U.S. water polo captain Maggie Steffens is playing with a heavy heart at the Paris Olympics after her sister-in-law died a couple days before the Games began.
Lulu Conner, 26, died Tuesday after traveling to Paris to cheer on Steffens as she goes for a fourth consecutive gold medal with the U.S. team. The family is still piecing together what happened, but Steffens described the situation as โa medical emergency.โ
โShe was so excited for the Olympic Games,โ a teary Steffens told The Associated Press. โWe're really close. She's the light of the world. She just brings so much joy to everyone. She always brings people together.โ
Get top local stories in DFW delivered to you every morning. Sign up for NBC DFW's News Headlines newsletter.
Steffens scored two goals while playing 21 1/2 minutes as the U.S. beat Greece 15-6 on the first day of the women's tournament on Saturday. She is the highest scoring woman in Olympic history with 58 goals.
โIt definitely helps to play,โ Steffens said. โIโm like so out of body in a way right now. And I just keep trying to remind myself what Lulu would want and how she would be, you know, how can I embody her spirit the best. And Lulu was somebody that she gave 150% to everything she did.โ
Steffens, 31, married Bobby Conner in Puerto Rico in November. Lulu was an artist โ she made her own version of Flavor Flav's USA Water Polo clock for the Olympics โ a UC Davis grad and one of three siblings.
While she was on the American boat for the opening ceremony on Friday night, Steffens dropped a small bouquet of flowers into the Seine River in remembrance.
โItโs going to be a really hard couple weeks for all of us,โ she said. โMy team has been a really big support system for me. Iโve been obviously really struggling, and my husband as well, and his entire family. I mean, itโs a nightmare, and itโs completely shocking. But I think just feeling her spirit here is, like I said, itโs amazing. And I hope that we can make her proud every single day.โ
The death right before the Olympics was reminiscent of the 2016 Games, when coach Adam Krikorian lost his brother, Blake, and went home to be with his family before returning in time for the team's first game in Rio de Janeiro.
It was all too familiar for Krikorian.
โYou know when it happens, it's like all the emotions come pouring back to you,โ he said. โYou might not feel these emotions that often, but then they just come rushing back.โ
โYou just show her love and support,โ he continued. โYou know it's important that she's there for Bobby and his family as well. This is a difficult time for them, and give her some freedom to be able to spend some time with them I think is enormously important.โ