Business Day

Never-say-die Olivier finally bags Olympic Games qualificat­ion

- Mark Etheridge

Pretoria canoeist Esti Olivier finally nailed down an Olympic Games qualificat­ion slot at the weekend, exactly 20 years after starting to sprint competitiv­ely.

She and 2012 London Olympian Tiffany Koch (née Kruger) secured the slot at the weekend’s national championsh­ips at Victoria Lake in Germiston.

But Olivier wasn’t really around to let the news sink in. Instead she had fainted from sheer exhaustion and toppled out of the boat as they crossed the line after the third and final shoot-out series against multiOlymp­ian Bridgitte Hartley and Michelle Burns. Thankfully in Koch, Olivier was in safe hands, as the former is a national level life-saving ace and supported her to a jet ski that took her ashore.

“It was a complete blur,” said Olivier this week as she reflected on a decidedly rollercoas­ter two decades to Olympic qualificat­ion.

“Before the race I told Tiff’ to get me to the side if she doesnt hear anything from me and we joked about her being a lifeguard. I came to when I felt her pull me up and help me onto the jet ski board.

“I couldn’t see anything, but then heard Nkosi Mzolo’s voice. He does great work with Soweto Canoe Club and will be our manager at the Paris Olympics. He’s also a paramedic and firefighte­r, which helps things.

“Then I heard [coach] Neil du Plessis’ voice, and my husband, Gerhard, ran to get my medication once he saw me safely into the ambulance. I wasn’t worried about my life being in danger, but felt really terrible and knew I had to calm down and drink my meds. I could hear people coming to congratula­te me, but it really wasn’t the way I’d want to celebrate an Olympic-qualifying victory.”

Olivier’s path to Paris has been peppered with pitfalls. “From an early age I pushed my limits when it came to paddling, always racing in an age group ahead of me.”

This was all before she had even finished school at Afrikaans Hoër Meisieskoo­l in Pretoria.

“In Grade 10 I just played hockey and even asked the coach to put me in the B side because I just didn’t want the pressure. It was one of my best decisions I ever made.”

Come matric and she was back to racing for senior spots and wasn’t at school much as she built up to and raced world championsh­ips.

But behind the scenes the pressure-cooker was also building and after matriculat­ing in 2010, she decided to take a gap year — and instead fell through the gap.

“I cracked completely, stopped playing all sport, fell into a deep depression. February 2011 found me being drunk for days on end,” she reflects with sobering honesty.

And then, as so often been the case, a saviour stepped into her life. “Just before I had my cave-in I met Gerhard, the man who would one day be my husband.

“He stuck around during my darkest times and gave me a reason to get off the couch and out of bed and I’m forever grateful for that.”

PSYCHOLOGY

She has also put her own experience­s into good effect and now has an honours degree in psychology, having put her masters on hold to go full out for the 2024 Olympics.

“It’s helped me being proactive at not allowing myself to get into that situation again. I’ve learnt my triggers and built coping mechanisms. I love the neuropsych­ology side of things. I have a huge love for kids with neurologic­al issues, and have a group of kids whom I still work with.”

She made her first A finals at under-23 internatio­nal level in 2013 before another hiccup saw her losing her Opex Programme funding from Olympic governing body Sascoc. She is in the dark about the reasons for losing the funding. “But what it taught me was that I’d never be reliant on funding again and decided I’d rather fund myself. ended up taking on three jobs – and I was still studying!”

On to 2015 and the roots of her Olympic K2 journey began with Tiffany Kruger. The initial grounds of the relationsh­ip were rocky.

“We were big rivals. As luck would have it, we went on a threeweek tour and shared a room. There was only one double bed, so we ended up sharing it for three weeks.”

Thus the roots of friendship found common ground. “We started realising that we had so much in common and that we could get on quite well.”

They missed out on the Rio Olympics qualificat­ion. Kruger married and went on to have two daughters with husband Kevin. But the friendship endured.

“She was a bridesmaid at my wedding. We went through so much and built an amazing bond. She’s always been in touch and invested so much in my career.”

Covid-19 hit Olivier hard and she developed a heart condition and, like so many other competitiv­e athletes, headed to Cape Town to see top cardiologi­st Wouter Basson. She had to take medication to keep her heart rate in check. Hardest of all, she had to take things easy for six months.

But it wasn’t long ago that Olivier decided for another crack at the Olympics. Now aged 30, her competitiv­e clock is ticking.

“I phoned Tiff and asked her if she wanted to go full circle and as luck would have it she’d started training hard again.”

A seismic shift in her approach to life came at her wedding in April 2021 when she had a wondrous week with friends in the tiny Eastern Cape village of Rhodes. “It turned out to be a week of freedom and my mindset shifted. I realised that I could finally say no to unreasonab­le requests, I could postpone things, I could be ‘selfish’ and look after myself after 30 years of putting everyone but myself first.”

Last year proved bitterswee­t. Her new mental freedom caused her to travel to Duisburg, Germany, to try qualifying for the K1 for Paris. She missed out by just one spot.

“While we were in Slovakia in May during the World Cups we heard that I was back on the Opex programme which was a huge relief as it meant I could travel frequently to Durban to train with Tiffany.”

She also went to the African Continenta­l Championsh­ips in Nigeria to tick another required qualifying box.

“We also had sad family news though. My mom was diagnosed with colon cancer and my aunt also got cancer and had to have her leg amputated. And all the stress had the effect of bringing my heart condition back, so it was tough going just to get to this weekend’s selection trial.”

But she has finally made Paris a dream come true. “I still need to put in a lot more hard work though.” Make that heart work as well.

“I’m going back to Dr Basson next month and we’ll see where we go from there. But I’m happy in the fact that I have every bit of support that I need … there are a crazy number of good people in my life whom I owe this qualificat­ion to and can never thank enough.”

FROM AN EARLY AGE I PUSHED MY LIMITS WHEN IT CAME TO PADDLING, ALWAYS RACING IN AN AGE GROUP AHEAD OF ME

 ?? Sean van der Westhuizen ?? For the win: Esti Olivier paddled her way into contention for the 2024 Paris Olympic canoe events. /
Sean van der Westhuizen For the win: Esti Olivier paddled her way into contention for the 2024 Paris Olympic canoe events. /

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