Sunday, July 9, 2023

John’s Journal: No. 1 From 2022-23/ One Step At A Time, One Foot In Front Of The Other

 

In a long career writing about high school sports and activities, I have written about many inspiring student-athletes. Some of them participated despite missing an arm or a leg, some overcame serious injuries to return to their team; there are a number of those kids (many of them now adults) out there and I appreciate every one of them as well as the inspiration they provide.

I met Luke Klassen on a warm, windy day last fall at the golf course outside of Blue Earth. As with so many stories I write, someone had sent me an email about Luke and what he was accomplishing. The fact that Luke, a senior from Mountain Lake, never missed a cross-country competition last fall despite going through cancer treatments is simply astounding. That’s why the MSHSL named him Minnesota’s Spirit of Sport Award winner for the year and why he was recognized as the upper midwest winner of that award by the National Federation of State High School Associations.

I was proud to present that NFHS award to Luke this spring during an assembly at school in Mountain Lake, and afterwards I watched him compete at a track meet. Luke will continue to inspire people for the rest of his days. He is one in a million

This story, which is No. 1 on my list of John’s Journal stories from the 2022-23 school year, was originally posted on October 13.

Luke Klassen jokes about his hair … or current lack of hair. The good news is that his hair will come back. The cancer? That can stay away.

Luke is a senior at Mountain Lake High School who has been part of the Wolverines cross-country team since seventh grade. When he was diagnosed with cancer during the summer, his life was turned upside down and he thought his final season as a high school cross-country runner – he had been named a team captain -- would not happen.

But what happened was and is amazing. One day after being diagnosed with mixed germ cell cancer on June 11, he had surgery to remove a tumor from his groin area. Tests showed that cancer cells had spread to his chest and lymph nodes. Between then and Sept. 15, he underwent chemotherapy treatments in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, sometimes becoming so sick from the drugs that he could hardly stand. And yet …

Luke never stopped running. He has competed in every cross-country meet on the schedule this season. He hasn’t always competed with his varsity teammates, sometimes running junior varsity or junior high races. But he never stopped running. One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

That’s how important his teammates, his friends, his coaches and cross-country is to him.

After running in the varsity race at the recent Buc Invite in Bue Earth, Luke told me, "I don't know how I would have made it through without this team and this sport."

Only four months had passed from Luke’s surgery until this week’s meet in Blue Earth. Shiny scalp aside, Luke looked strong as he ran. And he looked exactly like a team captain before and after, leading his teammates in stretching exercises and cheering for teammates who competed in other races before and after he ran.

“Luke has been the most faithful, inspired, inspirational person through all this,” said Mountain Lake coach Kyle Blomgren.

After Luke learned of his diagnosis, he went to Blomgren to tell him the bad news. That turned out to be an important meeting.

“I just knew it would be really hard,” Luke said. “Because I knew it would break his heart hearing that news. I didn't even know if I'd be able to get out of a chair for who knows how long because of this.”

Luke told the coach the diagnosis, thinking that the illness would never allow him to be the kind of team leader he wanted to be.

Blomgren’s response was not what Luke expected to hear. The coach talked about other ways to be a leader.

“He said, ‘Well, how are you going to lead then? What are you going to do?’ And we talked about it. We said even if I have to be in a chair on the sidelines, we’re going to lead and be involved and be a part of the team. And that was super inspirational to me.

“Here I was, going into it knowing I was just going to break his heart. I said, ‘I'm so sorry.’ And when I walked out, he had encouraged me a lot, which was really great.”

Among Luke’s teammates is his younger brother Zach. Their parents, Chad and Esther, along with extended family, friends and folks the Klassens may never meet, have offered support every step of the way.

T-shirts were sold. Fundraising events were held, with some proceeds being donated to Ronald McDonald House, which housed the Klassens for free while Luke was undergoing several five-day rounds of chemotherapy. An event called Luke 5:19 (after a Bible verse), held on Luke’s 18th birthday in August, saw people running or walking laps from noon until 5:19 p.m., with pledges coming in as nearly 400 miles were completed.

Luke’s mom is a breast cancer survivor, and Esther feared for what her son would be subjected to during treatments for what doctors considered Stage 3.1 cancer.

“I know what chemo is, so to willingly subject my child to what I had endured was hard,” she said. “I just thought, ‘Wow, how can we put a 17-year-old through that? So I asked the oncologist, ‘What if we do nothing?’ She paused for a long time and looked at us to make sure what we were asking and she said the tumors will grow, they'll build up in his lungs and he'll suffocate and he'll be gone before he graduates from college.”

Luke said, “It was super gruesome and dark, obviously. But that put a good perspective on everything. I might be feeling like crap but I told myself I can endure this; I can't endure drowning in my own lungs.”

The decision to continue running came with the blessing of Luke’s care team, which included some experienced runners.

“They said being able to stay active in some way, keeping yourself somewhat moving and keeping yourself in good spirits was so important,” Chad said. “It doesn't just help you make it through mentally but your body even reacts better.”

One of the most astonishing races that Luke ran came at a home meet in Mountain Lake. It was held on a Friday, which was always the second day of Luke’s five-day chemo sessions.

As the Klassens were making the two-hour drive to Sioux Falls on Thursday, Luke asked his parents about competing in the race the next day. 

