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
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