MANKATO – His gait still unsure four months after a near-fatal beating, Isaac Kolstad stepped to the head of a line of football players streaming into the Minnesota State, Mankato stadium Thursday.
Leading his former teammates to the center of the field, he stopped, turned to the stands and raised his fist, touching off a roar of approval from the stands packed with more than 6,000 Mavericks fans.
"It was amazing, just pure joy," said his cousin Annie Jessop, one of more than 130 family members also in the stands to watch Kolstad proclaim his return from injuries that had left him lingering on life-support for weeks. Like many others, she wore a T-shirt bearing the slogan "#22strong" in honor of Kolstad, who had worn No. 22 as a linebacker on the team before graduating in 2013. "I can think of nothing else to say but 'We love you Isaac' " Jessop said.
The Mavericks' season opener was only the latest turn in Kolstad's inspirational recovery from a beating police say was administered in May by Philip Nelson, a former star quarterback at the University of Minnesota who had recently transferred to Rutgers.
Doctors had told the family to prepare for the worst after he was punched and then kicked in the head while laying unconscious on the street. The story of his life since then, told in part by his wife, Molly, on a Caring Bridge website, has resonated in this football-loving town, with donors and Kolstad's former employer raising more than $150,000 to help the family pay medical bills and expenses related to Kolstad's against-the-odds fight.
"I'm super, super proud of Isaac right now," said Molly Kolstad, speaking to reporters before the game. Speaking publicly for the first time since the May 11 fight that landed Kolstad in the hospital, she said her husband has only a general understanding of what happened that night.
"He's ready to come home," she said. "He wants to be a husband again. He wants to be a dad, and he can't wait to go back to work." The couple have two children, including an infant daughter born less than a month after his injury.
Kolstad only recently began walking without assistance. His speech has slowly improved, but sentences are short. His brain injury makes it difficult for him to say the right words, she said. Still, she's grateful for how far he's come. The first brain scan of his injuries back in May had doctors telling the family not to expect too much.