She has Olympic gold in her trophy case, but American Sheila Taormina
has achieved more than victory - she has made history by becoming the
first American athlete to make the Olympics in three different sports.
VOA's David Byrd has this look at Taormina, who will compete in Beijing
in the grueling, five-event modern pentathlon.
Sheila Taormina
is no stranger to Olympic success. She won a gold medal in swimming in
1996 in Atlanta, swimming the third leg of the 800-meter freestyle
relay race for the United States. She then qualified for the 2000 and
2004 Olympic teams in the sport of triathlon, which includes swimming,
cycling and running. Taormina finished sixth in the triathlon in
Sydney and 23rd in Athens.
At the Beijing Olympics, she will
compete in the five-sport modern pentathlon. The event is meant to
imitate the skills needed by a Napoleonic courier and includes fencing,
swimming, running, shooting and horseback riding. Athletes must start
with air pistol shooting, then epee fencing. After that comes a
200-meter swim followed by equestrian show jumping. The final event is
a three-kilometer run. And it all takes place in one day.
In
early June, the 39-year-old Taormina made history when she qualified
for the U.S. team, making her the first woman to earn an Olympic berth
in three different sports. And the milestone is doubly special because
four years ago Taormina had never picked up a pistol, an epee, or
ridden any animal larger than a pony. Taormina said that her new sport
demands a great deal of her.
"I'll train no more than four
sports in a day," said Sheila Taormina. "I used to try to train five on
some days, but it is just too difficult. And so usually on any given
day there is just one of the sports I am not doing. And it goes from
about 7am; I am starting the training and I am finishing up about 5 to
6pm, with very little time in between there for anything else but
getting to the next practice. But Sundays I have off completely. I
don't go take any day trips anywhere. I just want to stay home when
I've got my days off."
Taormina is the youngest of eight
children, with 11 nieces and nephews, and says she values her time with
her family. In fact, her favorite Olympic memory is not winning the
gold in Atlanta, but her sixth place finish in Sydney in the
triathlon. Even though she had no chance of finishing higher, Taormina
says that the sight of her family cheering made her sacrifices worth it.
"I
was coming down to the last 200 meters of the run to finish, and I was
in sixth place," she said. "And fifth place was too far away to sprint;
I couldn't catch her. And I ran past the 20 members of my family who
were at the Sydney Olympics and all of them were jumping up and down.
And that became my Olympic moment because at that moment I realized
that the people who care about you the most and who I love the most -
the relationships that count the most with your family, your close
friends, your God - those never changed based on whether you are going
to win a gold medal or not going to win a medal at all."
Sheila
Taormina almost did not achieve her dream of qualifying in three
sports. Because of its elite - but small - following, modern
pentathlon was almost eliminated from the Olympics six years ago. Then
the U.S. organization that that oversaw its development in the United
States for more than 50 years folded.
And there were financial
problems. Modern pentathlon does not draw nearly the support as
marquee sports like athletics, gymnastics, or swimming. But Taormina
persevered. As part of her efforts to make the team, she sold her
house - at a loss - in 2006. Taormina said she counted that setback as
part of the sacrifice needed to achieve her larger goal of making the
Olympic team.
Then there was doubt whether she would be on the
team. Nations can send just two athletes per gender to the Olympic
competition, and Taormina was one of three American women to meet the
international modern pentathlon standard. However, she beat out
teammates Michelle Kelly and Margo Isaksen in the USOC's tiebreaker -
her performance in the World Cup this year. Taormina finished ninth
while Isaksen was 10th and Kelly was 29th.
Taormina says that
her goal in Beijing is simple - to enjoy the Olympics again as she did
in 1996 - with wide eyes.
She says that while her main goal - getting to Beijing - has been
achieved, she will be trying to make the podium. But even if she does
not medal, Sheila Taormina says that she is satisfied to finish what
she started - and to prove that someone her age can learn - and compete
- at a new sport at the international level.
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