Colorado was still mourning Sarcona’s death when Williams started feeling ill in the first days of February 2018. Mike and Erin Williams thought that the second of their five lacrosse-playing daughters had flu symptoms. Just after the hospital admitted her, though, Mike received the dreaded call, urging him to take the next flight from their Hingham, Mass., home to Boulder.
“By the time I got out there, they were ready to intubate her,” he said. “I got to say, ‘Aine, I love you,’ and they sedated her and intubated her. From there, it just went downhill.”
Williams was flown by medical helicopter to CU Anschutz Medical Campus in Denver. Her heart and lungs were failing and her kidneys were on the verge of dialysis. She was put on a ventilator and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) to act as her heart and lungs, and she was put in a medically induced coma as Colorado started the season.
“I remember the night before we played Florida, I was crying all night, I was so nervous,” said Williams’s roommate, midfielder Devon Bayer. “I had no idea what was going on and what was going to happen. That first weekend was the biggest shock. We knew she was really, really sick.”
Whidden, associate head coach Alex Frank and trainer Carina Gattas visited Williams often during her month-long stay in the hospital. Her Mass Elite club coach, Leslie Frank, flew out to visit.
“The lacrosse community was unbelievably supportive,” Mike Williams said. “I cannot say enough about the University of Colorado and the support they gave not only Aine, but us as a family as well. Ann Elliott is a special, special coach. I cannot say enough about her, the team, the family environment that she’s developed there and the support across the board. The athletic director, he called me no fewer than five times.”