Most Inspiring Life Stories from Olympics 2024
Admin October 14, 2024
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The Olympics is the pinnacle of any athlete’s
career. From all time champions to those who have beaten all odds to be there,
these are the most inspiring athletes of Paris 2024.
The road to greatness
is paved with suffering, dedication, and bucketloads of sweat. Nowhere is this
more evident than the Olympics, the absolute pinnacle of sporting competition.
Taking place between
July 26 and August 11, this year’s Paris Summer Olympics is already shaping up
to be a historic event, with boxing mothers, all-time champions and multi-sport
Paralympians gearing up to give it their all once again.
These are their stories.
Eva Okaro, Swimming, GB
At just 17 years of
age, Okaro will become the first black woman to represent Team GB in the pool.
Previously, Alice Dearing had represented Team GB in open water at the Tokyo
Games, and Okaro hopes to continue her legacy.
She has every chance
to make it happen: Okaro and her sister were setting new British swimming
records at the age of 14.
"Safety and fun —
that's where it all began for me,” she says. “Swimming's a key life skill you
have to learn. It saves lives and everyone should learn it.”
Dana Mathewson, Wheelchair Tennis, USA
The 33 year-old from
Tucson, Arizona native is ranked number one in the world, with a Grand Slam win
and a doubles title at the 2022 Wimbledon Championships making her the first
American woman to win a Major wheelchair tennis title.
Diagnosed with
transverse myelitis at 11-years-old, Mathewson has lived her life paralyzed
from the waist down ever since. It was her mother who – after a lot of
encouragement – got her into tennis when she was 13.
From there, Mathewson
bagged a scholarship at the University of Arizona before competing in the Tokyo
and Rio de Janeiro Paralympic Games.
With her powers arguably at their peak, Paris 2024 may well see Mathewson
confirm her brilliance in gold.
Nikola
Karabatic, Handball, France
Karabatic’s Olympic story is so inspiring because, put simply,
he’s the very best at what he does.
A centre-back for Paris Saint-Germain's handball team, he’s also
a three-time Olympic champion, with his hometown Olympics potentially providing
his fourth gold – a potentially historic achievement that would really
demonstrate the pinnacle of performance.
It’s especially nail-biting as, at 40, Karabatic has already announced he will
retire after the Olympics…
Penny Healey, Archery, GB
It’s a career that feels straight out of a Disney film, and it kind
of is. At 19, Healey will be Team GB's youngest archer in Paris – and it’s all
thanks to the fantasy film Brave, which inspired her to pick up a bow aged 9.
And did we mention she used to shoot arrows from the back of a
horse? "When I was about eight or nine, I was doing horse riding and
thought it would be cool to do archery on the back of a horse,” she says. “Then
I had to stop horse riding, because it was too expensive. So, I got into
archery instead. It was love at first sight."
With two gold medals at the 2023 European Games in Kraków,
Poland, Healey’s story – and age – are inspiring enough. But it doesn’t end
there; she says archery helped her through the anxiety she suffered during the
Covid lockdown.
Aurelie
Rivard, Paralympic Swimmer, Canada
Born in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Canada, the 28 year-old
swimmer already has three Paralympics gold medals, a silver Paralympic medal,
two World Records and a Paralympic Record to her name. On top of all of that,
she was Canada's flag-bearer for the closing ceremony of the 2016 Summer
Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Then, in Tokyo, she bagged two more golds in 50m
and 100m freestyle.
But success was far from guaranteed. Rivard was born with an
impairment in her left hand, and didn’t take up competitive swimming until she
was 12 years-old. She quickly made up time, being named Swimming Canada’s
Female Para-Swimmer of the Year six years later in 2014. At 19, she became the
most decorated female athlete of Parapan Am history, after winning seven
medals, six of which were gold at the 2015 Parapan American Games in Toronto.
Proof that force of mind really is powerful.
Simone Biles, Gymnast, USA
Biles made headlines, and kicked off a mental health revolution,
when she pulled out of competition at the 2020 Tokyo Games after experiencing
"the twisties” – a mental block unique to gymnastics which causes a
disconnect between the brain and body.
Having grown up in foster care, Biles said she felt like she
needed time to work on her mental health. It was an admirable step.
"Sometimes, you have to take that power back," Biles
says in a new Netflix documentary where she reveals it was only the support of
her family and friends that stopped her quitting her sport entirely.
Now 27, Biles recently won a record ninth all-around U.S. championship
and will make her triumphant Olympic return in Paris.
Charley
Davison, Boxing, GB
Being a woman in sport is difficult for a variety of reasons,
least of all because of the pressure to have children.
For Davidson, being known as ‘The Boxing Mum’ gives her drive.
“That's what I think about all the time – my kids and boxing,” she says.
“Before I get into that ring all I think about is them three children.”
Now 30, Davidson has boxed since primary school, but took a
seven-year break at 19 to start a family. After returning, she was fast-tracked
to Tokyo.
Following the 2023 European Games in Poland, where she clinched
bronze in the women's 54kg event, Davidson’s Paris spot is secured.
It will be her last shot at an Olympic medal before she leaves
to turn professional.
Justin Phongsavanh, Javelin, USA
From his earliest years, the odds have been stacked against
Justin Phongsavanh. With his parents sent to prison when he was two years-old,
he entered the foster system in Iowa before being shot in a McDonald’s car park
in 2015. The bullet broke into five pieces, one of which lodged in his spine,
paralysing him.
Now 26, he’s defeated the odds – helped by his service dog,
Morgan. Phongsavanh isn’t just doing this for himself, but for
differently-abled people everywhere, using his social media platform to educate
people about disabilities.