They qualified for Tokyo - then COVID hit. A year later, U.S.
marathoners hit their stride
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[March 03, 2021]
By Amy Tennery
(Reuters) - American
Aliphine Tuliamuk was about 10 minutes into her victory news
conference when the question was posed: Do you have any concern
about the coronavirus?
It was Feb. 29, 2020 and she had just punched her ticket to the
Tokyo Games, winning the United States Women's Olympic Marathon
trials in Atlanta, Georgia, with a time of 2:27.23.
Like her fellow Olympians on stage -- as well as millions of people
around the globe -- she had little idea what was to come: a historic
Olympic postponement and a pandemic that upended life.
"When they asked me that question, I thought, 'You're crazy'," said
Tuliamuk, who -- laser-focused on her training -- had watched only a
bit of news on the virus at the time.
"But then a week later the world shut down."
While U.S. trials for sports including swimming and gymnastics have
yet to take place, Tuliamuk and her five fellow marathon qualifiers
were among the last few to claim their spot on Team USA before
COVID-19 put the world on hold, a coveted position that nonetheless
came with challenges.
Tuliamuk, 31, said she was devastated by the postponement.
"Thinking a year ago, you know, we were in a different place," she
told Reuters. "We were learning about this disease, but we didn't
know that it was gonna take a hold of the whole world."
'EMBRACE THE CHAOS'
Molly Seidel, a Boston-based runner who finished second in the
women's division on her marathon debut, spent the year learning to
"embrace the chaos" after the pandemic stripped away the stability
that came with her sport.
"You go from this huge emotional high -- like I was, frankly, kind
of a surprise to make the team, so it was this thing that I couldn’t
have dreamed happening, one of the greatest days of my life -- and
then two weeks later Boston is going into lockdown," said Seidel,
26, an ambassador for Strava's 2020 Year in Sport report.
"That was probably the biggest toll on me, the mental aspect," added
Seidel, who works with a therapist and has been open about having
chronic anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). "All the
uncertainty of planning for races and then they get cancelled
immediately."
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U.S. Olympic marathoner
Molly Seidel trains outside the stadium at Harvard University during
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, U.S., May 29, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Jacob Riley, a 32-year-old who finished second in the men's marathon
trial, with a personal best of 2:10.02 after coming back from
Achilles surgery in 2018, said he's able to compartmentalise the
"gnawing frustration" in the back of his mind.
"Then all of a sudden you get to the end of the week and you don't
understand why you're so tired," said Riley, who got a half-marathon
personal best at a race in Michigan in October.
He has enormous empathy for those who might not want the Games to go
forward.
A Yomiuri newspaper poll showed last month that the majority of
Japanese remain opposed to holding the Olympics this summer amid the
coronavirus pandemic.
"I completely understand that the Japanese people might be exhausted
and concerned about the massive costs of the Games and having so
many people from a foreign country come in," said Riley.
"This is something I wanted to do since I was five years old. But
you know, I think the argument against having it is legitimate."
All three runners told Reuters they've used the last 12 months to
improve, with training soon resuming in earnest and the men's and
women's races set for August.
For Tuliamuk, the year yielded a particularly profound change - she
gave birth to a daughter in January.
"Honestly I think that saved me," she said. "I have such a strong
belief that I am going to be able to get enough training and fitness
that I would be able to compete well."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery; Editing by Toby Davis)
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