High School Sports

Sumner’s Ferencz had open-heart surgery. Now she’s thriving at state track

Ten months removed from open-heart surgery, Savannah Ferencz doesn’t take a single jump for granted.

When the Sumner standout struggled to breathe after track and field events last spring, multiple visits to local doctors and cardiologists uncovered a congenital heart defect — an anomalous right coronary artery (ARCA). The July operation erased her summer track schedule, forcing Ferencz to follow the Junior Olympics from her hospital bed.

“We had the blessing of going through a quick process,” she said. “But my recovery was such a blessing. I know God had his hand on me through the whole thing.”

Within six weeks, Ferencz was back on the track with her club team. And on Thursday afternoon, she was all smiles at Mount Tahoma High School — just hours before she finished runner-up (38-6.25) in the 4A Girls Triple Jump at the WIAA’s State Track & Field championships.

“Now, here I am,” she said. “I look around me, and I know I couldn’t do it by myself. It was not just me.

“My coaches are so invested in me, and they really want what’s best. My teammates, through everything, are just there for me before competitions. It doesn’t matter… they’re ready to show up. And that’s just the best feeling, because you really need that support.”

Sumner’s Savannah Ferencz competes in the girls 4A triple jump during day one of the Track and Field Championship at Mount Tahoma High School, on Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Tacoma, Wash.
Sumner’s Savannah Ferencz competes in the girls 4A triple jump during day one of the Track and Field Championship at Mount Tahoma High School, on Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Tacoma, Wash. Brian Hayes bhayes@thenewstribune.com

Before visiting her doctor last year, Ferencz thought she had asthma, or perhaps a negative reaction to something unknown. A standard heart screening proved otherwise, inspiring her to host a schoolwide heart screening event at Sumner High in February. She partnered with Nick of Time Foundation, which raises awareness about sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), to give back to the valley community that rallied behind her.

Three months later, a storybook season continues. The junior authored new Sumner records in the triple jump (39-5.25) and long jump (18-10.5) before claiming the 4A District 3/4 long jump title at Kent-Meridian High School last weekend.

There’s a chance for additional state hardware after taking home the silver medal in Thursday’s 4A Girls Triple Jump. Ferencz is among the contenders for the 4A Girls Long Jump title on Saturday, scheduled for 10:30 a.m. in Tacoma.

“I really can’t say that it was my strength alone,” Ferencz said. “It was just everyone around me, and God. I’m just so blessed by that experience, too, because then I got to come back and be coached by just the best coaches.

“I’m looking forward to just pushing myself as hard as I can. I mean, all of this has built up to now, so I can’t change anything. I’m just going to work my hardest.”

This story was originally published May 29, 2026 at 5:00 AM.

Tyler Wicke
The News Tribune
Tyler Wicke joined The News Tribune in 2019 as a sports clerk. A graduate of the University of Washington Tacoma in 2021, Wicke covers the Mariners, preps, and maintains clerical duties. Was once a near-scratch golfer, but now, he’s just happy to break 80.  Support my work with a digital subscription
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