90s Olympic Athletes that were training in Chula Vista will be making their way to London for the 2012 Olympic Games. Tennis, Soccer, BMX, and other various athletes train in the area year around thanks to the perfect weather all year.
About 90 of the athletes headed to London for the summer Olympics got
their training in San Diego. The Olympic Training Center opened 17
years ago in San Diego's second largest city: Chula Vista.
It's located
one-mile north of the Mexican border and a 20 minute drive south from
downtown.
Golf carts are the main mode of transportation at the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista. It's actually the size of a typical golf course -- about 155 acres.
Thousands of Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls have trained here since it opened in the summer of 1995.
"The training I've been getting here is the best in the world, so
having the best training in the world will make me the best in the
world," Blake Leaper said. He's from Kingsport,Tennessee. At age 22 he's
been overcoming the odds most of his life. Born with a congenital
birth defect his lower limbs never developed below the knees. His motto
for life is to "find the ability in your disability," said Leaper. "The
doctor told my father I would never walk, I would never run, I would
never play sports, I would be in a wheel chair all my life." Leaper
never took no for an answer growing up and as a double leg amputee, he
already holds the U.S. Paralympic records in the 100 and 200 meter
sprints.
"The energy return on the legs are amazing, I gain energy as I run
and as my race prolongs. So there's some good and some bad to the
situation, but the fact that I'm out here just running is a blessing for
me," he said with a big smile.
San Diego's warm weather makes this yearround training site perfect
for almost any Olympic sport.
Kayakers and rowers train on Otay Lake
Reservoir right next to the facility, and participants in the newest
Olympic event BMX dirt bike racing train exclusively here for the London
games.
"It's kind of like the BMX mecca of the U.S.," said 21-year old
Amanda Carr. She's from Punta Gorda, Florida and started racing at age
5. "When it comes to the race there's eight in the gate at once and
there's no lanes. So it's whose going to get from the gate to the finish
line first," Carr said.
BMX initially got its start in California in the 1970s when teenagers
would imitate their motor cross heroes doing tricks and stunts on their
dirt bikes. Is this more of a mental or a physical game? "I would say,
obviously the physical component needs to be there, but at this level
all of us are physically fit to win a race, I believe it comes down to
mental," Carr said.
"The athletes that train here are not the big professionals you see.
That's why they need a training center. They're not making huge
salaries, they're not the professional basketball players. These guys do
it because they have a passion for sport," said Tracy Lamb, director of
the Olympic Training Center. It's run on public and private donations
of about $7 million a year.
Lamb said despite the sluggish economy business is good. "We're the
only country in the world that funds its Olympic program through private
donations of the American people. It's a tough way to do business, but I
think it's a great way to do business," Lamb said.
This sprawling complex hosts sports ranging from tennis and soccer to
archery and women's field hockey. But take a tour and you'll notice
only 50 percent of the facility is being used. Lamb says it's by design.
"So we don't know what sports are going to be in the future, so we have
some potential for growth. The athletes are here to reach their full
potential and we're still striving as a training center in Chula Vista
to still have growth.
The archery, soccer and women's field hockey teams have qualified for
London. Along with 19 members from track and field including Paralympic
sprinter Blake Leaper. "So right now I'm the top dog in the U.S. but
I'm ranked second in the world in my events and there's this one
particular guy he's really good," Leaper said.
That would be Oscar Pistorius from South Africa. The first double leg
amputee to qualify for both the Olympic and Paralympic Games. "He'll
have some hype going it to it. I've raced him a couple of times, he's
beaten me yes, but I know that the training I've been getting here is
the best in the world and come the Paralympic games, I'll be ready for
him, so he better be ready for me," Leaper said with a broad grin.
Unfortunately BMX racer Amanda Carr didn't qualify during the Olympic
trials. The Summer Games start July 27th in London. And the Paralympics
begin two weeks after the close of the Olympics.
For more information on the Chula Vista Training Center go to KPBS.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Congratulations to all the Chula Vista Olympic Training Center Athletes
Posted by Larimer Associates on 11:14 AM


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