Scott Verkuilen was at pretty much rock bottom
last August. Shortly before his senior year and final football season at
Moorhead High School was to begin, he was hospitalized. There was surgery. Then
chemotherapy.
He was, as he told me recently, "really, really sick."
He was undergoing treatment for nodular
lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma, which is as scary as it sounds.
Visitors from Make-A-Wish Minnesota were with Scott in the hospital, asking if
he had any wish that they could help fulfill.
The options were amazing. Did he want to go skydiving with
Dwayne The Rock Johnson? How about traveling to Australia or another exotic
location?
Verkuilen talked with his parents about the possibilities.
“The options were completely wide open,” he said.
But
Scott also thought about Moorhead. He had lived in Little Falls until sixth
grade before moving to Moorhead. And he loves Moorhead; his friends, his
school, the community, the tradition, the Spuds.
Last fall, voters in Moorhead overwhelmingly approved the
construction of a new high school. Verkuilen thought about that, came up with
an idea and made his wish known. He wanted his school to have a world-class
weight room.
“I thought what better way to not only better myself but to
help those around me,” he said. “That pay-it-forward movement, treat others as
you would like to be treated. I knew the school was getting redone and I knew
sometimes those expenses get overlooked.”
And that's when others jumped in. Moorhead High School
strength and conditioning coach Cory Herrmann, who coaches the Spuds
weightlifting team, spread Scott's story and wish through contacts nationwide.
A monetary contribution from Make-A-Wish Minnesota got the ball rolling. Power
Lift, a company specializing in weightlifting equipment, got on board, as did
similar firms Intek Strength and Dynamax, along with the Moorhead school
district. Essentially, the new weight room will receive $200,000 worth of
donated gear.
“It gives you goosebumps just thinking about it,” Spuds head
football coach Kevin Feeney said of Scott’s wish.
All the Spuds football players and coaches gathered for an
online team meeting one evening last week. Representatives from Make-A-Wish
Minnesota and Power Lift were also on the video call as Scott learned that his
wish had been finalized and a top-shelf weight room would serve Moorhead
students for many years to come.
“For a teenage kid, a high school kid, to come up and think
of something like that to give back, rather than take a trip somewhere you
always wanted to go, I thought it was fantastic,” Herrmann told Verkuilen.
Scott said on the call, “I just wanted to make sure that
everyone knows they are not alone.”
That was a sentiment that helped carry Scott through surgery,
chemotherapy, loss of his hair and everything that went into his recovery. He
now has a clean bill of health. After his final chemo treatment in December at
Roger Maris Cancer Center in Fargo, his teammates and other friends filled the
lobby with smiles, hugs and cheers as Scott rang a celebratory bell.
“Before
all this happened, I would have told you Scotty was one of those guys who was
wise beyond his years,” Feeney said. “He’s a very mature young man. Going
through this process, I could not believe how he handled it and how he
consistently worried about everybody else and not himself.
“Our team learned so much, like you’re never alone. Our team
rallied around him. The kids who went through this with him understand his
legacy. He was as strong as he could be and more selfless than he should have
been. This group understands that legacy and it will be easy to keep that
legacy more visible for future generations.”
Scott will enroll at Concordia University in Moorhead this
fall on a pre-med track with the goal of becoming an oral surgeon. It will be a
grand day, in three years or so, when he helps cut the ribbon on the weight
room that will have his name on the wall. Weight plates will bear some of his
signature phrases, such as “Never Alone.”
The Moorhead weightlifting team began when Scott was a
ninth-grader and he loved it from the start; the room, the work, the support,
the goal-setting.
“The team was really important to me and coach Herrmann has
been a mentor for me,” he said. “He gave us an opportunity to be a part of
something great.”
Verkuilen missed his junior football season when he suffered
a hand injury during summer training. He wrestled that winter and had what he
called a “decent season.”
His cancer battle began last July began when tumors were
discovered in his neck. A lymph node the size of a golf ball was surgically
removed. And here he is now, ending his high school days with health, a smile
and a joyous attitude.
“I received a few messages from various teammates, saying
this was inspirational,” he said. “I just wanted to pay it back. I hope that it
inspires others to leave a mark on the world.
“It’s a dream that came true. I’m so unbelievably grateful to
everybody.”
--Follow
John on Twitter @MSHSLjohn, listen to "Preps Today with John Millea”
wherever you get podcasts and hear him on Minnesota Public Radio
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