Cheers greeted Mounds Park Academy Nordic skier Erin Quam as she glided around a corner near the end of her race Wednesday. Quam had led her team to a conference championship last season, but this 5-kilometer trek was different.
The race was the senior's first with the varsity since open-heart surgery only four months ago to address a newly discovered artery problem that, if left unchecked, could have been fatal.
Her goal was different from last year, too: This time she just wanted to finish, and without stopping.
Quam's mother, Anne, unsure what to expect from her daughter, felt a rush of excitement when someone yelled, "Here she comes; it's Erin!" A joyous noise rose up from the snow as a dozen parents, some from other schools, hollered their support.
She finished the course at Hyland Park Reserve in Bloomington. Without stopping.
"There was nothing like seeing her come around that corner," Anne said.
Placing seventh among eight Mounds Park skiers was something new for Quam. Last year, she routinely finished as one of her team's top skiers and led the St. Paul private school to the Independent Metro Athletic Conference championship. After her strong junior season, "a spark ignited," said coach Jerry Slater, and "everyone was anticipating a good senior year."
Instead, recovering from major surgery changed Quam's goals. Not that she is complaining. She is relieved to not be among the estimated one or two youth athletes per 100,000 who die each year from unexplained sudden death. Most coronary artery anomalies like hers are only discovered after tragedy. Quam's was caught in time, even though the correct diagnosis took years.