‘Embrace the freak-out:’ Athletes cope with wrecked schedules ahead of Tokyo Olympics
David Wharton, Los Angeles Times
‘Embrace the freak-out:’ Athletes cope with wrecked schedules ahead of Tokyo Olympics
Phil Walter/Getty Images South America/TNS
In this photo from August 19, 2016, Connor Fields of the United States competes during the Men's BMX Final on day 14 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic BMX Centre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Phil Walter/Getty Images/TNS)
Phil Walter/Getty Images South America/TNS
In this photo from August 19, 2016, Connor Fields of the United States competes during the Men's BMX Final on day 14 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic BMX Centre in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Phil Walter/Getty Images/TNS)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Adam Butler
American athlete Marion Jones holds up her 5 Olympic medals for track and field events in central Sydney, Australia, in this Oct. 1, 2000 photo. The IOC formally stripped Marion Jones of her five Olympic medals Wednesday Dec. 12, 2007, wiping her name from the record books following her admission that she was a drug cheat. (AP Photo/Adam Butler)
Adam Butler
American athlete Marion Jones holds up her 5 Olympic medals for track and field events in central Sydney, Australia, in this Oct. 1, 2000 photo. The IOC formally stripped Marion Jones of her five Olympic medals Wednesday Dec. 12, 2007, wiping her name from the record books following her admission that she was a drug cheat. (AP Photo/Adam Butler)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
DARRON CUMMINGS
Sarah Hughes of the United States displays her women's figure skating gold medal, during a press conference at the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, Friday Feb. 22, 2002.(AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
DARRON CUMMINGS
Sarah Hughes of the United States displays her women's figure skating gold medal, during a press conference at the 2002 Winter Olympic Games in Salt Lake City, Friday Feb. 22, 2002.(AP Photo/Darron Cummings)
IOC President Bach issues plea for Olympians to get vaccinated
MARK J. TERRILL
Silver medalist Andreas Dittmer of Germany, gold medalist David Cal of Spain and bronze medalist Attila Vajda of Hungary (left to right) display their medals on the podium after in the Men's C1 1000 meter final, during the canoe flatwater event at the 2004 Olympic Games in Schinias near Athens, Greece, Friday, Aug. 27, 2004. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
MARK J. TERRILL
Silver medalist Andreas Dittmer of Germany, gold medalist David Cal of Spain and bronze medalist Attila Vajda of Hungary (left to right) display their medals on the podium after in the Men's C1 1000 meter final, during the canoe flatwater event at the 2004 Olympic Games in Schinias near Athens, Greece, Friday, Aug. 27, 2004. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
ALBERTO RAMELLA
From left, the bronze, gold and silver medals of the Turin 2006 Winter Olympic games are seen in Turin, Italy, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2006. The design of the medals is inspired by the shapes of historical Italian coins and rings, and the hole at the center of the medals represents the open space of a piazza, an Italian square. (AP Photo/Alberto Ramella)
ALBERTO RAMELLA
From left, the bronze, gold and silver medals of the Turin 2006 Winter Olympic games are seen in Turin, Italy, Tuesday, Jan. 10, 2006. The design of the medals is inspired by the shapes of historical Italian coins and rings, and the hole at the center of the medals represents the open space of a piazza, an Italian square. (AP Photo/Alberto Ramella)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
ODED BALILTY
Official medals of Beijing 2008 Olympic and Paralympic Games display during a delivery ceremony of the medals to Executive Vice President of BOCOG Jiang Xiaoyu in Beijing Thursday, July 3, 2008. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
ODED BALILTY
Official medals of Beijing 2008 Olympic and Paralympic Games display during a delivery ceremony of the medals to Executive Vice President of BOCOG Jiang Xiaoyu in Beijing Thursday, July 3, 2008. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Jae C. Hong
USA's gold medalist Shaun White reacts during the men's halfpipe medal ceremony at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Jae C. Hong
USA's gold medalist Shaun White reacts during the men's halfpipe medal ceremony at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2010. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Sang Tan
The Olympic medals are seen on the hands of Chairman of London 2012 Olympic Games, Sebastian Coe, right, and Olympic gold medalist Kelly Holmes as the medals are unveiled during the London 2012 Olympic one year to go ceremony at Trafalgar Square in London, Wednesday, July 27, 2011. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)
Sang Tan
The Olympic medals are seen on the hands of Chairman of London 2012 Olympic Games, Sebastian Coe, right, and Olympic gold medalist Kelly Holmes as the medals are unveiled during the London 2012 Olympic one year to go ceremony at Trafalgar Square in London, Wednesday, July 27, 2011. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Dmitry Lovetsky
Gold, left, silver, center, and bronze medals are displayed for journalists during a presentation of Sochi 2014 Olympic medals at the SportAccord International Convention in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, May 30, 2013. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)
Dmitry Lovetsky
Gold, left, silver, center, and bronze medals are displayed for journalists during a presentation of Sochi 2014 Olympic medals at the SportAccord International Convention in St. Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, May 30, 2013. (AP Photo/Dmitry Lovetsky)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Michael Sohn
FILE - In this Aug. 12, 2016, file photo, five-time Olympic champion Katie Ledecky shows off her gold medal from the women's 800-meter freestyle swimming competition at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File)
Michael Sohn
FILE - In this Aug. 12, 2016, file photo, five-time Olympic champion Katie Ledecky shows off her gold medal from the women's 800-meter freestyle swimming competition at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File)
Helene Elliott: Simone Biles shows her human side while proving again she’s the greatest
Lee Jin-man
FILE - In this Sep.21, 2017 photo, South Korean athletes pose with the silver, gold and bronze medals, from left, for the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympics during an unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)
Lee Jin-man
FILE - In this Sep.21, 2017 photo, South Korean athletes pose with the silver, gold and bronze medals, from left, for the Pyeongchang 2018 Winter Olympics during an unveiling ceremony in Seoul, South Korea. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)
In the year leading up to the Tokyo Olympics, Connor Fields was having trouble with nerves. His problem? It seems he wanted to feel
The gold-medal BMX racer, forced to wait around for his third consecutive Summer Games because of the COVID-19 pandemic, got together with fellow riders to discuss raising the stakes on their daily routine.
