Ā鶹ֱ²„app at the Olympics: a longstanding tradition
In 1900 a University of Toronto graduate named George Orton became the first Canadian to earn gold at the Olympic Games - in the 2500m steeplechase.
And Ā鶹ֱ²„app faculty, students, staff and alumni have contributed to every Olympic Games since that day - as athletes, medical staff, coaches and commentators ā more than 460 men and women.
Over the years, more than 80 Ā鶹ֱ²„app athletes have won medals ā including alumnus Norman Lane, who brought home a bronze in canoeing from the last London Games, in 1948.
āGoing on the podium for the bronze medal at Wembley Stadium was the most emotional occasion,ā says Lane, 92.
Ken Lane - Normanās younger brother and fellow Ā鶹ֱ²„app alumnus - also excelled at canoeing, reaching the podium in 1952.
āHe won the silver in Helsinki in canoeing pairs,ā recalls Norman, who also competed at those Games. āIt was a photo finish ā they literally had to examine the photo to determine who won.ā
Like the Lane brothers, Rosie MacLennan, Canadaās gold medallist at these Olympics, comes from an athletic family; she took up the trampoline after watching her older siblings train.
But the experience of MacLennan and her fellow Ā鶹ֱ²„app Olympians in 2012 is very different from that of the Lanes. Now, athletes promote themselves through online blogs and social media tools such as Twitter and Facebook. And through that same social media, fans can follow their every step to share more closely in the Olympic experience.
āHeading to London today! Crazy! So hard to believe that its almost here!!ā tweeted Ā鶹ֱ²„appās Michelle Li, who represented Canada in badminton, placing fourth in womenās doubles.
āHUGE Thanks to everyone for supporting us!ā posted Ā鶹ֱ²„appās Josh Binstock and partner Martin Reader on their Facebook page, after their first round of menās beach volleyball. āSuch an amazing experience beating GBR at home for our first Olympic win! Next up is Norway on Monday morning at 11 London time. We will do our best to keep updated but our feeds are blowing up plus we must stay focused.ā
All of the attention can be costly, says sports psychiatrist and Ā鶹ֱ²„app lecturer Dr. Saul Marks. The alumnus and former national university diving champion is in London as honorary secretary of the FINA sports medicine committee which oversees aquatic sports including swimming, diving, synchronized swimming, water polo and open water swimming.
āOur athletes have increasingly become our āheroesā and ārole modelsā,ā Marks says. āThey are under the 'microscope' with more pressure than ever as a hero is not allowed to be human or have weaknesses.ā
But social media can help as well as hinder, says Marks.
āUsed in the wrong way, it can be very damaging to athletes,ā he says. āThere have been a few negative examples I am sure you have read about in the papers in Canada, but far and away, there are more positives.
āThe athletes can feel, and be, supported by people around the world for the first time.ā
Before his Olympic victory, Lane prepared on his own near his cottage outside Kingston, often performing the 10,000m Olympic distance twice a day. No coaches, no training partners.
ā[The Olympics] are much more professional now then they use to be,ā Lane says. āNow they bring in professional players such as in basketball and hockey. That wouldnāt have been allowed in 1948.ā
But no matter how much the Games change, certain challenges endure. Lane used his own money to purchase canoeing equipment and training in preparation for London.
āYou werenāt allowed to have any extra money given to you, or else you would lose your amateur status and couldnāt go to the Olympics.ā
On her , alumna Donna Vakalis includes a countdown clock to the start of the modern pentathlon ā and a PayPal button for donations.
The tally on her website shows Vakalis has received only $16,000 towards her goal of $36,000 ā money needed to support costly training in fencing, shooting, horseback riding, swimming and running.
āDebt is a big problem facing athletes as it dissuades young and talented individuals from participating. Itās definitely problematic for developing athletes for the future,ā says Vakalis.
Her friend and fellow Varsity Blues athlete Sarah Wells agrees.
āUnless Iām Usain Bolt, I will not be making a living on track and field,ā says Wells, who competed in the 400m hurdles.
The athletes agree that nobody can put a price on the Olympic experience. But as they look to their futures, higher education remains a priority. Many Olympians are returning to Ā鶹ֱ²„app, including archer Crispin Duenas who is headed to OISE, undergraduate Wells, and Vakalis, who will be pursuing a PhD in civil engineering.
āThe faculty has been amazing with helping me balance school and training and letting me excel in both,ā says MacLennan, who returns to Ā鶹ֱ²„app this fall to begin work on her masters in science in the Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education.