Last night was one of those evenings that everyone
experiences in high level competitive arenas.
The highs were high and the lows were low. Dealing with the roller coaster of emotions
is something you must learn to take in stride otherwise sports will eat you
alive.
Team USA had an overall impressive performance on day 3 of
the tournament finally winning some medals.
Jordan Burroughs won his third consecutive gold medal and improved his
undefeated winning streak to 65 international matches. Alyssa earned her second straight bronze
medal and Vicki finished 5th (in her first senior world
championships up a weight class). The
results on paper don’t tell the entire story.
The 3rd consecutive gold medal by Burroughs is
one of the greatest feats in American wrestling history. Knowing he did it on a broken ankle makes it
legendary. Rumors were flying over the
past few weeks that he hurt his ankle during training, but no one knew how
badly. We did a short morning workout
outside of the hotel and Burroughs’s fiancé hung around and watched. She shared with us that Jordan had broken his
ankle, had surgery on it and now has five screws and a plate. She said it was a “God healing.” Knowing this bit of information, it was plain
for me to see that he adjusted his entire style throughout the day and turned
out one of the guttiest performances I have ever seen. The highs were really high.
And for the lows…Vicki finishing 5th in the world
is no small feat. It’s a great
accomplishment added to a lengthy resume.
With that said, it doesn’t feel right at the moment. She was ahead 6-0 in the semi-finals and
working towards securing a place in the championship finals, which would have
guaranteed her no less than a silver medal, when one miniscule mental break
turned into a catastrophe. She was
caught and pinned by her Mongolian opponent and knocked back into a 3rd
place bout and was defeated by a tough North Korean wrestler. It was crushing and a $25,000 error (the
Living the Dream medal fund awards $10,000 to US athletes who earn a bronze
medal, $25,000 for silver and $50,000 for gold in non-Olympic years). Ouch!
Today is a new day, though.
I’m sure there will be highs and lows; there always is. It’s wrestling. We have a great line-up competing on this,
the fourth day of the event. Helen
Maroulis, Alli Ragan and Elena Pirozkova.
We’re “expecting great success” today – that’s how the Eastern Europeans
say it in English. Helen won a silver
medal last year and Elena won a gold medal, so we have our strongest group on
the mat. Tomorrow we finish as a team
with Veronica Carlson and Adeline Gray.
If you’ve read previous posts of mine, especially those from
wrestling events, you know that Helen is near and dear to us. She’s that once-in-a-lifetime athlete coaches
talk about. It happens to be her
birthday, too. Fittingly, she shares her
special day with Isaiah, who turns 5 today.
What makes it great, though, is she knows it’s not her day. It belongs to God. ALL this for a KING!
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