Bob Hagstrom knew this day would come when he saw her a decade ago when she was just in the seventh grade.
So did Kris Hansen and Ahvo Taipale. And Bill Simpson and the veritable army of supporters in the close-knit Nordic skiing community in the St. Croix Valley, all of whom were vital in smoothing Jessie Diggins' path to the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
As Diggins goes for gold half a world away Saturday, the legion will gather at Stillwater's Chilkoot Cafe and Cyclery in the dim morning hours to cheer on the 22-year-old skiing star in the 4x5-kilometer relay, where she will ski the final leg as the U.S. team's anchor.
As Diggins starts her medal quest at 4 a.m. Minnesota time, a special mutual bond will be renewed.
"It's just amazing. Even people who don't ski like to feel they're a part of it, too," said Simpson, a 37-year coaching veteran who helped build Stillwater Area High School, which has the largest Nordic skiing program in the nation, into a perennial powerhouse. "It's not just that she's a great athlete, but it's what she's like as a person. Everyone loves her. She has this gift — she knows how to reach out to other people to make them feel like they're appreciated. It's like she belongs to everybody."
Volunteers like Hagstrom typify the quiet, behind-the-scenes support Diggins has enjoyed since she took to the sport as a 3-year-old.
For years, blankets have been Hagstrom's thing, something that he has wrapped gently and in proud red-and-black Stillwater Ponies colors around the shoulders of countless local skiers, Diggins included, to keep them warm as they prepared to race. And just as he did when Diggins was on the team, he's always been there at the finish line, ready with a hug of congratulation, or solace.
Diggins, Hagstrom said, was a pugnacious competitor, never giving an inch in a race.