Dayton Daily News

U.S. luger Sweeney overcomes major crash

- By Tim Reynolds

Emily Sweeney could barely stand on a treadmill a few months ago. After four minutes of walking, the U.S. Olympic luge athlete had to lie down because of the searing pain that was spasming through her neck. She was battered and broken.

That didn’t matter this weekend.

Barely nine months removed from fracturing her neck and back — injuries suffered in a frightenin­g crash at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, and ones she hadn’t revealed widely until now — Sweeney won the women’s bronze medal at a World Cup race in Whistler, British Columbia, on Saturday. And even she didn’t think doing so well in her first race of the season was possible.

“It’s funny. So many people that I talked to would say, ‘You’re crazy to get back on the thing that broke your neck and your back and whatever,’” Sweeney said. “But to be honest, it scared me more to not get back on. I didn’t want to go through my life with such a terrible ending to luge, and I didn’t want to be afraid of anything.”

The bones have healed. The pain is still there, almost constantly.

The 25-year-old wakes up sore every day, is still dealing with tightness in her neck and back, and the muscles around the injured areas have not yet returned to normal because she had to cease training for six months after the crash. When Sweeney did some interviews by phone after her bronzemeda­l performanc­e, she had to do so while lying on the floor to help relieve pressure on her back.

“There’s good days and bad days,” Sweeney said. “I’ll put it this way. There’s been one afternoon since I crashed, one afternoon about a month ago when I was in Lake Placid, when I didn’t feel anything in my body was, like, screaming at me.”

Sweeney said after the crash that she was sore but fine.

She wasn’t lying. That was the original diagnosis, which proved incorrect.

She walked off the track that night at the Alpensia Sliding Centre, not knowing how badly injured she was. The crash was horrible — she wobbled off-line in the track’s most treacherou­s spot, unsuccessf­ully trying to slow down and regain control. By then, she was careening wildly and crashed feet-first into the lip atop the track, got thrown off her sled at probably close to 75 mph, and her body skidded down the ice to a stop.

Watching on giant screens near the finish line, Sweeney’s mother and fellow luger Erin Hamlin’s mother grabbed at each other in fear and disbelief. Sweeney eventually got up, and X-rays performed that night, along with an MRI taken the next day, both came back clean. Subsequent tests, however, revealed the back and neck fractures that she kept largely under wraps.

“I didn’t want to come out and say ‘Hey, look at me; I broke myself,’” Sweeney said. “The Olympics were still going on, and I didn’t want to throw anything else in there. I wanted people who were still competing and having their own moments to have them.”

Her offseason training was limited. Sweeney was dealing with physical limitation­s and mental challenges as well. She decided to spend the last few weeks training with USA Luge’s junior team, skipping the first two women’s World Cup races of the year in Austria. Even going into Saturday, Sweeney had no expectatio­ns.

“If you had told me at any point before this week that I was going to be on the podium, I would have laughed in your face,” Sweeney said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States