They wanted something more than just practice, peddling furiously around a course day after day, leaning through banked turns and flying off jumps.
“We were on simulation [races] to stay sharp and get the butterflies,” Fields says. “You know, even bet lunch on it.”
Training for the Games — a marquee competition that normally comes around only once every four years — can be daunting. There is pressure to stay healthy and hit peak form at just the right time. This year, the global pandemic has added another challenge.
The coronavirus shutdown wiped out a year’s worth of races, games and matches in every sport, robbing athletes of chances to hone their competitive edge. For many, what should have been a gradual, season-long buildup has been reduced to a few events and the Olympic trials at the last moment.
“Any disruption to the plan at this time is scary,” says Sean McCann, a senior sport psychologist for the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee. “That has created a lot of stress.”
Some athletes have gone to unusual lengths — more than just wagering on lunch — to re-create a game-day atmosphere. Others have spent months working through their concerns in therapy.
“It’s nerve-racking,” says Yul Moldauer, who qualified for the U.S. men’s gymnastics team last weekend. “We haven’t gotten all the opportunities we usually have.”
Most Olympic hopefuls learn from a young age to deal with the jitters of putting everything on the line. They can handle winning and losing, but uncertainty is another matter.
Elite athletes tend to be careful planners, working with their coaches to schedule practice routines and competitions well in advance. Track athletes, for example, like to have half a dozen or more events leading up to the U.S. trials in June, then two more in the month before the Games begin.
“You want to build momentum,” says Christian Taylor, a two-time Olympic triple jump champion whose bid for a third gold ended with a torn Achilles tendon in May. “But this is uncharted territory.”
With few synchronized diving events on the calendar, Kassidy Cook and Sarah Bacon improvised by placing a camera poolside and inviting a panel of judges to join them on Zoom. The pair, who won a national championship on the 3-meter springboard in 2019, treated the virtual meet like any other competition, right down to their ritual fist bump before each attempt.
“You have to convince yourself it’s real,” Cook says. “That gets the adrenaline and nerves going.”
Gymnasts have put something extra into their morning workouts, cartwheeling and flipping across the mat as if it were the world championships. Sprinters have imagined opponents on their heels as they raced down the track alone. With training facilities closed during the shutdown, swimmers tethered themselves to the side of small pools and stroked as hard as if they were gunning for a national title.
Summer Rappaport, a triathlete headed for Tokyo, competed only once in 2020 and was startled at how hard it felt.
“There’s just something special about being on the race course and learning to thrive under pressure and just rising,” she says. “I’ve tried to fill the gap with some race visualization that I’ve worked on with my sports psychologist.”
The process requires some homework, McCann says. He tells athletes to sit down and close their eyes, envisioning every moment of their event, whether it’s the last turn of a 400-meter race or the final attempt at the vault in gymnastics. It’s a technique ski racers have employed for years and it works for other sports.
Breathing exercises — often reserved for race day — have become crucial to remaining calm in the months before Tokyo. USOPC psychophysiologist Lindsay Shaw has her athletes watch video of their best performances from 2019 to remember how it looked and felt to win.
Coaches can also play an important role. McCann urges them to throw a few surprises into practice because almost every competition presents what he calls a “disruption,” something about the schedule or venue or weather that nudges an athlete out of his or her comfort zone.
“You need to find a way to disrupt the way you think in training, when everything’s easy,” the sports psychologist says. “It’s all about getting disrupted and then getting back to the path.”
During the heart of the pandemic, American athletes had to combat feelings of envy as they watched foreign rivals continue training and competing in nations that did not shut down. When infection rates finally began to ease in many parts of the world, life moving back toward normal, another issue arose.
Competitions restarted — BMX rider Fields was lucky to resume racing in winter — but the limited schedule made athletes feel pressure to excel right away, pushing hard at events that should have been tune-ups.
Nick Itkin, a young Los Angeles fencer who climbed into the top 10 during 2019, wasn’t thrilled with the way things went at his only international event before the Games, a tournament in Qatar. He and others had to rely on practice with teammates back home to reinforce their confidence.
“It’s sort of like coming back from an ACL injury,” McCann says. “They’re wondering, ‘Am I still the athlete I was in 2019 when I was on top of my game and nobody could touch me?'”
As two-time defending Olympic champions, the U.S. women’s water polo team spent additional time watching their opponents from afar, studying replays of European tournaments the last few months.
“Luckily, in this day and age, there’s a lot of video online,” veteran Maggie Steffens says. But, she adds, it’s “a little bit different than getting to play them physically and have the emotions involved and having somebody grabbing your suit.”
With the Summer Games only a few weeks away, McCann has been impressed by the way his athletes have adapted to the most extraordinary circumstances he has encountered in 30 years as a sports psychologist.
“It’s been a heavy lift,” he says. “But I’m seeing people come through this and not just survive, but shooting for excellence.”
Sprinter Jaide Stepter Baynes knew the situation was far from optimal as she tried for her first Olympic Games. There were long months when the best she could do was lift barbells on her balcony.
When competition resumed, she adjusted her expectations, taking a realistic approach to the U.S. track and field trials.
“Either way, you’re going to freak out,” she says. “So just embrace the freak-out.”