Current:Home > ScamsEchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center|Ukraine’s Olympic athletes competing to uplift country amid war with Russia -NextFrontier Finance
EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center|Ukraine’s Olympic athletes competing to uplift country amid war with Russia
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-11 00:38:24
Editor’s note: FollowOlympics opening ceremony live updates.
SAINT DENIS,EchoSense Quantitative Think Tank Center France – As she prepared for the 2024 Paris Olympics in hot gyms that lacked air conditioning and often went long stretches without power, Ukrainian fencer Olena Kryvytska sometimes had to stop her training mid-session to take cover in a bomb shelter.
"Sometimes it can be very often, sometimes more rare," Kryvytska told USA Today Sports.
Such has been the life for athletes in the Ukraine for more than two years, since Russia invaded the country in 2022.
Russia is banned from this year’s games, though athletes from the country are allowed to compete as Individual Neutral Athletes, or AINs for short.
Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from
Get Olympics updates in your texts! Join USA TODAY Sports' WhatsApp Channel
Ukraine’s delegation includes 140 athletes, and whatever success they have will be shared by the country in what remains a trying time.
"For us, a gold medal in this Olympics, I think it will be gold medal for all our countries," said Tetiana Kurtain, head doctor of Ukraine’s national Olympic committee. "Especially our military men."
Kurtain spoke to USA Today Sports at the Olympic Village on Thursday as she stood in front of a window at the team’s housing unit decorated with dozens of pictures drawn by Ukrainian children and brought to Paris to support the athletes.
One picture, from a student at School No. 78 in the capital city of Kyiv, showed a fencer standing alongside a soldier with words Kurtain translated to mean well wishes for the country’s sportsmen and good luck, strength and safety to its soldiers.
"For our sportsmen of course this is so hard, the games, because we have a very special situation in our country," Kurtain said. "Mental health is very strong and they very much make it about this game because they need it to win in this game, because they all support our people from our country and our military men from our country, too."
Kurtain, whose work has expanded to include soldiers since the start of the war, said about half of her country’s Olympic athletes trained in Kyiv or elsewhere in the country while others moved to foreign soil.
Rather than gather the entire delegation in the Ukraine before the games, Kurtain said they held sports camps elsewhere in Europe. Ukrainian press attaché Maksym Cheberiaka said one was funded by the French ministry of sports.
"Every day we have bomb attack," Kurtain said. "Bomb attack every day and every day we have alarm and all the sportsmen need to train, continue training in a safe place, and all time we need to stop training and move to safe place, and it’s all time, all day. Some days we can do this three or four (times)."
Kryvytska, whose brother is on the front line fighting in the war, according to Reuters, said she regularly practiced in gyms with temperatures of 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) because of attacks on Ukraine’s electric grid.
"Very hot," she said. "No (air) conditioners, no like working apparatus like with fencing we need to have. And when the massive attacks, the missiles attack, (it) alarms so we can’t."
The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
Other competitors from around the globe said they can’t fathom having to train in the conditions Ukraine athletes have had to endure ahead of the Olympics.
The Canadian artistic swimming duet of Audrey Lamothe and Jacqueline Simoneau said they gave their Ukrainian counterparts – one of their top medal foes at the Olympics – hair pins at the last World Cup just so they could compete.
"Definitely in our sport we really need to have 100% of our concentration and 100% of our awareness, and if I imagine me thinking of all of what’s going on outside, it will be another stress factor that it’s going on top of what our sport is demanding," Lamothe said.
Simoneau said her and Lamothe’s training venue at the Olympic Stadium in Montreal caught fire in April and forced a difficult and "huge shift" in their Olympic preparation that is "so miniscule compared to what they’re facing."
"I mean, we have so much sympathy and compassion to what they’re facing right now, it’s really, it’s a crazy situation," she said. "(We were) bouncing between training venues. Outside, inside, not ideal training conditions, but at least there’s no bombs on us. At least there’s no war going on. We’re in a good country, there’s nothing really that’s inhibiting us from training."
A Ukrainian coach who told USA Today Sports he did not speak fluent enough English to conduct an interview said, "I thank your country very much for support for my country," as he walked into Ukraine’s building Wednesday.
Kryvytska said she wanted people to know "that the war is still in Ukraine and it’s terrible and every day it takes a lot of lives."
And at these Olympics, Ukrainian athletes are competing for more than themselves, with a chance to uplift their country, even if temporary.
"It’s so hard, but it is our work now," Kurtain said. "It’s a hard time, but hard time it will build good people, strong people."
veryGood! (97)
Related
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- El Salvador Just Became The First Country To Accept Bitcoin As Legal Tender
- Facebook Apologizes After Its AI Labels Black Men As 'Primates'
- U.S. border officials record 25% jump in migrant crossings in March amid concerns of larger influx
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Canadians Are Released After A Chinese Executive Resolves U.S. Criminal Charges
- Ex-Facebook manager alleges the social network fed the Capitol riot
- Planning for a space mission to last more than 50 years
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- U.S. ambassador visits Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in Russian prison
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Dozens dead as heavy fighting continues for second day in Sudan
- Why the Salesforce CEO wants to redefine capitalism by pushing for social change
- Emaciated followers found at Kenyan pastor's property; 4 dead
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Tori Spelling Reflects on Bond With Best Friend Scout Masterson 6 Months After His Death
- Biden welcomed as one of us in Irish Parliament
- A lost hiker ignored rescuers' phone calls, thinking they were spam
Recommendation
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
Prosecutors Call Theranos Ex-CEO Elizabeth Holmes A Liar And A Cheat As Trial Opens
Apple Is Delaying Its Plan To Scan U.S. iPhones For Images Of Child Sexual Abuse
Oscars 2023 Red Carpet Fashion: See Every Look as the Stars Arrive
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
An original Apple-1 computer sells for $400,000
Fan Bingbing Makes Rare Appearance at 2023 Oscars 5 Years After Mysterious Disappearance
Transcript: Christine Lagarde on Face the Nation, April 16, 2023