Dad had some big news for Tegan Livesay when she came home from a high school volleyball match last November.
"He said, 'I think I've got a line on a job in Minnesota,' " Livesay said.
Livesay, who had pitched her hometown school, the Newton (Kan.) Railers, to the Class 5A championship at the Kansas softball state tournament as a junior, was gobsmacked.
She had already established herself as one of the top high school pitchers in Kansas, earning plenty of college attention before accepting a scholarship offer from Division I Southeast Missouri State. Newton was her home. She had big plans for her final high school go-round. This was not at all on her senior year agenda.
"I definitely did not want to move at first," she said. "There were things I wanted to do in a Railer jersey."
Her father, Tim, gave her a choice: She could stay in Newton, a city of more than 18,000 a half-hour north of Wichita, to finish high school or move with the family to Fairmont.
"I know she went back and forth on it a few times," Fairmont softball coach Cory Hainy said. "It was a tough decision. As a coach, I wanted to see her come here, but as a dad, I totally got it if she didn't want to."
Wanting to stay near her family, she followed them to Fairmont in December. She's glad she did.