“As a mom,” said Esther, “I just wanted to wrap him in bubble wrap.” She told her son they would ask his oncologist, “And if she approves,” she said to Luke, “I will drive you all the way back home.”

Luke completed that day’s chemo, got the OK to run, they returned home and the next morning he was running with his team in their home meet during his senior year. Afterwards it was back to Sioux Falls to continue with treatments.

There were plenty of rough patches, including two platelet transfusions and one blood transfusion. On the first day of cross-country practice, Luke nearly threw up. “I ran the warm-up and was shaky and unsteady and had to immediately run to the bathroom and hold myself with the toilet for a little bit,” he said.

On several occasions, the effects from chemo meant trips to the emergency room in Windom. But running, the simple act of running, was always there as a goal, a beacon. One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

Luke’s goal in each competition was simple: Finish the race.

“I love this sport,” he said. “It’s something I’m passionate about, but I couldn't do much more than finish (early on). But once the chemo ended, I was able to start doing more immediately. The very next race, which wasn't even a week later, I already felt like I could actually race. I saw someone and I wanted to catch them. And I did. I didn't collapse.”

A year ago Luke was usually the No. 3 runner for his team. In cross-country, the places of the top five finishers for each team are combined to tabulate the final results. His goal this season is to return to the top five. He was the Wolverines’ No. 6 varsity finisher at the Buc Invite. The individual winner was Luke Miest of St. James. Zach Klassen was Mountain Lake’s No. 2 runner and Luke was 31st in a field of 44 runners.

Luke has a clean bill of health and undergoes tests every two months to make sure the cancer hasn’t returned. Those intervals will get larger as time goes on; eventually he will be tested once a year throughout his life.

The Klassens know they can never repay everyone for all the good deeds that have come their son’s way.

“We've seen that communities want to fight with someone and they love to get behind someone who is fighting,” Esther said. “Because life is hard.”

Luke’s attitude was a big factor in his battle. There were times in the hospital when he couldn’t stop vomiting, times when his blood pressure was worrisome, times when he had a dangerously high fever.

Esther recounted one of those times, saying, “There were like 10 of us in the room trying to help him. And then he just laid back and said (jokingly), ‘Well, that wasn't too bad.’

“He was really kind to all the nurses, which isn't always the case with every patient. Nursing is a tough job. He asked about their days. He thanked them for things.”

As strange as it may sound, Luke knows he was lucky. His cancer is highly treatable and he received tremendous care and support

“My cancer is really, really rare but it dies fast to the chemo,” he said. “Chemo kills it really well.”

Meanwhile, Luke continues to run. He also continues to lead. He’s looking forward to the track and field season, where he focuses on the 400- and 800-meter distances. He was an alternate on his school’s 4x800 relay team that placed eighth at the Class 1A state meet last spring. Wouldn’t a chance to run at state next year be a great way to cap his high school career?

“Running kept me going,” he said. “It gave me something to get up and do every day.”

One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

 

Saturday, July 8, 2023

John’s Journal: No. 2 From 2022-23/ A Powerful Statement About Respecting Officials


In mid-December I drove to Rushford-Peterson High School in southeast Minnesota for a basketball game between the home team and the visitors from La Crescent-Hokah. The game was secondary to my mission that evening. Working with Lancers coach Ryan Thibodeau, I had set up a pregame interview with La Crescent-Hokah senior Noah Bjerke-Wieser. We sat off by ourselves and talked about what he had done a few days earlier in the name of sportsmanship and respecting officials. What he had done was quite remarkable, and he has been recognized nationally.

The story was originally posted on Dec. 19.

Noah Bjerke-Wieser had seen enough. The senior captain of the boys basketball team at La Crescent-Hokah High School in the southeast corner of Minnesota was frustrated and wanted to do something. The problem was sportsmanship, particularly mistreatment of officials.

Last Tuesday evening, Noah went home after the Lancers defeated Fillmore Central 62-53 in a Three Rivers Conference game in La Crescent. Thinking of how people had acted toward the officials, he started to write. He told his mom, Jamie, what he intended to say.

“I went to her and I was like, ‘I think I'm going to post this. What do you think about it?,’ ” Noah told me. “She said, ‘I don't know if you should.’ I told her I feel like I should because it can help, it can only do positive things.”

He posted his message on Facebook at 10:18 p.m. and the darn thing exploded. In 239 very well-written, very respectable words, he asked everyone to think about what they had been doing:

“Hello Lancer community, I am Noah Bjerke-Wieser and I would like to talk about our team’s basketball game tonight. We all know that there were some controversial calls but nothing is going to be perfect. As a captain of the varsity team I would like to come out and say we need to stop yelling at the refs, us as players, and as spectators in the stands. Nobody will ever call a perfect game and everybody makes mistakes. We all get it is frustrating watching and playing in a game where the officiating is not great. But we need to stop. It is hard enough to get officials to ref a varsity game anyway, it doesn’t help when they specifically don’t want to ref for a La Crescent game because they know they will be getting yelled at. I personally would appreciate it if we could change the “La Crescent way” and when refs see La Crescent on the schedule they WANT to ref for us because of how great our team and fan base are. As players and spectators we need to let the players play, the officials officiate, and the fans cheer. I know I am not perfect in this too but we need to change. I hope we can all come together as a community and change for the better. Thank you for coming and supporting us but let’s support our team in a positive way.”

