In the minutes after leading St. Michael-Albertville to its third girls basketball state tournament berth in four years, Tessa Johnson was difficult to locate amid the throng of fans, parents and well-wishers.
A 5-10 senior guard, Johnson had delivered another stellar performance in a season of many, scoring 23 first-half points and spending the second half orchestrating the Knights offense in a 34-point victory over Elk River in the Class 4A, Section 8 final.
Now Johnson was crouched in the middle of the crowded gym floor, pen in hand, signing her name on dollar bills being offered to her.
This was not remuneration for a job well done. She was signing autographs for a legion of preteen girls. Johnson took the time to personalize each one. Her fans' common response was "Thank you, Tessa." Also common: "See you in the WNBA."
Maybe so. For now, Johnson is the Star Tribune Metro Player of the Year in girls basketball.
"It's usually shoes or jerseys or shirts they want me to sign," Johnson said, chuckling. "I think I've only signed money once before."
This is Tessa Johnson at her essence, the Pied Piper of youth girls basketball in the St. Michael-Albertville community. Where she is, they go. A smile or a kind word from Johnson is enough to spark a basketball career.
"Little girls all want to be like Tessa," Knights coach Kent Hamre said. "She lights the fire under them, and they want to be her, on and off the court."