UC Berkeley Press Release
'Olympics, here we come!'
Top Cal athletes gear up for
their Olympic trials or — for those
who've already qualified — the
Beijing Games themselves
BERKELEY — With the 2008 Summer Olympics less than two months away, dozens of top Cal athletes are hoping to exchange the blue and gold for their national colors during a few unforgettable weeks in August.
Many national teams have long since been finalized. The Swiss will be rooting for Cal senior swimmer Domnik Meichtry; Croats for junior Martin Maric, in discus and javelin events; Kiwis for sophomore swimmer Lauren Boyle and denizens of Hong Kong for first-year swimmer Hannah Wilson; Estonians for freshman breaststroker Martti Aljand. Trials held in April determined the six U.S. marathoners headed for Beijing, among them Magdalena Lewy, a Cal alumna and assistant coach. Other Golden Bear athletes, including gymnast Tim McNeill and runner Alysia Johnson, both All-Americans many times over, face qualifying trials set for late June through early July.
UC Berkeley has a long history of Olympic achievement. Its varsity rugby program alone has produced six Olympians; since 1920 its student and alumni athletes have taken 83 gold medals, plus a total of 60 silver and bronze awards, in the Games. During the 2004 Summer Olympics, the world watched as Cal athletes earned 16 medals (five of them gold) — enough to have put UC Berkeley in 18th place if it were a nation instead of a research university in California. The bar is set high, and the Games of the XXIX Olympiad, Aug. 8 to 24, await.
Current Cal students and recent alums are legion among the Beijing-bound and Beijing-hopeful athletes of summer 2008. Meet seven of these individuals with Olympian dreams.
Tim McNeill: The most decorated gymnast in Cal history, McNeill aspires to make the U.S. Olympic Team at trials set for June 19-22 in Philadelphia, Penn., and go on to compete for an All-Around medal in Beijing. He owns five individual NCAA championship titles, is an eight-time All-American, boasts six Mountain Pacific Sports Federation event crowns, and was a member of the U.S. Senior National team in 2006 and 2007.
Student status: Senior,
Psychology
Age and height: 22, 5'6"
Hometown: Falls
Church, Virginia
Courtesy
of Cal Sports Information
'I think I can
show the judges and selection-committee
members at Olympic trials that I'm a good competitor
when it counts.'— Tim
McNeill |
When I was four, my mom put me in some gymnastics classes. I loved it and went from there. As a kid, someone I really looked up to was a teammate named Justin Spring; working out with someone so talented always pushed me to be better. He would learn a skill in minutes where it would take weeks or months for other people to learn it.
Balancing school and gymnastics
I was home-schooled before Cal, so
gymnastics had always been the first focus on my
mind. Having to manage school, especially the hard
classes here at Berkeley, has made it very challenging.
But I've kept up with both: I'm doing well in school
and I'm doing well in the gym. So I'm proud of
myself for being able to do that so far.
Competitive focus
What helps me compete well is having full control
of my focus and attention. I try to stay in the
moment, focusing just on the event that I am about
to compete on, not on later routines or past routines.
I've found that even if I was very successful on
the previous event, thinking about that success
can still interfere. It's very tricky, though:
you also can get nervous if you think too much
about an event or routine. So there's a fine line.
I've learned it from experience how to concentrate.
Most lasting Olympics memory
Without question, it was watching Paul Hamm overcome
his fall on vault to win the Olympic All-Around
title in 2004.
Beijing bound?
The biggest thing holding me back right now is my
lack of international experience. I think I can
overcome this by showing the judges and selection-committee
members at Olympic Trials that I'm a good competitor
when it counts.
Calbears.com sports stats on Tim McNeill >
Dominik Meichtry: He will represent Switzerland at the 2008 Summer Olympics in the 100 and 200-meter freestyle events. For the 2008 NCAA championships, he swam five events, including the anchor leg of Cal’s 400 free relay that placed third. Meichtry reached the semifinals of the 200 free at the 2004 Olympics in Athens. He finished 11th in the event at the 2007 World Championships and earned a silver medal at the 2004 World Cup in Durban, South Africa.
Student status: Senior, Interdisciplinary
Studies
Age and height: 23,
6'0"
Hometown:
Rorschacherberg, Switzerland
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'Now, going to Beijing, I'm
very motivated. I have that ambition to reach
the top.'— Dominik
Meichtry |
Student and athlete
My thesis is going to be on law and social change.
I'm a senior, but I have one more year. Especially
with the Olympics, you don't want to a full load
of courses.
Right now, everything is geared toward the Olympics.
Now that the semester is over, it's Olympics, here
we come!