Someone sent me his note via Twitter, and I posted it to my followers. It also was posted on the MSHSL Facebook page. The reaction was overwhelming.

--"Awesome read! Proud of this high school student recognizing this issue. Kids just want to play and have fun.”

--" Well said! You sound like a great leader for your teammates & fans! Keep up the great work!”

--"Every community needs to hear this. I hope this spreads like wildfire.”

--" So cool to see a player writing this.”

Thousands of social media Likes and positive messages later, Noah has been a little taken aback by the reaction.

“I didn't think it was going to get that big,” Noah told me in Rushford on Friday night, where the Lancers played Rushford-Peterson. “But after I really thought about it as coming from a student, more people are going to think it's more of a problem, right? Everyone said they've been super proud, that they’re glad I did that or thankful I did that.”

He had seen people treat officials poorly during games in La Crescent for a long time. Something clicked after the Fillmore Central game, leading him to his keyboard afterwards.

“I've thought about it in the past and I didn't really think it was that big of a deal,” he said of the treatment toward officials. “But that game really stood out to me.”

La Crescent-Hokah coach Ryan Thibodeau, who was unaware that Noah was planning to post anything, said, “Number one, what a positive message. And it touches everybody in this region and it touches everybody in the country. And there’s the leadership piece of it, too. Until we started basketball this season, I didn’t really see Noah as more of that vocal piece. And now to watch him act as a leader; I know how hard he works and his teammates see that stuff. But to be able to speak your opinion and not feel afraid of any sort of pushback was impressive.”

The MSHSL and other organizations, including the National Federation of State High School Associations, regularly post messages about the importance of officials and showing respect toward them. Across the country, there is a shortage of youth and high school officials, with mistreatment by fans among the biggest reasons.

It can be difficult for those messages to sink in, but such a clear, powerful, honest statement from a student-athlete takes it to another level.

“It's an opportunity to learn and to teach about the message,” Thibodeau said. “It's just a good, positive general message that's not pertaining to just one set of individuals. And you know, a lot of it is made out to be the people in the stands, but from my role, too, I was able to reflect on it as well; as a coach, how are my players handling these adverse situations? I really just viewed it as a powerful, general message on how we can all be better, how we can all be more positive, and how we can all appreciate just being in the gym and being together.”

Noah, who also plays football and is a member of the golf team, spent a half hour or so writing his message. His mom helped proofread the note before he posted it.

“I gave it a lot of thought and tried to use the best words that I could,” he said.

He certainly accomplished that, with words like these: “I hope we can all come together as a community and change for the better.”

Noah’s message is one that should resonate across Minnesota and around the country.

“As a captain of the varsity team I would like to come out and say we need to stop yelling at the refs, us as players, and as spectators in the stands. Nobody will ever call a perfect game and everybody makes mistakes.”

As Noah and I talked, I posed this question: “Have you ever thought about becoming an official someday?”

He smiled and said, “Yeah, I definitely want to be a basketball official and probably football, too.”

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Friday, July 7, 2023

John’s Journal: No. 3 From 2022-23/ Female Wrestling Coaches Fill Important Positions


The growth of girls high school wrestling in Minnesota over the past two years has been remarkable. During the 2022-23 wresting season, full brackets of girls wrestled at the state tournament for the first time. The scene at Xcel Energy Center was electric during those matches, adding another level of greatness to an already outstanding tournament.

The addition of female wrestlers has led to a growing number of female wrestling coaches. I wrote about this facet of the sport prior to the state tournament, and this story is No. 3 on the list of my Top 10 favorite stories from 2022-23. It originally appeared on Feb. 27.

Teresa Tonda remembers the day in May 2021 when girls wrestling was approved as an MSHSL sport. Despite having no background in the sport, the longtime teacher in South St. Paul and a onetime basketball coach immediately made it clear that she wanted to help coach female wrestlers.

The middle school language arts teacher, now in her 34th year as an educator, said, “Literally that day I went in and said, ‘I want to coach wrestling.’ My stepsons had wrestled, I love the sport and I wanted to be part of girls having a place to belong.”

Tonda is one of several female high school wrestling coaches in Minnesota, where wrestling for girls is in its second season. Some of the coaches are veteran teachers and coaches in other sports, some have children who wrestled, some are young women who have experience as wrestlers on the high school and college levels, and all are enthusiastic about this new opportunity for female athletes.

“It’s really awesome being a role model and leader for these girls,” said Savannah Vold, 23, an assistant coach at Chatfield who wrestled at Rochester Mayo High School, Waldorf University in Iowa and Augsburg University in Minneapolis. “It’s cool to know how much they look up to me.”

The number of MSHSL schools sponsoring girls wrestling doubled to 96 this season, and the opportunities for postseason berths also doubled. The number of section tournaments for girls went from two last season to four this season, and the number of girls advancing to state also has doubled.

Ninety-six females have qualified for this week’s state tournament at Xcel Energy Center. A year ago, when girls competition was held for the first time, four girls advanced to state in each weight class. When the individual competition for girls and boys is held Friday and Saturday (boys will compete for team titles on Thursday), girls will wrestle in 12 weight classes from 100 to 235 pounds, with eight girls in each class.

