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News
Watkins Overcomes Obstacles to
Run for MVNU
written by Dave Parsons, Sports Information Director
MOUNT VERNON, Ohio - Cross country runners have long been known
for their determination, perseverance, and dedication due to the
sometimes grueling nature of their sport that requires endless
training and pushing their bodies to the limit in order to
continually better their times.
For
Mount Vernon Nazarene University’s Amanda Watkins, that perseverance
and determination was required just for her to be able to train with
the team this year as she battled back from brain surgery and a
broken ankle just to be able to compete in the final two races of
the season for the Lady Cougars.
For Watkins, the story begins about a year ago when during her
junior year she decided that she would go out for the cross country
team that was being re-started at MVNU in 2006 after a 27-year
absence. A native of Mount Vernon, she had played volleyball and run
track all throughout middle school and high school, but she quickly
fell in love with cross country after running as a senior at Mount
Vernon High School.
"Running cross country was such a positive experience for me in
high school,” said Watkins, who also helped the Mount Vernon High
School team to a conference track title as a senior. "We had such a
great coach and our team was like a family. This was a huge
influence on why I decided to run at MVNU. In a sport like cross
country, you see each other at your worst so there is so much
encouragement between teammates. You create such a bond with each
other.”
"I wanted to experience being part of a team again, and when some
of my good friends decided to run, my decision to run became even
more confirmed,” Watkins added. "To be able to run with good friends
my last year of college for a great coach (Chip Wilson), it seemed
like a perfect way to finish up my time here at MVNU.”
As Watkins began training and making plans to run cross country
in the
fall of 2006, different roadblocks began to come across her path. In
February, she was diagnosed with
Chiari
malformation, which is characterized by abnormalities in the
area where the brain and spinal cord meet that cause part of the
cerebellum to protrude through the bottom of the skull and into the
spinal column. This interferes with the flow of spinal fluid to and
from the brain. As a result, Watkins was scheduled to undergo
surgery in May to remove a portion of the bottom part of her skull
and the inside of her first vertebrae in order to allow spinal fluid
to reach her brain and hopefully shrink the syrinx that had formed
in her spinal cord.
During the months leading up to the surgery, Watkins was told
that she could continue to run and exercise right up until the time
of the surgery. So, she began training for the upcoming cross
country season since she knew that the surgery would keep her laid
up for awhile. Two day before the surgery, she stepped in a hole
while running and heard a crack. She knew right away that it was
broken. Despite the broken ankle, the doctors were still able to
proceed with the brain surgery and Watkins began to recover from it
in about a month. However, she was still unable to walk due to the
broken ankle until late in July.
"It was definitely an eventful and character-building summer for
me,” she said. "My hopes of running cross country began to dwindle
the longer I wasn’t able to walk because I knew that even if I was
able to run by the time the season started that I would be too out
of shape to actually help the team. Then, my hopes were further
crushed when my surgeon told me that some tests revealed information
that the surgery had not produced the anticipated results and that I
would not be able to run until November.”
However, Watkins was determined to run anyway and after her ankle
became stronger she started running short distances at a time. She
could only make it about 200 meters when she first started, but then
she slowly worked her way up to 400 meters, 800 meters, and finally
a mile. By this time, the cross country season had started and she
realized that she was in no shape to keep up with her teammates.
"Coach Wilson was so understanding and gave me separate workouts
to do on my own until I was stronger,” Watkins said. "I was
gradually able to run more and more, and finally at the end of
October I was feeling like I was back to normal. I really wanted to
try and compete in our last two meets, but I wasn’t sure if my
surgeon would clear me in time. Thankfully, I was able to contact
him and explain to him that I had been running and had been feeling
better and better. He agreed to clear me for the last two meets, and
I was so excited to finally be able to compete.”
After serving as a cheerleader for her teammates and charting
their times with a stopwatch at the previous meets, Watkins was able
to join 130 other runners for the
American Mideast Conference/NAIA Region IX Meet hosted by Tiffin
University on November 4. In her first action of the year, she
completed the five-kilometer course in 23:15 to finish 95th and in
fourth place for MVNU. Her finish also helped the Lady Cougars to an
11th-place finish in the 14-team event.
"I was so excited to finally be able to run,” said Watkins.
"Coach Wilson and the whole team have been so encouraging and
supportive throughout the entire season. There were definitely times
when I let the frustration get to me, but the team and Coach Wilson
were always there to help me keep my head up. Once I got into the
mindset that even though it was a slow process that I was still
making progress, that was a turning point for me. I knew that God
wouldn’t let me do any more than my body could handle, so I just
kept running.”
While
Watkins is quick to thank her teammates and coach for their support
through all the difficult times, she was also providing an example
that did not go unnoticed. "Amanda has been such a strong supporter
and encourager this year,” said senior teammate Brittany Dissinger.
"There were times that she was in so much pain that we encouraged
her to stop and just take a day to rest and recover. However, being
the tough competitor that she is, she kept on and never quit.”
"I really admire the way that Amanda has persevered through her
injuries this season,” added senior Sarah Parks, who was a high
school teammate of Watkins as well. "She has shown that discipline
and self-determination can pay off no matter how difficult the
situation. Injuries are one of the things that any athlete dreads
and to have to overcome two significant ones in one season proves
that Amanda has a lot of heart and does not give up easily. I have
seen how frustrated she would get at times, but she never once quit.
She was an encouragement to our team at times when I know that it
had to be so hard on her not to be able to run.”
"Amanda is one of the hardest workers I have ever seen,” said
Wilson of Watkins, who was selected as the team’s captain and will
also earn Scholar-Athlete honors with a 3.84 grade point average as
a Spanish Education major. "She has battled many obstacles and I
have seen her struggle, but she has never quit. Through her
struggles she has inspired the rest of the team. She has come a long
way in just a short time, and as a team captain, she has shown what
leadership is truly about.”
"Thankfully, God never gives us more than we can handle,” Watkins
said. "Even though the past few months have been filled with
frustrating and humbling experiences, there is no doubt in my mind
that God had a reason for it all. If I had not broken my ankle, I
know that I would have started running and training too early and
more than likely would have undone what the surgery had helped to
fix. So, in a way, the broken ankle was a blessing - not a fun one -
but still a blessing. God has proven His faithfulness over and over
to me and what a comfort it is to know that His faithfulness will
never stop.”
Watkins and the rest of the MVNU men’s and women’s cross country
teams will close out their successful first season back on Saturday
at the
National Christian College Athletic Association National Meet held
at Cedarville University.
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