Help Aleteia continue its mission by making a tax-deductible donation. In this way, Aleteia's future will be yours as well.
*Your donation is tax deductible!
This year’s Olympics have proved demanding in so many ways for the participating athletes. With so much indecision due to COVID, the run up to the Tokyo Games has demanded an immeasurable amount of determination and strength.
Thankfully these sportsmen and women channeled their desire to represent their countries into finding ways to maintain their grueling training schedule while lots of the world are in lockdown.
So when we see these Olympians take part in their various events, it’s important to consider the extra efforts they went to in order to achieve such sporting greatness.
Katie Ledecky
It’s incredible to think that one of the greatest ever female swimmers had no place to train for the Olympics when Stanford was forced to close down. Thankfully, the former Stanford swim coach, Ted Knapp, heard about Ledecky’s training problem. He called on his neighbor, Tod Spieker, who has a 25-meter swimming pool, complete with two lanes, flags and timer, and asked if Ledecky could train there.
Even though Speiker, 74, was an All-American at UCLA in his youth, he decided he’d willingly help out his college rivals and offered his pool for Ledecky and fellow swimmer Simone Manuel to train in. The pair practiced for three months, with Speiker’s grandchildren watching on, according to a report in Mercury News.
The inter-generational support the swimmers have received will no doubt prove vital to them as they go for gold. And no matter how they perform on the day, the Speiker family, young and old, can take heart in their contribution to the American swim team.
Hidilyn Diaz
The Filipina champion not only proved her strength in her Olympic training, she showed just how innovative she could be. With her team stranded in Malaysia due to COVID lockdowns, she had no access to the usual training equipment.
However, the weight-lifter managed to train using water bottles, water jugs and bamboo sticks. To make it more challenging she resorted to using duffel bags filled with the water jugs that were then balanced on sticks.
And while she managed to get creative with her equipment, she didn’t have the support of her family to keep her going. However, she stayed positive, “I sacrificed a lot. I wasn’t able to be with my mother and father for how many months and years and then of course, training was excruciating. But God had a plan.” Diaz said after her gold medal win, as reported in the Philippine Daily Inquirer.