It's a sea change for a sport that was largely a boys-only activity for nearly a century; the MSHSL began sponsoring state wrestling tournaments in 1938.

“The big thing for me is I wanted to show girls you can have a job and be a mom and work out and be strong and sweaty and dirty, and then you clean up and put on your high-heeled shoes and go to the dance,” Tonda said. “There are zero limitations for girls.”

South St. Paul’s Gisele Gallegos and Ella George will wrestle at state. The Packers brought seven female wrestlers to the section tournament and they all medaled, including three who are first-year wrestlers.

Kahlea Jolly, 21, is one of the busiest wrestlers and wrestling coaches in the state. She wrestled at Centennial High School for four years and is now a senior wrestler at Augsburg -- which has sponsored women’s wrestling since the 2019-20 season – as well as an assistant coach at Centennial. She was at Hastings High School for a girls section wrestling tournament on Feb. 11, where Centennial’s Jaden Ruegsegger, Nora Akpan and Alaina Franco advanced to state.

“It was full of emotions,” Jolly said of the section tourney. “The highest of highs, sending three girls to state, and the other girls barely missed going to state. I was full of adrenaline all day long. It’s kind of bittersweet because when I was in high school, we didn’t have this. I’m soaking up every second of it.”

Jolly is very busy, because a typical day begins with wrestling practice at Augsburg at 7 a.m., a full slate of college classes, followed by coaching Centennial High School wrestlers at 3:30.

“I love it,” she said.

A love of wrestling provides motivation for coaches, no matter the gender.

Jenn Passe, 38, works as a school nurse at Jordan High School as well as a first-year assistant wrestling coach for the Scott West team, a cooperative squad with athletes from Jordan and Belle Plaine. She wrestled at Hesperia High School while growing up in southern California.

“It was the only way my dad would let me and sister wrestle,” she said, “if it was on all-girls team. Me, my sister and other girls joined forces. My dad drove us to tournaments, because there were no buses for us. It was nothing like it is today. We had three tournaments and that was it. No section, no state, nothing like it is now.

“And I would have to say I love it,” she said. “My five-year goal is to build the girls team up as well as the boys team. We had 10 girls at Scott West to start with, and two left the team. Next year I hope to double or triple that number. I’m paying my respect back from when I was in it, and I’m glad I can pay it forward because I love wrestling.”

Vold graduated from Rochester Mayo in 2018. She began wrestling as a high school junior, competing mainly against boys.

“You really didn’t see any girls wrestling,” she said. “It was crazy if you saw two girls. It was basically all boys.”

Chloe Berg, who will wrestle at state this week, is one of seven female wrestlers on the team at Chatfield.

“I love all of them so much,” Vold said. “It’s so much fun getting to bond with them and relate to them. That makes the girls more comfortable to come out for wrestling.”

Having females compete has given wrestling a big boost, in numbers as well as attention. The female coaches see much more growth ahead.

“Honestly, I feel like it’s going to keep getting bigger and bigger,” Vold said. “It’s amazing that the MSHSL has sanctioned it. I’ve talked to my friends from Augsburg and we wish we’d had this opportunity. It’s cool to talk to the wrestlers now and hope they appreciate this.  I don’t have any doubt that it’s going to continue getting bigger. Now that it’s an actual thing and they see all these girls go to college and wrestle, they know they have a shot with this now. It’s super cool to see.”

Passe said, “Ten years from now, I feel like girls wrestling will be just as big as boys wrestling, if not bigger. Especially with how many girls wrestle now compared to just five years ago. I feel like it’s a powerful sport and now that parents are realizing that their girls can do it, and now there are female coaches and female refs. It’s going to become a female sport just as much as a male sport. It’s a wonderful thing.”

Vold said the relationships with young female wrestlers is vitally important.

“I can help give them experiences that I didn’t necessarily get,” she said. “Being there for them off the mat, too, giving them life advice, is important. It’s pretty special.”

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Thursday, July 6, 2023

John’s Journal: No. 4 From 2022-23/ The Sky’s The Limit For Tackle Cancer

 

As stated below, “There may be no other charitable effort like Tackle Cancer in the country.” In the story that was originally posted on Nov. 29, I researched the beginning and the growth of Tackle Cancer, an effort that raises more money every year in the fight against cancer. It’s quite remarkable, and something that the Minnesota football community can be extremely proud of.

After one of the biggest games in Simley High School football history, a victory on Nov. 17 that moved the Spartans into the Prep Bowl state championship game this week, head coach Chris Mensen was standing in a quiet hallway inside U.S. Bank Stadium and talking about Kim Madigan.

Kim was 59 years old when she died on January 20, 2020. Her husband Mark is an assistant football coach at Simley and Kim was an administrative assistant in the athletic department at the school in Inver Grove Heights. Her memorial service was held in the school gymnasium.

As Mensen talked about Kim, he touched a rubber wristband he wears in her memory. The Spartans had just defeated Rocori 17-16 in the Class 4A state semifinals; they will face Hutchinson in the Prep Bowl on Friday afternoon. The coach’s thoughts were focused on the team and the day, but when asked if his school raises money in support of Tackle Cancer, his focus shifted.

Kim Madigan died after a battle with cancer.

“I still wear her bracelet because she means the world to this program and this community,” Mensen said. Like at many schools across Minnesota, Simley’s Tackle Cancer activities include T-shirt sales and free-will donations during one designated week and home game each fall.