On sacrifice
When everybody goes out to party, you have to sacrifice
that — though with sacrifice comes reward,
too; you can look at it both ways. Maybe sacrifice
was also coming here, leaving my parents, and starting
my own life. It wasn't easy saying goodbye to my
parents, who babied me, to come here. When I do
go back to Europe, it's mostly for a swim meet.
So I don't get the opportunity to spend that much time
with my parents or brother, which is a little sad.
On average, I'm able to spend, maximum, maybe three
weeks a year with them.
Remembering Athens
Back in 2004, my coach told me that I should just
experience the whole experience — being surrounded
by so many other athletes, by Olympic champions,
and hundreds of thousands of fans. Just before
the race, he said "To be honest,
Dominik, you're not going to make the finals. So
go out there, have fun, enjoy the experience, enjoy
waving to the crowd, take the whole thing in. Because
in four years' time, in Beijing, we have some business
to care of." So I went into the semifinals
with that attitude. I didn't do great, but I loved
the experience.
Dealing with competitive pressure
In the 2004 Olympics, I didn't have any kind of pressure
on me. I was the youngster on the Swiss team; I
just enjoyed it. But now, going to Beijing, I'm
very motivated, I have certain goals. I've improved
a lot since 2004, matured as a person and as a
swimmer, taken part in numerous world and European
championships. Now I have that ambition to reach
the top.
Swiss fan base
My mom actually came to Athens. But this year, in
Beijing, is really expensive and the
tickets were really hard to get. There's
only a certain amount of tickets that each country
can get — and
they sold out real, real fast in Switzerland. So
my mother's not going to be coming. But she'll
be tuned in, for sure, to the TV, and she'll record
it. I'll have my support base back in Switzerland,
for sure.
Calbears.com sports stats on Domink Meichtry >
Jernej Godec: At the 2008 Summer Olympics, he will swim for Slovenia in the 150-meter freestyle event. A swimmer on Cal’s 2008 Pac-10 champion 200 free, 200 medley, and 400 medley relays, Godec also placed sixth and 12th in NCAA events this past year. He anchored Slovenia’s 400 medley relay at the 2004 Athens Olympics and placed 12th in both the 50 free and 50 butterfly at the 2007 World Championships.
Student status: Senior,
Molecular & Cell Biology
(emphasis in immunology)
Age and height: 22, 6'2"
Hometown: Ljubljana, Slovenia
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'Both athletics and academics are very
important to me, so I try to give my best in both
fields.'— Jernej
Godec |
In high school I realized that I couldn't stay in Slovenia, because I would have to choose swimming or an academic path. To combine both academics and athletics at a very high level, it was much more feasible for me — like a lot of people from foreign countries — to come to an American university. I wrote to the top 10 schools in the NCAA championships in swimming. It came down to a choice between Cal and Stanford, because I wanted a very good academic school and a very good swimming program.
Combining academics and swimming
It's definitely tough — especially the first
two years, when my language was an obstacle. For
the first time, I had to actually study in English,
do exams in English, listen to all the lectures in
English. I started learning English in the fifth
or sixth grade, but it's not something I would encounter
on a daily basis before I came here; it's still a
foreign language. After a while, though, language
wasn't an issue anymore.
On earning a Pac-10 Postgraduate Scholarship
For this scholarship, your athletic achievements
and your academic achievements are combined together;
they evaluate it that way. Both are very important
to me, so I try to give my best in both fields.
I'm thinking about a PhD; the scholarship gives
you something extra for your living expenses.
Beijing bound
I was in Athens. I
swam the relay. It was a wonderful experience to
be there for two, three weeks. I tried to expand
my horizons, especially in the Olympic cafeteria,
where all the athletes from the Olympic Village
eat together. That's what I'm looking forward to
most in Beijing — apart from swimming my best,
trying to make the semis and finals. I would be
very, very happy if I made the finals.
Long-term plans
I see myself more in a professional career or in
academia. Swimming is definitely not my long-term
goal in life; it's the vehicle that gets me through
and lets me enjoy the ride.
Calbears.com sports stats on Jernej Godec >
Alysia Johnson: She hopes to make the U.S. Olympic track team at trials set for June 29-July 6 in Omaha, Neb. and go on to Beijing to compete in the 800-meter (half-mile) run. In the 2008 season, she was named the 2008 West Region Co-Women's Track Athlete of the Year, achieved the best national collegiate 800-meter time, and successfully defended her 800-meter title at the NCAA West Regional. At the NCAA Indoor Championships earlier this season, she earned All-America honors for the sixth time in her collegiate career.
