USA TODAY International Edition

Olympians go for gold right in the backyard

- Tom Schad

With the games delayed in Tokyo, U. S. athletes learn to bake, play guitar or throw some mulch around the yard.

Rai Benjamin is one of the fastest men in the world, a 400- meter specialist who is favored to win one medal – if not two – at the Tokyo Olympics next summer.

He’s also fascinated by the guitar. So as the coronaviru­s pandemic stretched on, and he found himself losing interest in other hobbies like yoga and video games, he started thinking: Why not try something completely new? Why not learn how to play the guitar?

“It’s like, why not add another skill to my list of skills?” he said.

Benjamin is not alone. With the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympic­s postponed to 2021, and internatio­nal competitio­ns on hold, some of the world’s top athletes are weathering the pandemic with the help of new hobbies, or the pursuit of new skills. They’re picking up photograph­y or gardening. They’re learning to play piano, or speak Spanish, or resod a lawn. One is studying to become a certified public accountant. Another is taking online illustrati­on classes.

“Sometimes we can get so immersed in our sports,” said Rachael Adams, an Olympic volleyball player. “We come home, and we think about it. We go to bed, and we think about it. We wake up and we think about it. We don’t have those moments to balance that out with something else.”

Now, those athletes – whose lives typically revolve around their training regimens – feel like they finally have time to find joy in other things. And after spending thousands of hours working to master the minutiae of their sports, they’re now newbies, embracing what it feels like to be really bad at something new.

That’s certainly the case for Benjamin. The 22- year- old recently started out on his musical quest by borrowing an acoustic guitar from a friend, and finding a set of daily tutorial videos on YouTube.

His goal is to practice and learn as much as he can in the next two months. Ideally, he’d like to be able to play an acoustic version of “Wonderwall” by Oasis.

“It’s a little bit tricky,” Benjamin said. “There are definitely mess- ups here and there — but it’s not impossible, I’ll say that.”

USA TODAY spoke with four other Olympic and Paralympic athletes

about the hobbies and skills they’ve picked up while social distancing.

Ruth Winder: Baking and biking

The 2016 Olympic silver medalist has always been a bit of a baker.

As one of six kids, Winder said it seemed as if her mother were was always baking birthday cakes, and she was often in the kitchen to help.

When she embarked on a profession­al cycling career, however, it meant spending about half of the year on the road – away from friends, family and, notably, her own oven.

So perhaps it’s no surprise that when Winder began social distancing at her home in Boulder, Colorado earlier this spring, she turned to baking. Then she shared some of her creations with friends. Then pictures of those dishes started making their way to Instagram, and that’s where Winder’s longtime hobby took on a new twist.

“It started with these sourdough babkas that I was making,” said Winder, 26. “I was like, ‘ Cool, why don’t I just make them for a couple people and I can just ride them around town and drop them off at people’s houses?’ … I think it ended up being 12 babkas or something that I needed to make.”

Twelve soon became 15, and 15 became 20. Now, the reigning road racing national champion is baking enough sweet or savory goods each week for 30 people and delivering them around Boulder.

Winder said the group gives her some money to cover the cost of ingredient­s, occasional­ly leaving enough for her to buy a cup of coffee while making weekly deliveries, which takes about four hours. She whips up a different dish each week, from sourdough pretzels and miniature blueberry and ricotta pies to scones. ( Winder was born in Yorkshire, Great Britain before moving to California as a child.)

“I’ve done custard creams, which are these custard- filled biscuits. Basically just butter and sugar in the middle. Those were really popular,” Winder said. “And then last week I made a Greek- yogurt- based raspberry lemon cake. So I’ve just been trying to mix it up.”

Winder admitted she probably won’t be able to expand her weekly bake- andbike project. She’s discovered the limitation­s that come with having only one oven, and estimated that she’s used up about two- thirds of a 50- pound bag of flour this month alone.

It’s all been worth it, though. Winder said her weekly baking and deliveries have given her some clear goals at a time when she has otherwise felt a bit lost, in the absence of competitio­ns. And it’s given her an excuse to have face- to- face interactio­ns with friends, even if that typically means leaving sourdough babkas at their doorstep and conversing from the end of the sidewalk.

“It’s like their weekly treat,” Winder said. “And it’s fun for me, too.”

Richard Torrez Jr.: A boxer takes to the backyard

Torrez said his new hobby actually began as a Mother’s Day present. The super heavyweigh­t boxer and Tokyo hopeful wanted to spruce up his parents’ yard in Tulare, California as a gift, so he connected with a friend whose uncle works in landscapin­g and asked if he could tag along on some jobs for a week.

“I found out how to turf, how to sod, how to mulch a yard,” Torrez said.

Then the 20- year- old took what he learned and used it to help his parents, resodding their backyard – which involves clearing the area of vegetation, tilling the soil and laying down new sod – as well as mulching the front lawn.

Other small jobs have followed in the weeks since, Torrez said, mostly mulching yards for neighbors.

Like Winder, he said he’s not trying to make a profit. Just enough to cover the cost of the mulch and other supplies. He said each yard typically takes a day or two to complete.

“And then to keep busy during the landscapin­g, I’ll listen to ‘ The Republic’ by Plato,” Torrez added. “I’m having to go through it four or five times to try to understand the message behind it. But it’s really interestin­g.”

After a day of landscapin­g, Torrez said he’ll move on to his usual training for boxing in the later afternoon or evening. He’ll run three to five miles, then either break apart concrete with a sledgehamm­er, shovel dirt or work on technique using a punching bag behind his house. His father, Richard Sr., is his coach.

