The first time Ephraim Bird ran in a cross-country meet, he threw up. And then he won the race.
That pretty much sums up the fledgling running career of Bird, at 5-4 and 105 pounds a slightly-built sophomore who is trying to become the first athlete to represent tiny Hope Academy in Minneapolis in a state tournament.
The story began four years ago, when Jeff and Widdy Bird of Minneapolis adopted Ephraim from Ethiopia to join his younger brother Aman, whom they had adopted three years earlier.
Home-schooled for a year, Ephraim enrolled at Hope Academy, a Christian school in south Minneapolis, in the fall of 2009. While academics were a family priority, Jeff Bird was also determined to expose Ephraim and Aman to as much of American youth culture as possible.
"I tried just about everything," Ephraim said.
He took a liking to soccer. But Jeff couldn't help but notice that whenever Ephraim ran, he left others in his wake.
"At the school's track day in eighth grade, he ran the mile in about 5:20 in basketball shoes," Jeff Bird said. "It seemed like that's where his talent was."
But at first, Ephraim wasn't hearing it. He wanted to play soccer. The idea of running long distances held little appeal.