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The Unbreakable Spirit of Piper Hoyt

The whistle blew, sharp and clear, cutting through the crisp Utah air. Piper Hoyt, a sophomore at Maple Mountain High School, sprinted across the soccer field, her eyes locked on the ball. At sixteen, she moved with the confidence of a seasoned athlete, her ponytail swinging with each stride. The opposing goalkeeper loomed ahead, the only obstacle between Piper and a potential goal. Her teammates held their breath, the crowd leaning forward in anticipation. This was her moment.


But moments can turn in an instant. Piper pushed the ball just a touch too far. The keeper slid in, snatching it inches from her cleats. Instinct took over—Piper leaped to avoid the collision, but the defender’s leg rose, catching her mid-air. Time slowed as she twisted, then crashed to the ground, her shoulder taking the full force of the fall. A sickening pop echoed in her ears. The pain was immediate, searing, unlike anything she’d felt before. Lying on the grass, Piper knew: her collarbone was broken.


This wasn’t the first time. Nor would it be the last.



Piper’s love for soccer began at five, when she first chased a ball across a field, her small legs pumping with unbridled joy. Back then, life was a whirlwind of school, soccer, and gymnastics. She flipped on bars and sprinted down fields, her days a blur of motion. But by her early teens, the balancing act grew unsustainable. Gymnastics demanded precision; soccer demanded heart. She couldn’t give both everything. So, she chose the sport that set her soul on fire: soccer.


The decision wasn’t easy, but it was hers. Piper threw herself into the game, training with a ferocity that caught the eye of her coaches. At Maple Mountain, she started on the junior varsity team as a freshman, but she played every minute as if it were a state championship. Her intensity was undeniable, a fire that burned brighter with every practice. Coach Cliff Swain noticed. Soon, he invited her to dress for a varsity game. From that day, Piper became a cornerstone of the team, a forward who could shift the tide of a match with a single play.


Coach Swain
Coach Swain

“She’s one of those players you can build around,” Swain says, his voice warm with pride. “She’ll give it everything, every single play. She can change the game just by being out there.”

But the game gives as much as it takes. In one of her final club season games with Storm, Piper faced that brutal 1v1 with the keeper. The fall broke her left collarbone, a clean snap that sent her to the ground in agony. X-rays confirmed the fracture. The doctor recommended a specialist, a sling, and, soon after, surgery. A plate and screws would hold her bone together, but nothing could brace her for the pain that followed.


Every movement was torture. Yawning sent shocks through her body. She couldn’t lift her arm, couldn’t dress herself, couldn’t even brush her hair. Her mother became her anchor, helping with everything from bathing to pulling on socks. “I don’t know what I would’ve done without her,” Piper says, her voice soft but steady. The night before her surgery, family friends offered a blessing, their words wrapping her in comfort. Her faith in Jesus Christ, a quiet but constant presence, gave her strength. “He was with me through it all,” she says.


The surgery was a success, but recovery was a slog. For a month, Piper endured relentless discomfort as her bone grew over the plate. A second surgery in November 2022 removed it, and slowly, she clawed her way back to the field. She was tougher than the steel that had held her together, but the trauma lingered, a shadow she couldn’t outrun.



Then, on November 1, 2023, the shadow struck again. In a scrimmage in Orem, just 48 hours before a major tournament in Arizona, Piper was tackled hard. She fell, and the familiar pop rang out. Her right collarbone—her other one—had snapped. Tears streamed down her face as she lay on the field, not from the pain but from the question that tore at her: Why is this happening again?


“I was just… broken,” she recalls. “I’d already been through it. I didn’t understand why I had to do it all over again.”


The doctor confirmed the break. Another sling. Another round of X-rays. This time, the fracture wasn’t as severe, but it still demanded surgery. Two weeks later, the bone had shifted, refusing to heal. On December 1, 2023, surgeons inserted a new plate and screws. Another month of recovery loomed.



Piper’s story could have ended there, on a hospital bed or a sidelines bench. But that’s not who she is. “Success is never owned; it’s rented, and the rent is due every day,” she says, quoting one of her favorite mantras. Even as pain gnawed at her, she paid that rent. Her family rallied around her—her parents, her siblings, her mom most of all. Her faith held her steady, a lifeline through the darkest moments. Coach Swain, too, played his part, his patience and belief in her a constant reassurance. “He never got mad,” Piper says. “He showed me what a good teammate could be.”


Swain sees her resilience in every game. “I’ve seen her with cramps, broken bones, everything going wrong, and she’s like, ‘No, I’m staying until the end.’ She has heart.”


That heart drives her still. Piper is back on the field, though the pain hasn’t fully faded. She’s still healing, still pushing, still chasing the game she loves. At sixteen, she’s already faced more than most athletes endure in a career, yet her passion burns brighter than ever. “Soccer is my everything,” she says. “I’m going to play as long as I can.”







The whistle will blow again. Piper will sprint toward the ball, her eyes fierce, her spirit unbreakable. And when it does, the crowd will lean forward, knowing they’re watching something extraordinary—a girl who falls, but always rises.


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