“And we try to honor someone, a part of the Simley family, who’s suffering from cancer,” he said.

Tackle Cancer began 10 years ago, and by the time all the participating high schools and colleges in Minnesota send in the funds they have collected this fall, the 2022 total will exceed $400,000. In the decade that Tackle Cancer has existed, nearly $3 million has been raised to fight cancer.

There may be no other charitable effort like Tackle Cancer in the country. The Minnesota Football Coaches Association (MFCA) leads the efforts, which provide funding for research, prevention, treatment and other programs Asrelating to the needs of the cancer community.

THE BEGINNING WAS SIMPLE, and no one could have imagined 10 years ago what was to come. It started with two friends: a television veteran and a football coaching veteran.

Randy Shaver, news anchor at KARE TV, is a cancer survivor. He and his wife Roseanne started the Randy Shaver Cancer Research & Community Fund after his experience with the disease. Dave Nelson, now retired as a football coach, was the head coach at Minnetonka High School when he was treated for prostate cancer in 2011. Shaver invited Nelson to one of his fund’s charity events.

“I asked Dave to just come see it, as a friend,” Shaver said. “I told him, ‘Come see what we do, meet some people, have some fun.’ He took that moment and turned it into something that was totally unexpected on my part. It was his initiative to try and do something with the MFCA to benefit something we all deal with in one way or another.”

Nelson and his wife Maureen found the evening to be life-changing, hearing inspirational stories of what people were doing to support Shaver’s foundation. As the Nelsons drove home, Dave began pondering ways to help. “I was thinking, there’s got to be something we can do,” he said.

At a construction project near Minnetonka High School, rocks needed to be removed from the site. The Skippers football team pitched in, spending three days shoveling rocks into wheelbarrows, with Shaver stopping by to show support and take photos with the kids. They dubbed their effort “Rock Cancer” and were paid several thousand dollars, which they donated to Shaver’s cancer fund.

Nelson met with fellow officers from the Minnesota Football Coaches Association, asking if such efforts might be something that other teams would be interested in. That’s when the partnership between Shaver’s foundation and the MFCA began rolling.

“I asked our executive committee, ‘How about if a bunch of teams did this?,’ ” Nelson said. “We got Randy’s blessing and everybody thought it was great.”

The coaches committee met with Randy and Roseanne (she dubbed the project Tackle Cancer) and they decided it would be fantastic if they could raise $5,000 during the 2012 football season. The total? $120,000.

Shaver said, “My first concern was I didn’t want to inconvenience coaches. I didn’t want them to feel obligated. Dave said, ‘They’re all going to be on board.’ They took it and ran with it.”

THEY’VE BEEN RUNNING FASTER AND FARTHER each year as Tackle Cancer efforts have spread around the state. This year, 182 high schools and 18 colleges, including the University of Minnesota, have taken part. The small community of Randolph, which has a well-deserved reputation for charitable giving, led the way by raising $49,000 this fall in their Tackle Cancer efforts.

Stillwater High School raised $26,000 and St. Thomas Academy provided $25,000 to Shaver’s fund.

The St. Thomas Academy head football coach is Dan O’Brien, whose son Casey is a well-known cancer survivor. Casey, who played football at Cretin-Derham Hall and was a holder for kicks at the University of Minnesota, was diagnosed with osteosarcoma, a bone cancer, at age 13 and has had multiple cancer fights since. Casey has undergone 25 surgical procedures and has spent 300 nights in hospitals.

“Cancer has touched everybody in our community,” Dan O’Brien said. “Everybody knows somebody and you think about it every single day. The coaching community is a tight-knit deal. People go through stuff they shouldn’t have to go through. It rips your guts out and you want to support them.”

During this year’s Tackle Cancer events at St. Thomas Academy, the Cadets had donation buckets at the gates, also selling wristbands, headbands and other items. Students at the school wear uniforms, but if they bought a Tackle Cancer shirt they could wear that instead of the uniform.

“For us it’s a week-long deal, not just the day of the game,” Dan O’Brien said. “We start preparing for it in the summer. Our community really rallies around it.”

After 10 years, students and families at high schools all over Minnesota are familiar with Tackle Cancer efforts. The focus is on football games in the fall, but money also is raised for Tackle Cancer during basketball games, wrestling meets and other sports.

The funds are distributed mainly to support cancer research in Minnesota; the Shaver fund puts nearly 95 cents of every dollar into that support. The organization is lean, with Roseanne Shaver serving as executive director and Heather Austin as assistant executive director. Much of the work is done by volunteers.

“We don’t pay (medical) salaries, we don’t pay for researchers or their assistants. We pay for the things they need to do their research,” Randy Shaver said of where the money goes. “It allows us to really dig down and support incredible research projects with the Mayo Clinic, University of Minnesota, University of Minnesota Duluth, all those great places.”

THIS WAS A GRAND FOOTBALL SEASON at Wheaton/Herman-Norcross, with the Warriors winning 12 consecutive games before losing to Mountain Iron-Buhl in the Nine-Man state semifinals.

“Everyone's impacted by cancer nowadays somewhere. We've had parents have it, we've had grandmas and grandpas, it's just everywhere,” said Warriors coach James Paul.

