Pisgah High School in western North Carolina reopened its football stadium last year after Tropical Storm Fred tore through in 2021.
Now it has to be rebuilt again after being demolished by Hurricane Helene.
Amid the lives lost and the catastrophic damage, high schools in dozens of communities in southern Appalachia are shut down and with that the prep sports that binds so many towns together. It's the latest disruption for young athletes who've already endured a pandemic.
The Pigeon River rose to record levels after Helene plowed through, taking out parts of Interstate 40 along with bridges, homes and other infrastructure in the region. In Canton, North Carolina, the high school's football, baseball and softball fields, covered in several feet of water, were ''a total loss,'' Pisgah athletic director Heidi Morgan said.
In an adjacent county, six dozen people have died. Morgan is keeping that in perspective as she ponders the monumental task ahead at her school.
''You cannot replace a life,'' she said. ''Material things, you can replace.''
First COVID, now this
The loss of Pisgah's athletic facilities is personal for Morgan. She played softball there in high school and became its athletic director in 2019. She's also the current softball coach.