Dionne Thomas was excited to be involved in her son's Michael's senior football season at Champlin Park.
She planned to once again volunteer at the team pre- and postgame meals, ring her notorious cowbell during games and wear Michael's No. 79 jersey with pride on Senior Night.
But last November, Dionne was hit by a car and killed while crossing the street near her workplace in south Minneapolis.
Thomas, 38, was buried wearing a necklace featuring a "79" charm and with a team sweatshirt that said "Big Mike's Mom" on the back. When Senior Night comes around, Michael will take the field with the example she set living on through his actions.
Named the Rebels' top defensive lineman as a sophomore two years ago, the 6-2, 306-pound Thomas said moving to right guard on the offensive line was a better philosophical fit.
"Offensive linemen are under the radar all the time but if it wasn't for us, our running backs wouldn't be as good as they are," Thomas said. "It all starts with us in the trenches."
Not unlike his mother who, working on the front lines, helped fellow members of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe as a case manager with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services's Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program.
Her sister, Danielle Krause, said Thomas "really enjoyed her work because she had been in that position. She got to offer the help she used to get back on her feet."