Briana Scurry walked into the auditorium at Wayzata High School on Wednesday night, and a tall man hugged her, saying, "Welcome home."
The man was Chad Chastain. His sister is Brandi Chastain, whose shootout kick won the 1999 World Cup. His wife is Erin Chastain, the Gophers soccer coach and a Wayzata alum.
Shortly before Brandi Chastain scored and flexed and became a symbol of women's sports, Scurry made a remarkable diving save in the shootout against China, a bookend moment to Chastain's that is often forgotten.
Years later, despite becoming one of the greatest goalkeepers in American history, winning two Olympic gold medals and a World Cup, Scurry would find herself largely forgotten. Depressed, broke, concussed and suicidal, Scurry would live alone in a studio apartment in New Jersey and pawn her medals to pay for food and rent, "struggling in my own depths of hell."
Scurry grew up in a blue-collar family in Dayton, Minn., playing boys' tackle football and hoping to become an NFL cornerback. "I loved to hit," she said.
This week she returned to her home state to promote her book, "My Greatest Save," and her upcoming documentary, titled "The Only." Wednesday night, she spoke to the Fusion Soccer Club, telling a story of achievement, despair and transcendence.
She can speak to the importance of opportunity, as she was born one year before Title IX passed 50 years ago.
She can speak to the power of sport as a driver of personal growth, having turned a strong high school career into a scholarship at the University of Massachusetts and a career that took her all over the world.