“He’s really into all the old- school training, especially now with all the gyms closed,” the younger Torrez explained. “He’ll take me out to an old ditch, and I’ll just start shoveling. And then I’ll put the dirt back.”

Torrez, who counts playing the guitar and performing magic tricks among his other hobbies, said he’s also been reading books about training and raising golden retrievers, with hopes of soon getting a dog.

As for the landscapin­g, he admitted it’ll probably be a “quarantine- anddone” type of activity.

“I give a lot of credit to guys that do this for a living. I don’t know if I could,” Torrez said. “It’s ( been) helpful in a way – but after quarantine, I’m pretty sure I’m just going to stick to boxing.”

Rachael Adams: Illustrati­ng the day away

Some new skills or hobbies are simply a way to pass the time. But for Adams, who helped the U. S. indoor volleyball team win bronze at the 2016 Olympics, the decision to take online classes for the graphic program Adobe Illustrato­r was motivated by questions she began to ask herself about what she wants to do after volleyball.

“What else am I passionate about?” she wondered. “What else do I kind of want to fill my time with, that brings me joy again?”

Adams majored in advertisin­g at the University of Texas, with the goal of becoming an art director. She said she’s always had an interest in design – the type of person who will see a pamphlet and get excited about the font or color scheme.

But when Adams started dedicating more of her time to volleyball, she felt as if she put a pause on her creative side. Two months of social distancing have given her the opportunit­y to tap back into that, largely by sketching illustrati­ons on an iPad through an app called Procreate, then uploading them to Adobe Illustrato­r, which allows her to add color, texture and dimension to her work.

“I’ve thought about maybe illustrati­ng a children’s book one day,” Adams said. “So I thought now would be a good time to learn what it takes to be an illustrato­r and just see if I enjoy it.”

Adams estimates she spends about three hours a week taking online classes for Illustrato­r or otherwise studying the software, learning new features and shortcuts. She hasn’t completed any major projects yet. A recent class, for example, prompted her to sketch a detailed drawings of plants and books atop a desk.

Adams, 29, said she isn’t sure whether all of this will lead to a second career. Maybe she’ll just wind up doing occasional projects, like designing party invitation­s for a friend. But she’s been grateful for the chance to be able to spend some free time on an activity that requires so much focus.

“Normally when I have free time, I want to nap. Or I’m eating. Or I’m recovering from our workouts and our difficult training,” Adams said. “( This) is kind of the last thing I want to give my attention to. Now, I can.”

Hailey Danz: A paratriath­lete tries piano

Danz said her dorm building at the U. S. Olympic & Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado has apartments on three floors. The fourth floor has a piano and a drum set, for no apparent reason.

A paratriath­lete who won silver at the 2016 Paralympic­s, Danz is one of the few athletes who stuck around at the facility when the pandemic hit. And as the days turned into weeks, she started to feel as if she were in stuck in a rut. She wanted to find a way to work her brain. She remembered that random piano on the fourth floor.

Well, she thought, why not?

“I have zero intention of making this my new craft and really trying to master it,” said Danz, 29. “I’d be happy if I could learn how to play a couple of songs. Just enough to entertain people at a party, if those ever happen again.”

Danz was diagnosed with bone cancer in her left leg at 12 and made the decision to amputate the leg at 14. In the years since, she’s become one of the world’s top paratriath­letes, thriving in an endurance sport that doesn’t require tons of hand- eye coordinati­on. She figures that’s why she’s having so much trouble separating her right hand from her left on the piano keys.

Danz said she is learning basic scales and chords from YouTube videos and can do them with one hand just fine. The same chord with both hands? Easy.

“Trying to play two different things is kind of where I’m stuck right now,” she said. “But I kind of feel like it’s a cool way to wire the brain to do something totally different.”

Danz said she took some piano lessons as a child but has long since forgotten them. Her goal this time is to be the person who can play three songs at a party and leave everyone in attendance thinking she’s a pro. She’d like “Thunder Road” by Bruce Springstee­n to be one of them. Then maybe a Christmas song.

“I just feel like in general, when you’re an adult and you’re going about your everyday life, there are very few opportunit­ies to be a novice at something – to just take on something new, and be really bad at it,” Danz said. “I just kind of feel like now’s a really good time to do that. And I think there’s a lot of lessons to be learned in taking something like that on.”

 ??  ?? BOXER RICHARD TORREZ JR.
BOXER RICHARD TORREZ JR.
 ?? PETR DAVID JOSEK, AP ?? Rai Benjamin of the United States anchors the team to the gold medal in the men's 4x400 meter relay final at the World Championsh­ips last fall.
PETR DAVID JOSEK, AP Rai Benjamin of the United States anchors the team to the gold medal in the men's 4x400 meter relay final at the World Championsh­ips last fall.
 ??  ?? USA middle blocker Rachael Adams ( 5) celebrates against the Netherland­s in the women's volleyball bronze medal match. JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY SPORTS
USA middle blocker Rachael Adams ( 5) celebrates against the Netherland­s in the women's volleyball bronze medal match. JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY SPORTS
 ??  ?? Olympic boxing hopeful Richard Torrez Jr. does landscapin­g work in Tulare, California. COURTESY OF RICHARD TORREZ JR.
Olympic boxing hopeful Richard Torrez Jr. does landscapin­g work in Tulare, California. COURTESY OF RICHARD TORREZ JR.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States