“Tackle Cancer is a way for us to rally for a cause, and I think the kids enjoy it. We have great support with it, too. We order T-shirts and this year I ordered pink team socks, so now we can keep those and use those every year.”

The Warriors also hold an auction with the winners taking possession of the seniors’ jerseys, among other fundraisers.

At Becker, everyone knows Dwight Lundeen has completed 53 seasons as the only head football coach in school history. Some also know that his wife Pam is a breast cancer survivor, his sister Marlene has been declared cancer-free and his brother Dave is currently receiving cancer treatment. Cancer indeed touches everyone.

During Becker’s 2021 efforts, the players wore pink jerseys during warmups before their designated Tackle Cancer game, with the jerseys being given to players’ family members and friends who have been impacted by cancer. This fall, the Bulldogs were given pink footballs, to be gifted to the person of their choosing. Dwight gave his pink football to his brother Dave.

Barnesville and Hawley usually come together on a Tackle Cancer game when they meet in a passionate rivalry with large crowds. If it’s during Homecoming week at Barnesville, girls are not allowed to wear the boys’ jerseys; instead, a silent auction allows girls to get in bidding wars for the jersey they want to wear. The jersey auction alone raised $1,000 last year.

“In our community, we lost a teacher this past summer to cancer and I think everybody knows somebody that's affected by it,” said Barnesville coach Bryan Strand, whose team will meet Chatfield in the Class 1A Prep Bowl game on Friday.

Simley’s Tackle Cancer efforts extend beyond the dollars raised. The football team talks about how cancer impacts their community.

“We speak that week about the importance of thinking about family members and everyone who has come into combat with this awful disease,” Mensen said. “I don't think there's a person out there who hasn't been touched by it. I know I have personally, good friends of mine are currently battling cancer. Everything we can do to fight this horrible disease, I'm in and the kids are in and we want to help serve. That's a great thing.”

Ron Stolski, who retired at Brainerd following the 2019 season after 58 years as a football coach, is executive director of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association. He and other coaches among MFCA leadership have been the driving force behind Tackle Cancer, but Stolski doesn’t hesitate in calling Nelson “The wheelhorse behind this. He has driven it, formed a committee of over a dozen reps responsible for certain sections of the state and did all this great work.”

Stolski, who attends the American Football Coaches Association convention each year, said he talks about Tackle Cancer with people from other states and basically sees blank stares from coaches who are so wrapped up in the game that they have a difficult time thinking of devoting so much time and effort to off-the-field charitable efforts.

That’s clearly not the story in Minnesota. Tackle Cancer is an incredible tale of selflessness and commitment, with football coaches and football players, joined by their communities, going above and beyond to help conquer cancer.

“It’s been so cool to watch it grow,” Nelson said. “The coaches of Minnesota have been so awesome and so many good football programs are behind it. This year our goal was $400,000, which would be a record, and we’re going to breeze past that.”

What does the future hold for Tackle Cancer?

“I think the sky’s the limit, I really do,” said Nelson. “Next year our goal might be $500,000, what the heck? To see what these schools do, it’s unbelievable.”

Shaver smiles when he thinks back to how Tackle Cancer started, how far it’s come and what could happen in the years ahead.

“It’s amazing,” he said. “It started with one guy who took it to the MFCA, who all said, ‘Yes, let’s do this thing.’ I just kind of stand back in amazement and watch what they’ve done.”

--For more information on the Randy Shaver Cancer Research & Community Fund, click here: https://randyshavercancerfund.org/

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

John’s Journal: No. 5 From 2022-23/ A Game To Remember … And Forget

 

As we resume the countdown of my Top 10 favorite John’s Journal stories from the 2022-23 school year, we venture to southeast Minnesota for a Week 1 Nine-Man football game … a game that took two days to complete.

On rare occasions I like to get “inside” a team, being in meetings, riding the bus, really going behind the scenes to get a sense of what the experience is like for players and coaches. This story below, originally posted on Sept. 4, is unlike anything I had ever experienced. The LeRoy-Ostrander football team was coming off a dream season that ended with a state championship, and I was with the Cardinals for their first game a season later.

Was there drama? Absolutely. Uncertainty? Certainly. Courage? Oh yes. From an afternoon team meeting to a silent bus ride home in the rain – and a return trip the next day to finish the game – my time with the LeRoy-Ostrander Cardinals was something special.

The night was dark, the mood was darker and Trevor Carrier’s head was down. He was sitting in the second row of seats on bus number 45 from the LeRoy-Ostrander School District when he made a phone call at 9:21 p.m. Friday. On the other end, a cell phone lit up inside a hospital in Rochester, 38 miles away.

“Hey buddy, how are you doing?,” the LeRoy-Ostrander head football coach said to Layne Bird, senior quarterback who had started the first game of his career that night.

Everyone on the bus and everyone who was at the 2022 season opener between the visiting Cardinals and the Southland Rebels in Adams knew how Layne was doing. Terrible.

This was Week 1 of a season in which the Cardinals are the defending Minnesota state champions of Nine-Man football. Their season opener was not finished on Friday, but Bird’s season was.

It was a crazy, strange, head-spinning day for the Cardinals. Friday’s game was delayed at halftime because of lightning, then delayed again and again as the strikes continued. Finally, a decision was made to resume the game on Saturday morning. The second half began at 11 a.m. – 16 hours after the first-half kickoff – with Southland leading 12-7. The Cardinals scored on their first drive of the second half and came away with a 14-12 win that will long be remembered for many reasons.

