Seeing Terry Steiner on the podium holding that large 3rd
place team trophy was a special moment.
No one was satisfied with a bronze finish at the World Championships in
Budapest; we left a couple of medals there, that’s for sure. However, it is rewarding for everyone involved
in this program to see the fruits of our labor.
Alyssa Lampe, Elena Pirzkhova and Adeline Gray all won bronze medals,
Victoria Anthony nearly missed being in the finals finishing 5th,
Helen Maroulis was 7th and Alli Ragan and Veronica Carlson were also
in the hunt for a medal.
Terry was my coach at Wisconsin when he received phone calls
from Mitch Hull and Rich Bender asking him to take a new position at USA
Wrestling in 2001. It was announced that
the International Olympic Committee would add women’s freestyle wrestling to the
program. USAW needed a coach and Terry
was the only choice. When he accepted
the position and told our team, I remember all of us were very confused about
why he would leave a Big Ten team who had just finished in the top 10 in the
NCAA in back-to-back years to coach girls.
Many of us had a negative attitude towards women’s wrestling for a
variety of reasons, but he told us that he asked himself why he coaches and he
concluded that his purpose to help transform lives through wrestling wasn’t
gender specific. That was a defining
moment in my life. I became intrigued by
what was Terry was doing. In 2003, the
World Championships were held in New York and I had to opportunity to attend (as
a spectator).
I saw a US team of women competing with one common goal – to
win a team title. Terry had inherited a
team of athletes and coaches and things started to resemble a “team.” They finished second in front of a home crowd
and many people, for the first time, believed in women’s wrestling. I was one of them. I approached Terry after the tournament and
told him I was all in. He was a
significant person in my life when he was at Wisconsin and I was inspired what
he was doing. I told him I’d do whatever
I could to help him achieve his goals.
As a fresh college graduate, I didn’t know that he would believe in me
almost as much as I believed in him. He
took my up on my offer immediately by sending me to China with a group of 14
and 15 year old girls.
I started going on tours with the girls and coaching at a
variety of developmental and national team camps. USA Wrestling added assistant coach Vladimir
Izboinikov and he perfectly complimented Terry and his vision. Coach Izzy was able to organize a
comprehensive development plan that included identifying talent and developing
them as a team in anticipation of building a program that would win that
elusive team world title. He put in
place a group of volunteer coaches that each had his/her own unique style and
it all meshed together perfectly. This
was the first year every member of the US World Team was a part of that
development model. All seven girls have
an abundance of age-level international experience. Each one of them has won a medal at the
junior and/or university world championships.
With all of them between the ages of 21 and 25, this was our youngest
team ever, but it was also the most experienced. This is exactly what the plan was designed to
do.
Terry standing on the podium represented much more than a
bronze medal. It represented the fruit
of a 10-year plan. It represented
patience, persistence and consistency.
It’s also a lightning bolt of confidence to this program and for the
girls. The principle of the harvest is
simple: you reap what you sow. We
planted the seed, watered and cultivated it and are ready for the harvest. In agriculture, it’s easy to trust this
principle, but with the human element of emotions and individual choice, it’s
much more difficult to do so. We’re
getting close, though. It was as if
Terry standing on the podium was a proverbial ear of corn on a stalk assuring
us that we are, indeed, going to have that bumper crop we anticipated when we
planted those seeds years ago. Now it
comes down to timing and remaining patient as we actively wait for the crop to
become ripe. That ripening is the only
piece of the puzzle left and it happens as these athletes begin to believe in
themselves. They need to see themselves
as the best team in the world before it happens.
You cannot script it much better, can you? Next year, the World Championships are in
Tashkent, Uzbekistan. We have a year to
watch this crop of athletes develop and mature.
In 2015, the World Championships will be on our turf, in Las Vegas. In 2003, the American wrestling community
ordained Terry in his role and he’ll be able to show them over 10 years later
what happens when you develop a plan and follow it; the principle of the
harvest. Going into the 2016 Olympic
Games in Rio, Team USA will be, without question, the best women’s wrestling
country on the planet.
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