m trying to be as coachable as I can,” Sanders said. “It’s hard to do when everybody on the team including the coaching staff, I’m old enough to be their dad.”
Sanders is still working full-time weeks while juggling classes and lacrosse practice. He was up late Thursday to complete a test after practice and work, one day after his family made little fanfare of his birthday. The team didn’t even know about it.
“We have a game this Saturday,” Ethan said. “We don’t have time for that.”
Sanders credits Ethan’s defense for helping lighten his work in his debut. He saw only 17 total shots last week, the sort of protection he can appreciate. Just being on the North Texas team has meant a lot more than he ever anticipated when he decided to return to school.
“It wasn’t about the lacrosse,” Sanders said. “But once I got in, the teammates are great, it feels like a little brotherhood of my own little network. They encourage me, and I just want to get better. And I’m not awful.”