“I don’t know why these things happen,” Carrier said into his phone as rain fell on the dark bus. “I’m so proud of you; that’s from my heart. I wish I could take it for you. I wish it was my leg or foot. I love you so damn much.”

*****

The Cardinals had forced Southland to punt on the game’s first possession. From their own 29-yard line, the LeRoy-Ostrander offense lined up with the 5-foot-8, 165-pound Bird at quarterback.

As a receiver last year, Bird caught a 55-yard touchdown pass from then-senior quarterback Chase Johnson during a 58-8 win over Fertile-Beltrami in the Prep Bowl at U.S. Bank Stadium. Hours before he was injured on Friday, while the team was at school waiting to board the bus for Adams, Layne and a teammate walked down a quiet hallway toward Carrier and a few others.

“That’s Layne, our quarterback,” Carrier said to a visitor. “He’s going to have a great year.”

On the first play at Southland, Bird fumbled the snap. On the second play he overthrew sophomore receiver Camden Hungerholt. On third-and-10, Bird ran around the right side on a keeper, took a hard but clean hit, and stayed down in front of the Cardinals bench.

Carrier and assistant coach Kyle Stern ran to him. Stern yelled, “trainer!” Southland’s athletic trainer, Char Yunker, quickly came across the field and kneeled next to Layne. As players from both teams also kneeled, a utility vehicle – normally used for carrying water jugs, yard markers and the like – was driven onto the field by Southland athletic director Randy Smith. It carried Layne to the trainer’s table behind the Rebels bench.

Yunker stabilized Layne’s lower left leg and ankle with a splint. Smith tore the plastic wrap off a pair of new crutches. Bird’s parents, Kim and Brian, pulled their car up, Layne was loaded in and they got on the road to Rochester. His injuries were horrific: fractured tibia, fractured fibula, fractured ankle, tearing of ligaments that connect the leg to the ankle. Everything, wrecked.

When Bird was injured, all the joy and excitement of Week 1 seemed to evaporate. Up to that point, everything had been glorious.

*****

3 p.m.

The Cardinals hold a team meeting, gathering in a room near the school’s indoor swimming pool. They watch film of last year’s Week 1 home game vs. Southland, a 57-26 win. The coaches discuss offense, defense and special teams. Carrier writes on a white board, “Let’s Become Great!”

The meeting ends with these words from the head coach: “We're mentally ready. We're physically ready. There's nothing else but to play the game. I love you, I'm proud of you. Let’s be great.”

Carrier, in his third year as the head coach, is the school’s dean of students and athletic director. A 2003 graduate of Houston High School, he was hired as a kindergarten teacher out of Winona State University. During Friday’s team meeting, he talked to the boys about the strength of Nine-Man football in Section 1, which covers southeast Minnesota.

Seven of the past eight Nine-Man state championship teams have come from Section 1. Grand Meadow won four in a row from 2013 to 2016, Spring Grove took the title in 2017 and 2018, and the Cardinals continued the tradition in 2021.

LeRoy-Ostrander went 6-2 in the regular season last year, losing to Lanesboro and Grand Meadow. They avenged those losses in the section playoffs before three wins at state gave them a 12-2 record.

The 2021 season began with an eerily similar calamity. Then-junior Peyton Roe suffered a broken leg in the opener vs. Southland and missed the rest of the season. When this year’s opener resumed on Saturday morning, it was Roe who scored the winning touchdown on a 2-yard run. Poetic justice, right?

“Do we have to play Week 1 next year?,” Carrier said to the other coaches on the bus ride home Friday night. Gallows humor can be a coping mechanism.

*****

4 p.m.

As is tradition, the coaching staff gathers at Sweet’s Hotel, Restaurant and Lounge -- which has stood in downtown LeRoy since 1898 -- for a pregame meal. Sweet’s owner Lu Overocker greets them with hugs and treats them like royalty. The coaches order the same thing every time, unless the team is coming off a loss. Cheeseburgers, fries, baked potatoes, chicken strips, wings, it’s all available.

“My chicken wings and salad bar are 10-0,” Carrier announces.

The six coaches are close friends and verbally jab each other. Carrier, looking at Aaron Hungerholt’s baked potato and chicken strips, says, “You better hope we lose so you can order something different next week.”

Hungerholt, also the school principal and former head football coach, watches the games from the press box and communicates with Carrier via headset. The other coaches are Stern, Nick Sweeney, Ryan Evans and Dave Farlinger.

As they eat, the discussion ranges from the Gophers’ victory over New Mexico State the previous evening to the Vikings and beyond. Six community-minded men enjoying the moment. Lu, wearing LeRoy-Ostrander red, hugs them as they leave. She tells Carrier, “Give ‘em hell.”

*****

4:45 p.m.

Nearly an hour before the bus will leave, the players wander in and out of the locker room as Metallica music booms. They pull on their football pants, wearing sneakers, slides or just socks. They wander around the school a bit, killing time and mentally preparing. In the gym, the volleyball team is practicing.

The volleyball athletes depart after practice – someone exclaims, “Oh my gosh, boys stink!” -- and the football players congregate in the gym. They throw footballs, they stretch, they banter. More Metallica.

