RIO DE JANEIRO – When Jennie Johnson played at the University of Minnesota she could not have imagined women's rugby in the Olympics.
When Dan Johnson coached at Minnesota, he had to start a youth program so his daughter could play.
Before 2009, when the IOC announced that women's rugby sevens would be added to the 2016 Games, Katie Johnson never thought she would have a chance to play in an Olympics.
All three — mom, dad and daughter — were at Deodoro Stadium in the hills above Rio on Saturday, as Katie played two games on the first day of women's rugby in the Olympics, and the first day of Olympic rugby of any kind in 92 years.
The Americans lost 12-7 to Fiji in the early afternoon, then beat Colombia 48-0 in the early evening, after a pink dusk and the surrounding mountains turned the stadium into a postcard.
The U.S. will face a powerhouse Australian team that is 2-0 on Sunday in the last game of pool play. At least three Minnesotans — Dan, who coaches rugby at Hopkins High School, Jennie, who is in the Hall of Fame at Owatonna High, and Kathryn, who attended Hopkins — will spend another day at Deodoro Stadium.
"To have women's rugby, and sevens, in the Olympics?'' Dan Johnson said. "I mean, I'm way up here.''
He held his right hand as far as he could reach.