COKATO, Minn. — The lead was precarious, at best. After a 17-point first-half blitz, Dassel-Cokato was scratching and clawing and doing everything it could to hold on.
Annandale, its Class 3A semifinal opponent, had whittled the Chargers' lead to a field goal, 17-14. The Cardinals were marching in the fourth quarter, a relentless drive that seemed destined to find the end zone and possibly snatch the lead, and the game, away.
There was tension, all right. But on the Dassel-Cokato sideline, there was no worry. This group had faced down a much bigger adversary and came out stronger. Win or lose, this was just a game.
In the fall of 2017, sophomore Jacob MacDonald went to a party and ate a cookie. Less than a week later, MacDonald — starting linebacker, well-liked classmate, friend to everyone, leader for many — was dead, the result of an allergic reaction to peanuts in the snack.
There are times, often, when classmate Josh DeBoer, now a senior, still expects to see his buddy walk through the door, ready for a good time and a little horse play. The Dassel-Cokato linebacker will shrug off the moment, but it lingers. More than two years since Jacob died unexpectedly, it doesn't feel that long ago.
"It's felt like a flash," DeBoer said last week. "I feel like he's just going to come back sometimes, but he doesn't."
In those two years, however, the response from the football team and the Dassel-Cokato community have forged bonds that define a program set to play on Saturday in its first championship football game in 47 years.
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