One of the kids asks Carrier, “What time are we leaving?” About half an hour, he’s told. Stern collects the players’ cell phones in a box. They will be returned after the bus arrives back at school following the game. Focus is everything now.

*****

5:45 p.m.

Carrier makes the announcement. “OK boys, let’s load up! We’ve got business to take care of!”

Shoulder pads and jerseys are packed into the rear end of a school van. A small gang of younger kids, who are in charge of water bottles and other sideline necessities, load their gear into another van as the team boards bus No. 45. Their home field is across the street; above the entrance hangs a sign proclaiming their recent gridiron glory, including this: “2021 NINE-MAN FOOTBALL STATE CHAMPIONS.”

Horns honk as cars drive past. It’s a short trip to Adams, just 12 miles west on state highway 56. Between LeRoy and Adams is the tiny town of Taopi, where evidence of an April tornado remains.

The bus is driven by Rick Roe; Peyton is his grandson, as is ninth-grade team member Carson Roe.

As the bus pulls away, Carrier stands in the aisle and says, “Let’s go. Ten minutes to focus.” Music by Eminem pounds out of a Bluetooth speaker in the back of the bus.

Outside the windows, the scenery is familiar. Farms, trees, horses. The official capacity of the bus is 71; there are 25 football players on board. At the Adams city limits a sign proclaims it the “Pride of the Prairie.” The bus rolls through downtown Adams to the west end of town, where an immaculate football field awaits. In the back of the bus, there is rhythmic clapping as a teenage voice yells, “Let’s go baby!”

*****

6:45 p.m.

Meat is being cooked to perfection on two gas grills. The public-address system is pure old-school: Motley Crue, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi. The football field is surrounded by a crowd-control system consisting of metal posts and a single wire cable.

As veterans from American Legion Post 146 in Adams bring out the colors, the Cardinals demonstrate that no detail is too small. They line up on their sideline, evenly and widely spaced, in numerical order. Their names are on the backs of their jerseys and the family connections are clear as they stand at attention for the national anthem. Lewison, Lewison. Hungerholt, Hungerholt. Schaefer, Schaefer. Roe, Roe. Diemer, Diemer.  

Seconds from kickoff, Carrier tells the boys, “We don’t pay taxes here but this is our field! Dominate!”

*****

After Layne is injured and the mood crumbles, so does most everything else for the Cardinals. Camden Hungerholt – son of Aaron, as is eighth-grade player Reid Hungerholt -- moves from receiver to quarterback. His first pass is a great one, 85 yards to Carter Sweeney for a touchdown and 7-0 lead. That is the entirely of the good news for the night.

Talented Southland junior Jack Bruggeman corrals a bad punt snap and runs for a first down on fourth and 22. A Cardinals face-masking penalty helps keep the Rebels’ drive alive, and they score late in the first quarter to trail 7-6.

As the second quarter begins, Carrier says into his headset, “We haven’t shown up yet.” Camden Hungerholt runs 26 yards for a score, which is nullified by a holding penalty. During a timeout, the coach tells the kids, “Start playing football! Stop feeling sorry for yourselves!” The drive ends with an interception in the end zone. Uff da.

Shortly before halftime, Southland takes a 12-7 lead on a fourth-down, 13-yard pass from Noah Bauer to Bruggeman. As the second quarter ends, the Cardinals exit the field and gather behind bus No. 45. They drink water and Gatorade as one of the coaches hands out Rice Krispies treats. “We couldn’t have played a worse half,” Carrier says. “Defensively, we’ve got to stop 26 (Bruggeman). This is what champions are made of. It’s like last year when Peyton got hurt. Champions gotta fight.”

The fighting will have to wait. As the teams return to the field for the second half, a distant, silent bolt of lightning causes a mandatory 30-minute delay before the game can be resumed. The bolts keeps blasting as the storm moves closer. People check the radar on their phones. Referee Grant Klennert from the Rochester Area Officials Association meets with Carrier and Southland coach J.J. Galle, and the decision is made to suspend the game until the next morning.

As the team boards bus No. 45 again, Carrier tells them, “We could be 0-8 and I’ll still love you guys. Mentally we can regroup. It’s devastating, we all love Layne. We have to play for Layne Bird.”

As Rick Roe drives the Cardinals back home, everyone is broken-heartened and confused. In a soft voice, Carrier says to the other coaches, “I don’t get it. It’s not about the game, it’s about the kids.”

*****

8:30 a.m. Saturday

The Cardinals regathered in the meeting room and talked about Layne and how they felt about their friend. Carrier drew a large F on the white board and announced that this was the grade he gave himself for the previous evening.

“I was very emotional,” he said later. “I love Layne to death. I don’t think I did a very good job. It took me a bit to get back on track. It was a difficult situation.”

Shortly before the contest resumed Saturday morning, some of the elation and joy that had surrounded the field in Adams before Friday night’s game was rekindled. A teenage boy got out of a vehicle and moved slowly toward the field, still learning to navigate the world on crutches. When the swelling goes down, Layne Bird will have surgery. But on this sunny morning he wanted to be back with his teammates. There were lots of hugs. And the defending state champions, finally, ultimately, began the season with an emotional and hard-earned win.

“The kids really responded,” Carrier said. “We’re playing for Layne.”

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org  

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