Enough bad news about other sports. Here is some cheerful stuff.
My sister and her husband are teachers in the Richford, Vt school system. In those little rural towns, the common behavior (driven even more so now by state education funding laws) is for several small towns to keep their own little elementary schools but send all the kids to a common Jr-Sr High School. Such is the case at Richford, where students from Richford, Montgomery, Enosburg, and Berkshire all study at Richford High. About a decade ago, one young farm girl (milking and cleaning up after 30-40 cows every day) from Montgomery named Elinor Purrier (she prefers Elle, pronounced like Ellie) tried out for the girls' soccer team. One of the elements of the tryout was a fitness test run, 800 meters, two laps around the track. Elle scorched the whole field, including the Senior boys, by about half a lap. "Maybe you should try out for the cross-country team". She ended up winning the state cross-country meet three times as well as several of the state meet distance events multiple times.
She got relief from the farm chores by going away to college at the University of New Hampshire, where she was a triple-sport All-American (cross-country, indoor track, outdoor track) and ended up the most-decorated athlete in UNH sports history. Then she got a job as a member of the New Balance running team (a nice little New England company) but didn't really give up farm life. She married her high school sweetheart and moved onto his family's dairy farm. (His engagement present to her was a heifer).
The one-year delay in the Tokyo Olympics was perfect for her maturation as a runner, so she won the top spot in the womens' 1500 meters for the USA. You can't take the farm out of the girl -- in her post-race interview, while she was still getting her breath back, she answered a question with "I'm just so fucking excited" (now bleeped out of all rerun of the video).
The guy in the orange shirt is her husband --