Waterloo Region Record

Wiebe says she found ‘joy in the process’ despite setbacks

- CURTIS WITHERS The Canadian Press

Erica Wiebe knows she won’t fly under the radar at the Tokyo Games. That suits her just fine.

Wiebe will enter the women’s 76-kilogram wrestling event as a reigning Olympic champion when competitio­n kicks off Sunday at the Makuhari Messe Hall in Chiba, about 50 kilometres outside the Japanese capital.

“Obviously now, as an Olympic champion, there’s added pressure,” Wiebe, who topped the podium in the women’s 75-kilogram event at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games, said in an interview. “But my process and my perspectiv­e between this Games and Rio are actually completely the same.”

That’s not to say there haven’t been challenges. Like most elite athletes in Canada, Wiebe had to work around training disruption­s and a lack of preOlympic competitio­n due to restrictio­ns around the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I think, as athletes, you have to be flexible, you have to be adaptive, you have to be resilient. And this pandemic has definitely tested all of those mechanisms,” Wiebe said.

“From having to spend the majority of 2020 training outside on grass, potentiall­y going a month or two without having physical contact. So we would just do ‘shadow wrestling’ in a field for weeks on end.”

When wrestlers were finally able to train together in small cohorts, Wiebe said it started with off-mat training in basements and garages.

“It has definitely been a challenge,” Wiebe said. “But I think you always have to think ‘OK, what do I have and what can I do?’ ”

Wiebe qualified for the Games at a tournament in Ottawa, near her hometown of Stittsvill­e, Ont., in March 2020, just at the onset of the global pandemic.

She didn’t return to action until the 2020 Individual Wrestling World Cup in Belgrade, Serbia.

Wiebe said the months-long hiatus from competitio­n was the longest of her career.

“You really have to put your head down and find joy in the process, the technical, tactical and physical aspects of training,” she said.

Danielle Lappage of Olds, Alta.; Amar Dhesi of Surrey, B.C.; and Jordan Steen of Tecumseh, Ont., are also on Canada’s wrestling team, which is smaller than normal due to the difficulti­es of qualifying during COVID-19.

Tokyo will mark the first time since women’s wrestling made its Olympic debut in 2004 that Canada hasn’t sent a competitor in all of the female weight class.

Sam Stewart was close to qualifying in the women’s 53-kilogram division before losing her semifinal at a World Olympic Qualificat­ion Tournament. The 31-year-old from London, Ont., lost 4-2 after her opponent landed a double leg takedown with under five seconds to go.

Wiebe’s advice to Stewart, and others who missed out due to exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, is “failure is not final,” especially with the upcoming quadrennia­l before the 2024 Paris Games being only three years.

“For Sam, this is nowhere near the end of her story,” Wiebe said. “I have complete confidence that she’ll be ready when her time comes.”

 ??  ?? Erica Wiebe
Erica Wiebe

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