While I
was watching the Olympics I kept thinking about the short story “The 80-Yard
Run,” by Irwin Shaw. It’s about a man who, looking back from a perspective of
20-odd years, concludes that his life’s highlight was a football-field play (in
a scrimmage, no less), and that everything since had been downhill. It’s a sad
story, leavened only by thought that the guy at least had the run to look back
on.
That’s
not something I think of when taking in the American-staple sports of baseball,
basketball and football, all of which have come to offer lucrative futures to the
keen and lucky few who qualify to play them at the highest levels. By contrast, the Olympics are the pinnacle of
sports such as track and field, swimming and gymnastics, whose later commercial
opportunities are few. Thus, just about all the competitors who thrilled us
during last month’s Rio extravaganza will have to move on to quite-different
lives, either immediately or eventually.
One
might think that given the energy and discipline it takes to get to the top of
any sport athletes would be likely to succeed in any endeavor they choose, but
proof of that notion is elusive. Eric
Heiden, the five-gold-medal speed-skating star of the 1980 Winter Olympics, and
Dot Richardson, the shortstop of the U.S.’s gold-winning women’s softball teams
in 1996 and 2000, both became orthopedic surgeons, and Seb Coe, the
record-setting British miler, went on to become a member of Parliament and head of the world track federation, but other
such examples are hard to find. Mostly, former O-Games stars can be found hanging
on at the fringes of their sports, coaching, providing media commentary or
hawking gear. Apparently, once you’ve heard the roar of the crowd it’s tough to
leave the stage for the anonymity in which the great majority of mankind toils.
It
might be ironic but the Olympian I worry most about is Michael Phelps, whose 23
gold medals over the last four Games, and 28 medals overall, makes him the most
successful Olympian ever. I don’t worry about his finances—with multi-million-dollar
endorsement deals in hand, and a reported net worth of more than $40 million
going into this year, neither he nor his descendants need ever lift a finger in
toil should they so choose.
But time can weigh heavily on the
richest of us, and the 31-year-old Phelps seems at a loss for how to spend his.
A swimming pro since his teens, and with little college to fall back on (he
attended just a few classes at the University of Michigan after following his
coach, Bob Bowman, there in 2004), his between-Olympics sojourns have been
marked by lack of focus, alcohol use and, possibly, depression, making him (excuse
me) a kind of fish out of water. He announced his retirement after the 2012
Games but, finding little else to do besides swim, rescinded it. Now he says
he’s again retiring, and one only can hope that he finds challenges sufficient
to profitably fill his remaining decades.
The Games star I worry about least
is another swimmer, Maya DiRado. A late bloomer at age 23, the backstroker was
a double-gold winner at Rio, surprising many, obviously including herself.
Perhaps because she wasn’t a child whiz at her sport she combined it with
academics at Stanford U. and emerged with a degree in management science and
engineering, and a job offer from a major management-consulting firm. She should grab it without passing “Go” or
collecting the $200 she might earn by lingering in her glory.
What makes moving away difficult
for successful athletes is the regimentation their achievements demand on today’s
fields of play. Even in such little-noticed sports such as judo and fencing competitors
with Olympic aspirations must put all other pursuits on hold, devoting years to
single-minded training. Schedules,
usually set by others (coaches, mainly), are regulated down to the minute. Meals
and sleep are programmed with an aim toward achieving maximum performance. Once the last whistle has been blown, returning
to the everyday world can seem strange and alien, much like astronauts regard
it after coming back from long missions.
That sense came through strongly
when I read some “Where Are They Now?” pieces in a recent Sports Illustrated
Magazine. One of them focused on the “Magnificent Seven,” the group that won
the U.S.’s first women’s team gymnastics title at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.
Ranging in age from 14 to 19 years at the time, they now are women in their middle-to-late
30s.
According to the story all are
doing pretty well, but not without some travail. Rather than bow out at the top
of their brutally difficult sport, five stayed in training through the 2000
Olympics (but only two—Amy Chow and Dominique Dawes-- made that year’s squad),
and one—Dominique Moceanu-- kept trying until injuries finally waylaid her in 2006.
Three of the group—Moceanu, Jaycie Phelps and Amanda Borden—still are in the
game as coaches. Shannon Miller remains involved peripherally with a company
that markets video workouts and health and fitness products.
Writer Greg Bishop devoted most of
the article to Dawes and Kerri Strug, who seem to have had the most-circuitous
personal journeys. Strug, whose
broken-ankle vault dramatically secured the U.S. gold medal, has earned
bachelor’s and master’s degree from Stanford, taught in elementary school, held
positions in the U.S. Justice and Treasury departments and is a wife and
mother. She divides her life into two, sharply different periods, one on each
side of her Games triumph. As a gymnast, she says, she traveled widely but
never saw much bedsides hotels, gyms and arenas. Once on her own she was free
to wander and wonder, and both were revelations. “It was really interesting to form my own
thoughts and opinions,” she told Bishop. “I wasn’t used to doing that. It was
liberating and scary, too.”
The more-glamorous Dawes opted for
show biz after weaning herself from gymnastics, performing as a dancer, actress
and model. Then she got a college degree and gravitated toward sports
administration. Since 2010, she’s been co-chair of the President’s Council on
Fitness, Sports and Nutrition, in addition to being a wife and mom.
She, too, spoke of a before-and-after. “I had
to rewire my brain [after gymnastics],” she said. “I had to learn to let go.
Look at our team in ’96—you didn’t see us smile. It was that intense. That’s
why I don’t want my daughter to train for the Olympics.”
1 comment:
A well written story about life after death or death after life.
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