When Olympism runs in the family
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| Pyeongchang, South Korea
When defending Olympic champion David Wise captured another gold in the skiing halfpipe Thursday, his dad was there to see it. Not to prod or hover, but just to cheer. Just to be his dad.
And that represented a different kind of victory.
Tom Wise, a former college ski racer, had been very motivated to help his son succeed on snow. The motive was right, but his approach was sometimes a little too intense, said the younger Wise before the Olympics.
鈥淎t one point ... I had to be like, 鈥楧ad, I鈥檇 rather you be my dad than my coach 鈥 I have a coach, whose job is coaching me. I have you, whose job is dadding me. I don鈥檛 need you to be coaching me and dadding me,鈥 said Wise. 鈥淥nce we found that balance, it improved drastically. And my dad is still, to this day, and always will be, my biggest fan, my biggest supporter.鈥
Wise is one of many athletes at the Games who come from families of accomplished athletes, some of them Olympians in their own right. Those relatives are often a huge asset, knowing what it takes to be successful and helping to foster that in their up-and-coming athletes at home. While their example or expectations can sometimes add extra pressure, more often than not they urge patience and a healthy perspective that enables athletes to not only excel at their sport but enjoy it, too.
There鈥檚 Friday鈥檚 gold medalist Alina Zagitova of Russia, whose hockey-player father waited a year to name her, before , a two-time Olympic medalist in rhythmic gymnastics.聽Finnish figure skater Emmi Peltonen was also born to a hockey-playing dad 鈥 hers is a four-time Olympian, who always reminds her that no matter how discouraging things may be, just keep at it day by day and you will see the light.聽
Then there鈥檚 American biathlete Emily Dreissigacker, whose parents were Olympic rowers and only let their kids watch TV when the Olympics were on. Their advice for her in Pyeongchang? 鈥淭ake lasting pictures, not just Snapchats,鈥 said Dreissigacker. And her teammate Susan Dunklee, whose dad was a two-time Olympian in cross-country skiing.
鈥淥ne of the best pieces of advice he鈥檚 always given me was 鈥 keep it fun. He held me back a little bit. And I didn鈥檛 like being held back at the time.... But he knew what he was doing,鈥 says Dunklee, who last year at age 31 became the first American woman to medal at biathlon World Championships. 鈥淚 think I would have burnt out and not made it this far in my career if I hadn鈥檛 stayed fresh and excited about the sport.鈥
Instilling a competitive drive
US bobsledder Aja Evans has not only been dreaming of the Olympics since she was a little kid; she鈥檚 been surrounded by people who push her to be faster, higher, stronger at everything.
鈥淲e used to compete at eating, anything,鈥 says Evans, describing her childhood household. Her dad was the first African-American to win a collegiate national championship in swimming, her uncle and cousin both played Major League Baseball, and her older brother went on to become a defensive tackle in the National Football League. 鈥淢y brother raced me down the street once 鈥 whoever got to the car first got to sit in the front seat 鈥 and of course I beat him. But he split his pants on the way down, too, so since then he hasn鈥檛 raced me.鈥
鈥淚 think just having that competitiveness and that drive from my family all helped me a lot,鈥 says Evans, a standout track and field athlete in college. 鈥淎nd they鈥檙e all so supportive 鈥 it was never pressure or anything.鈥
Evans鈥檚 dad never got his kids into swimming. But other athletic parents have become very involved in teaching their progeny to excel in the sport they themselves enjoyed.
If that were an Olympic sport, alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin鈥檚 parents probably would take the gold.
Eileen and Jeff Shiffrin, who had raced on the Master鈥檚 circuit, started Mikaela鈥檚 prodigious career when she was a toddler 鈥 pulling her around the living room on skis, according to a recent New Yorker profile. Eileen has been by her side ever since, homeschooling her, accompanying her to races, and analyzing endless videos of the world鈥檚 best ski racers, which now 鈥 in large part thanks to her parents 鈥 include Shiffrin.
鈥淚 think [Mikaela] is maybe the best ski racer I鈥檝e ever seen, male or female,鈥 said Bode Miller, the most decorated male alpine skier in America, in the run-up to the Pyeongchang Olympics.
Sharing dreams
Miller predicted two golds for her; others had been talking about four or even five. But between a series of weather delays that crunched the racing schedule, and the emotion and pressure unique to the Olympics, in the end Shiffrin came out with gold, silver, and a fourth in her signature event 鈥 the slalom.
But even at the end of an Olympics that didn鈥檛 fulfill all the expectations placed on Mikaela by media hype and ski-racing observers, Eileen looked thrilled and Shiffrin praised her parents鈥 unconditional love.
鈥淚 feel like it doesn鈥檛 matter what I do on the course, if I just try my best then they鈥檙e going to be happy with me,鈥 says Shiffrin, after taking silver in the alpine combined on Thursday. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the most important thing.鈥
Some are critical of parents who become heavily invested in their children鈥檚 athletic careers, saying it can become unclear whose dream is being pursued. But it鈥檚 not a bad thing for parent and child to share Olympic dreams, says curler John Shuster, whose team is in the hunt for a gold medal on Saturday 鈥 an accomplishment made possible by his mom鈥檚 willingness to help babysit his kids so he could train for the Olympics.
鈥淭his is as much her dream as it is my dream and she鈥檚 Super Nanna,鈥 says Shuster. 鈥淢y mom always says, at some point your kids鈥 dreams become your dreams.鈥