There is a picture Bryan Guse keeps in his office of a baseball game on a sunny day last summer. Bryan's son Wilson is rounding third on his way home after the first over-the-fence homer of his life. He and his dad, who is coaching third, are about to bump fists.
"Looking at this just bums me out with the current situation," Guse said.
Guse grew up in New Brighton playing baseball. He played in the high school state tournament for Irondale. He played catcher for John Anderson with the Gophers and was the team's Player of the Year in 1997. He is a husband, father, banker — and coach.
He has two sons. Wilson, 12, is named after Dan Wilson, the former Gophers catcher. Nolan, 11, was named after Nolan Ryan. Both play baseball, like their dad, who coaches — or, more accurately, is scheduled to coach — Ryan's U12 team. Daughter Adalyn, 6, is into hockey and gymnastics.
None of the children is doing much of anything, sports-wise, these days. Like everyone else, their lives have been on hold since the coronavirus pandemic forced people to retreat to their homes.
How many of Minnesota's young athletes have been affected by the shutdown of sports at all levels? An exact accounting is difficult, but surveying sports associations in the state shows it's already impacted well beyond 10,000 kids. That number would grow dramatically if the shutdown lasts into the summer.
Guse feels for his kids, of course. But he feels for everyone, every kid, who is unable to play organized sports and potentially looking at a summer that might be devoid of the game they love. Looking across all level of sport, he summed it up simply: "It's awful."
That pain is discussed often in terms of pro and college sports. The loss of must-watch television, billion-dollar industries frozen. Will the Twins play? Will the Wild and Timberwolves be able to return to action? Will this crisis bleed toward the fall and football?