Toronto Star

‘I NEVER GAVE UP’

14 months after breaking both legs, Olympian back to racing at top level

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

Olympic three-sport wonder Georgia Simmerling returns for cycling worlds 14 months after devastatin­g ski-cross crash,

VANCOUVER— A year ago, Canada’s first three-sport Olympian was broken. Georgia Simmerling had crashed during a ski cross competitio­n weeks before the Pyeongchan­g Olympics where she was expected to be a medal contender.

Bones snapped in both of her legs. Nearly every ligament in her left knee was torn.

But just 14 months later, the 29-year-old West Vancouver, B.C., native is preparing to race at the top level once again, competing this week at the track cycling world championsh­ips in Poland.

The journey back to competitio­n has been a tough one, Simmerling said.

“It was a lot of tears,” she said from Cycling Canada’s training facility in Milton. “I was broken for sure. But in the grand scheme of things, I never gave up.”

Returning from injury wasn’t new for Simmerling, who’d suffered previous fractures throughout her long athletic career.

She made her Olympic debut at the Vancouver Games in 2010 as part of Canada’s alpine ski team, then switched to freestyle the following year. At the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, she competed in ski cross.

Soon after, she decided she wanted to compete in the Summer Games, too.

Simmerling tried rowing first but found she was better suited for track cycling and started training for the team pursuit.

“I definitely get that sense of adrenalin that I got from ski cross,” she said of the sport. “I think that competing as a team was something that I really fell in love with.”

In 2016, Simmerling was part of the women’s team pursuit squad that won Olympic bronze in Rio.

She also made history, becoming the first Canadian to compete in different sports at three separate Olympics.

Still, she wasn’t done with skiing just yet. Simmerling went back to training for one last Winter Games and racked up multiple podium appearance­s on the World Cup circuit.

Then, in January 2018, she crashed during a race in Nakiska, Alta.

Her injuries required multiple surgeries. Simmerling lost 20 pounds of muscle and spent 11 weeks walking with crutches.

Then there was the emotional toll — simply seeing cyclists rid- ing casually along Vancouver’s picturesqu­e streets would make her seethe with anger.

“I was just miserable,” she said. “I did not send those happy cyclists any good vibes.”

Many tears were shed as Simmerling spoke to her parents and girlfriend Stephanie Labbé — goalkeeper for Canada’s women’s soccer team — using FaceTime.

“I think challenges really test us as human beings, not only as athletes,” she said. “I’ve definitely been tested over my career, for sure, and this last injury was just another test for me. It puts your life into perspectiv­e and it puts your job into perspectiv­e.”

Midway through her recovery, Simmerling announced her retirement from skiing. Returning to the velodrome, though, would required gruelling rehab for as much as six hours a day.

“I told myself ‘If you want to race, you have to get back on your bike and you have to get over this.’ And I did,” Simmerling said.

She wasn’t able to get back on her bike until September and even then, her injuries weren’t fully healed.

“She came in, atrophied muscles. She couldn’t even really properly take her feet out of the pedals, it was so painful,” said Kris Westwood, Cycling Canada’s high performanc­e director.

Last month, Simmerling returned to competitio­n for the first time at a World Cup event in New Zealand, and helped Canada to a silver medal in the team pursuit.

“It was just so exciting to be back on the line and to feel that adrenalin in me and perform under pressure,” Simmerling said.

Her team — which also included Allison Beveridge of Calgary, Ariane Bonhomme of Gatineau, Que., and Annie Foreman-Mackey of Kingston, Ont. — posted a time of four minutes, 15.179 seconds in the first round, less than one second off the national record set at the 2016 Olympics.

Simmerling’s “stoic perseveran­ce” has lifted the rest of the Canadian cyclists, said Westwood.

“It’s truly incredible and quite inspiratio­nal to see her just taking her natural talents and drive and turn her season around like that,” he said.

Heading into the world championsh­ips in Poland, Simmerling said she’s feeling “super excited” and stronger every day.

“We’re super strong as a unit, as a team,” she said.

Canada’s cyclists aren’t at their absolute peak but they’re still hoping for a medal in the women’s team pursuit, Westwood said. “We know we can do the times to get us on the podium,” he said. “We just don’t know what everyone else is bringing to the worlds.”

While Simmerling is excited to be working towards yet another Olympics, she’s also taking time to reflect.

“I’m so happy and grateful for where I am now,” she said. “I think it’s really a testament to what I’ve put in, the work that’s been required to get here today. It’s been a lot of work.”

“I was broken for sure. But in the grand scheme of things, I never gave up.” GEORGIA SIMMERLING CANADIAN TRACK CYCLIST

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 ?? DEREK LEUNG GETTY IMAGES ?? Georgia Simmerling couldn’t even properly take her feet out of the pedals when she got back on her bike last September.
DEREK LEUNG GETTY IMAGES Georgia Simmerling couldn’t even properly take her feet out of the pedals when she got back on her bike last September.

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