Cal status: Senior,
Theater & Performance Studies
Age and height: 22,
5'7"
Hometown: Canyon
Country, California
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'Hearing the word 'Olympian' by my name sounds
great in itself. Along with that, I'd like to win
a medal; that'd be awesome.'— Alysia
Johnson |
Student-athlete challenges
Training is very difficult. Last year, going from my collegiate season
to the national season wasn't particularly mentally difficult, but it
was physically wearing on my body. This year, I know what my goals are;
I know what I want to do. I want to make the team and I want to do well.
I don't want to just go. I want to show up at the Games ready to do some
damage. I have to pull back the reins a little bit on my collegiate season
so I can work more on the national season.
Dreaming of the Olympics
In my head, I always thought it was a realistic dream,
but when it showed up on paper that it was an actual
realistic dream was during my sophomore year. I
knew that eventually I would try for the national
team and be a potential Olympic candidate, but
I didn't know it would be this soon. I showed up
as a freshman and my personal record was 2:08 in
the 800. That's pretty good for a freshman coming
in without all the training that you're going to
get at the University.
Biggest sacrifice in order to make the Olympics
I want this so bad that I don't feel like I'm giving
something up for it. Your lifestyle is totally
different from the average person. There are so
many things that my peers are able to do like eating,
daily routines, sleeping habits, but everything
is different for me. Being in college, I'm not
really living the college lifestyle. I can't. Every
day I have two to three workouts that I have to
get done. There's no way that's going to get done
to the best of my ability if I'm tired.
Most looking forward to in Beijing if on
the U.S. team
Hearing the word 'Olympian' by my name sounds great
in itself. Along with that, I'd like to win a medal;
that'd be awesome. I'm looking forward to the competition
and seeing the Olympic Games for myself. You always
see it on TV, but to witness it for myself, to be
in it, to feel proud to wear the USA uniform as an
Olympian is totally different.
Earliest interest in track
My oldest cousin ran track. All of my brothers and
cousins started running after him. Our parents
weren't pressuring us. My cousin Mark would be
running and I'd be running alongside him on the
track and we'd all be cheering him on while running
on the track. Then you say to yourself, "I
want to do that."
• Extended
version of this interview of Alysia Johnson >
• Calbears.com
sports stats on Alysia Johnson >
Lauren Boyle: At the 2008 Summer Olympics, Boyle will represent New Zealand in the 800-meter freestyle relay. During her 2008 season, she broke her own Cal record in the 1650-yard free at the NCAA championships, where she finished fifth. Boyle initially won the event at the Pac-10 meet, snapping a record that had stood for 20 years. She represented New Zealand at the 2005 World Championships.
Student status: Sophomore,
undeclared major
Age and height: 20, 5'11"
Hometown: Whenupal,
Auckland, New Zealand
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'The most exciting thing will be being in the Olympic
Village with all the other athletes. There's no
other competition on Earth like that.'— Lauren
Boyle |
Swimming for UC Berkeley
Cal has one of the best swim teams in the world — not only on a collegiate
level but on an international scale as well. We have world record holders
— Natalie Coughlin, Dana Vollmer. It's very rare that anyone has a chance
to train with people like that. Natalie graduated, but she still trains
with us every day. She and Dana are really good with helping us figure
out good ways to race, helping us with our technique. They have a lot of
experience that they can share with us. They've been to so many international
meets, and have done so well for so long.
The student-athlete challenge
Spring semester was pretty difficult, because
the competition schedule has been so tight with
the Pac-10, NCAAs, going away for both of those,
and then going away for my Olympic trials as well.
New Zealand had its trials two days after the NCAA
championships. So I had to go straight from Columbus,
Ohio to Auckland, New Zealand, lose a day because
of the time difference, and compete in the trials
the day after I got home. It was really, really
tough. So I've missed quite a lot of school this
semester; I've been learning how to juggle that.
Keeping cool under pressure
As an athlete you're constantly developing your composure.
I've become more composed since coming to Cal,
because I've had to deal with so many different
adverse situations — like living away from
home, making a whole new set of friends, and dealing
with not living with my parents…. Sometimes
I like to visualize my races before I do them,
but not all the time. Sometimes that helps me concentrate — but
sometimes I need to do it without thinking.
Anticipating Beijing
The most exciting thing will be being in the Olympic
Village with all the other athletes. There's no
other competition on Earth like that. It's something that I will remember
for the rest of my life…. As swimmers we're
really lucky: the Olympics opening ceremony is
on the 8th of August and swimming starts on the
9th. We'll be done within eight days, and the New
Zealand team isn't leaving until Aug. 26. So we're
going to have a lot of time to look around, experience
the other sports, and experience Beijing. I'm really
looking forward to that.
