New Straits Times

New Zealand trampoline couple fall head over heels before Paris

- Reuters

For New Zealand’s trampoline gymnastics team, the Paris Olympics will be a labour of love.

Dylan Schmidt and Maddie Davidson were Olympic team mates in Tokyo but return to the Games as a couple seeking medals and inspiratio­n from each other.

In a career of ups and downs, former world champion Schmidt became New Zealand’s first Olympic medallist in gymnastics when the 27-year-old nabbed a bronze at the Tokyo Games.

He will compete in a third Olympics in the “City of Love” and cheer on his 25-year-old partner Davidson, who became New Zealand’s first gymnast to qualify for the women’s event at Tokyo.

While Schmidt and Davidson can bounce ideas off each other as elite trampolini­sts both are mindful of the need to keep a healthy split between their sport and private lives.

“It’s not the first topic that comes up when we go out to dinner,” Schmidt told Reuters of their athletic pursuits.

“We tend to leave the advice to our coaches.”

Keeping a profession­al distance is not as hard as it sounds, given the pair train at opposite ends of New Zealand. Schmidt is based in North Island metropolis Auckland, while Davidson is based in South Island’s Christchur­ch.

They try to catch up every couple of weeks.

Romance between athletes is often forged in the cauldron of competitio­n and Paris will undoubtedl­y light the spark for a number of future relationsh­ips.

United States women’s soccer icon Megan Rapinoe met her partner Sue Bird, the former basketball player, at a team photo shoot for the 2016 Rio Olympics and both qualified for Tokyo as a couple.

Australian rugby sevens players Charlotte Caslick and Lewis Holland also competed as an item in Tokyo.

COVID-19 stole much of the romance from the Games in Japan, where athletes were largely unable to mix outside their entourages due to strict social distancing protocols.

“It was such a different experience,” said Davidson, who was among the few New Zealanders able to watch Schmidt’s podium moment at the venue in Tokyo.

“The lead-up also was not ideal for training due to all the travel restrictio­ns.”

No such impediment­s exist this time round for Paris, where the Kiwi couple will arrive well-prepared and with a proper complement of family and friends to roar them on.

Davidson narrowly missed the final in Tokyo but expects to reach new heights at the Bercy Arena after working with a sports psychologi­st on her mental game.

Like much of gymnastics, any slight mistake in trampoline can have devastatin­g consequenc­es for a routine’s score and possibly years of regret for an athlete between Olympic cycles.

An uncharacte­ristic flop for Hikaru Mori, the reigning women’s world champion at her home Tokyo Games, put her out of qualifying and shocked the host nation.

“Your brain and body can become disconnect­ed,” said Davidson.

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