Olympics-Cycling-American BMX rider Willoughby seeking golden end to
cruel tale
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[July 29, 2021]
By Martyn Herman
TOKYO (Reuters) - American BMX rider Alise Willoughby and her husband
Sam once both cherished the same ambition to win Olympic gold medals
until a tragic accident sent their lives in a direction neither could
have imagined.
Shortly after the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics at the Chula Vista BMX
track near San Diego, Australian Sam flipped backwards off a jump and
landed on his head -- suffering spinal injuries that left him paralysed.
The accident cruelly robbed him of his dream of upgrading the silver
medal he won at the London 2012 Olympics.
On Thursday he was in the stands at the Ariake Urban Sport Park watching
his wife, who he began dating in 2008 after meeting on the junior
circuit and married in 2019, qualify for the semi-finals of the BMX race
event.
The 29-year-old has filled part of the void left by his crash by
coaching Alise, hoping that she can go one better than in Rio when she
won silver and finally dethrone Colombia's Mariana Pajon as Olympic
champion.
"Having Sam at my side as someone who is so prepared as he is, he has
like OCD about preparation, really caters to me," Willoughby, 30, told
reporters on Thursday.
"I feel that I feel as prepared as I've ever been. It's nice to have Sam
here, it's a little blessing in disguise."
However much attention to detail the Willoughbys have put in in the
build-up to the Games while training at the same Chula Vista track where
Sam was injured, Alise says that when the starting gate drops at the top
of the ramp she's on her own.
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Alise Willoughby of the United States in
action. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann
"Those moments you're behind the gate
the work's done," she said. You're on your own."
Pajon is favourite to claim a third
successive Olympic gold, but Willoughby looked equally impressive in
the quarter-final heats and matched the Colombian by winning all
three races.
"I've raced her a lot more times than just on the Olympic stage,
since we were 12 years old probably, and we're competitors and yeah,
she's definitely beatable," she said.
"But she runs great laps and she's consistent and she's been here
before so that plays into her favour and you respect that but
there's a lot of girls here and it's anybody's game."
(Reporting by Martyn Herman; Editing by Toby Davis)
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