Fans, coaches, and officials outlined the recent 6-Flags
Cross Country course. During the final
event of the morning, JV girls raced the two-lap circuit. As I watched near the midpoint, race leaders
lapped one particular contestant. The
rain-saturated course challenged even the best plodding the muddy trenches worn
into the sod from earlier repetitive races.
While the majority of the competitors completed their second lap to the
checkered finish, one girl running on short, slightly contorted legs veered along
the left fork splashing onto the second half of the course … alone….
Time
elapsed … so much so that individual and team scores were posted. I camped near the finish as a once exuberant, cheering crowd straggled away. I searched two long stretches … no more
athletes. I began to walk to another
stretch of the course to intersect the path of a grandparent.
“I thought
there was one more girl yet to finish?”
I invited a conversation.
“The little
girl with cerebral palsy?” His smile
welcomed a fellow fan. “She run with
your school?”
“No. I
thought she might have been with your school.”
My tone begged to know his allegiance.
“I saw her earlier. Figured she’d
be close by now.”
“No, I
don’t know this girl. My granddaughter
runs for Liberty, north of Kansas City. She’s
a nice athlete and I enjoy cheering her forward, but she’ll never run for
Liberty’s varsity. They’re deep in
strong runners. I know when I was her
age, I couldn’t have competed with the determination she has.” He obviously took great pride traveling the
length of the state to support his granddaughter.
“Liberty sure
has large numbers, a very successful program,” I complimented.
“Yes. They’re good every year.” He spoke of matter of fact. “Same man been coaching them for thirty-two
years. Good man. Lots of good kids.”
I glanced
back to where colorful streamers once marked the finish. The host timing crew with Maryville
University packed the finish tent away.
They secured the electronic scoring system, cords, and displays into
cases and stowed them in vans. They rolled
and stored the checkered flags in overhead bins. Only a remnant, a muddy soup pooled where the
day’s athletes finished to record another competition to history.
Various
teams were loading on busses. The timing
crew and officials drove away. Those
remaining scattered like cattle in small herds across the plain.
“I imagine her coach probably
pulled her off the course.” I referenced
the girl with the crooked legs. “Not only
is it long, but the rain and previous races have reduced it to a sloppy
obstacle ….”
“Oh,
no!” the Liberty fan interrupted. “She’ll finish.” Determination in my elder’s voice anticipated
her appearance. “She has a lot of
heart. She runs for a school somewhere
in our area. Not sure where, but I’ve
seen her run before.”
We were not
to be denied as a mud splattered, exhausted athlete emerged from towering
bramble into the final clearing. She
negotiated mud trenches and pools for grassy shoulders. A handful of athletes from a few different
teams darted around her like bees inspiring one with stricken legs to press
forward, to finish the race. We, too,
channeled words of encouragement walking beside her to a final over-arching
curve.
… and as we
turned, to face the final straight-away out of the curve, an enormous Liberty
squad had reformed an alley, ... the finish, ... yelling, chanting, clapping. Though not a teammate, they cheered the final
athlete … home.
If anyone
had any reason to pack early and hit the road, it was Liberty. If they were not the most distant team to
travel to the event, they were close to it.
Remember the elder’s granddaughter?
She and so many, many more like her were winners that day and will be on
many more occasions to come!
Fortunately, I saw the girl running
with short crippled legs win her own race, one I could not run or experience
with her, but I witnessed her victory and celebrated with her.
Individuals and organizations
cutting corners, … greed, destruction of human life and relationships, … corruption,
abusive power, legal deception … all taunt us to be on top. And yet, events such as what I witnessed on
an overcast Saturday are like a flower breaking through the crease of a
sidewalk or a tree growing out of stone.
“The last shall be first and the first shall
be last.” Matthew 20:16
At this particular meet on this
day, Liberty claimed the team championships in every event, boys and girls, varsity and junior
varsity. They may not collect metal for
the mantle everywhere they compete, but I imagine many win in life everywhere
they run!!!
1 comment:
Wow! Great blog Tim. I love these kinds of stories.
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