His family, who left Cuba for the United States when Torres was
four, couldn't afford the trip to the national karate
championships that he wanted to compete in. But Torres's parents
didn't want to disappoint their son, who never asked for much
knowing that money was tight.
So Torres's sister and parents concocted the plan for the
collection, and after a week or two, they had enough to rent a
van and drive from their home in Hialeah, Florida to the
competition in North Carolina.
The trip paid off: little Torres won first place in both the
solo "kata" and sparring "kumite" contests - disciplines that
debuted at the Tokyo Olympics this week, and where, 12 years on,
Torres won a bronze for the United States in kata on Friday.
"My mom and dad were like, 'You see, Ariel, don't let money stop
you. You find a way, we find a way, and that sacrifice will be
the difference between you and other people'," Torres recalled
of the extreme measures they took for the trip in 2009.
Torres said money was short for many more years. Becoming a
professional athlete required making it to the top 12 in world
rankings, which in turn meant costly international trips, he
said.
It was only in 2019, when Torres won the Pan American
Championships that pushed him up to the top-10, that the
stipends and free trips started to finally roll in."This medal
is going to change our life forever," the 23-year-old told
reporters after a tearful celebration over his win. "It's not
only for my country and USA karate, but for my family and
everyone back home in the community."
Torres said he would give "whatever money I get" to his parents,
and that just qualifying for the Olympics had helped him to get
"more clothes than I've had in my whole life", from the likes of
Nike and Ralph Lauren, which are dressing Team USA's Olympians.
"(My parents) came to (the United States) for a better life,
sacrificed everything. They did everything for me to do karate,"
he said. "I wish I could give them more."
(Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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