STEWARTVILLE, MINN. — Evening basketball practice is still a few hours away, which gives Will Tschetter enough time and daylight to feed the cattle grazing outside his home.
He throws on rubber boots and sloshes through a mixture of snow, mud and water to fill and refill buckets of corn feed. He starts with the 2-year-olds first. Then he climbs over a railing into the pen that holds the 1-year-olds.
“I don’t think you’ll want to come in here,” he says to a visitor, noting the mess at his feet.
A few days earlier, Tschetter helped wrangle all the cows on the farm, 35 or so, after two bulls arrived for breeding.
The next night he scored 35 points in a blowout win for the Stewartville boys’ basketball team.
Many kids would have posted highlights of dunks and three-pointers on social media, except Tschetter (pronounced “cheddar”) doesn’t do social media. None of it. He tried Snapchat briefly but gave it up. Too much of a distraction, he says.
Tschetter is neither your average teenager nor your average high school athlete. He’s committed to activities that give him balance and happiness, whether that be basketball, extracting maple syrup from a tree, taking care of pigs in the summer, playing trumpet in the marching band or fishing in the Root River off the banks of his family’s 160-acre farm. (He beams with pride when sharing the story about the time he pulled a trout out of there.)
It is here, 12 miles south of Rochester in a town of 6,000, where you’ll find the state’s No. 2 basketball prospect, behind only Minnehaha Academy’s Chet Holmgren, the nation’s No. 1 recruit.