Calbears.com sports stats on Lauren Boyle>
Emily Silver: She'll compete for a berth on the U.S. Olympic swim team at trials set for June 29-July 6 in Omaha, Neb. A member of the U.S. team at the 2007 World University Games, she won a gold and a silver medal there in relay events. During the 2007-08 college dual season, she recorded 15 first-place finishes, and swam in relay events that won the 2008 Pac-10 title in a conference record. As a freshman Silver was voted team MVP.
Student status: Senior,
American Studies
Age and height: 22,
5'll"
Hometown: Bainbridge
Island, Washington
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'As
an athlete you have to schedule your classes around
practice. So swimming has really defined my college
experience.'— Emily
Silver |
Cal recruit
When you're recruited for a program, you take a trip
to the school and you get to meet the coach. You
have a relationship with them for months before
you actually commit to the school. Building that
relationship with Terri McKeever allowed me to know that
this is the right place for me.
Training with the greats
Being here, surrounded by so many amazing athletes — being
able to train with Natalie Coughlin every day, Erin
Reilly, Ashley Chandler, all these elite athletes — has
allowed me to really start to believe that I could
be at that level. And to have amazing coaches, Terri, Kristen Lewis, to have them believe in
me — that's allowed me to really start to believe.
If I had gone to school anywhere else, I wouldn't
have been able to do this.
Student-athlete formula
Student athletes have to commit not only to their
school work,
but also to a full-time job. I practice 20 hours
a week, Monday through Saturday. So you have to
figure out how not only to commit to class but
to training and the competition. I'm a senior
this year, but I actually have another year. As
an athlete you have to schedule your classes around
practice. So swimming has really defined my college
experience.
Most lasting memory of Olympics past
I remember watching Dana Vollmer in
the 800-meter relay. Dana dove in, and I think
the U.S. team was behind, and she caught up. I
remember the commentator saying, "Look at
Dana Vollmer! She's having the most amazing swim!" I
remember thinking "Wow, this girl is so talented.
I would love to be in her position." And then
she comes to school here (she's a year younger
than me) and I get to know her, and to train with
her every day! I love it. She works so hard. I
love being around someone like that, who has the
same goals as me.
Beijing hopes
I wouldn't have to have any material things to take
away from the Games. If I didn't get anything out
of the meet, just being able to be there, and have
that experience, would be enough for me.
Calbears.com sports stats on Emily Silver >
Magdalena Lewy: She won a spot as a U.S. Olympic marathon runner with a second-place finish in the Olympic trials held in Boston this April. While at Cal in the late '90s, Lewy earned All-America honors at the 1997 NCAA championships. Now in her seventh year as an assistant coach with the Cal track and field program, she is married to former Cal runner Richie Boulet. They have a three-year-old son.
Cal status: '97
alumna, assistant coach for women's
distance track and field
Age and height: 34,
5'4"
Birthplace: Poland
(became a U.S. citizen on Sept. 11, 2001)
Cathy
Cockrell photo
'It's going to be hot,
humid, and polluted in Beijing, and will require
a lot more strategy than a race under perfect conditions.'— Magdalena
Lewy |
On being recruited by Cal
At first I was a swimmer, so I didn't start competing as a runner until
I got to Long Beach City College. I spent two years there, and was recruited
by Tony Sandoval, Cal's current head cross-country coach. So after two
years at Long Beach, I transferred to Cal — and the rest of it
is history. I fell in love with running and improved from year to year.
While I was here, the longest run I did was 5K. It was two to three years
after college that I started running marathons. The runs are a lot longer,
but the philosophy is still kind of the same.
Berkeley grad
At Berkeley I majored in human bio-dynamics, which
is "integrative biology" now, which concerns
how the body moves and is sometimes called "exercise
physiology." I graduated in '97, and afterwards
I worked for a local company that makes an energy
gel that athletes eat, "food on the go." I spent
seven years there, had a great time, resigned last
year to train full time, in hopes to make the Olympics.
Mom on the fast track
When my son, Owen, was a baby, I used to run on a
treadmill when he was napping. Now I do it when
he is playing, or right before dinner or after
dinner. There's definitely a challenge to finding
that perfect balance — what works not just
for me but also my family. It took us a while to
find that. The treadmill is probably the biggest
change. I never ran on a treadmill before I had
Owen.
Why strategy will matter at Beijing
For the Olympic marathon they pick only the top three
women and top three men. So there will be six of
us on the U.S. team. I know it's not going to be
a hilly course; it's going to be pretty flat. The
challenge is going to be humidity and heat — in
the 80s or 90s, which is pretty hot to run. An
ideal marathon day would be 50°F; every 10
degrees slows things down. It's going to be hot,
humid, and polluted, and will require a lot
more strategy than a race under perfect conditions.
Calbears.com sports stats on Magdalena Lewy >