Angie Fifer first enrolled at Penn State with a plan to become an athletic trainer. But during a class in sport psychology, she felt a tear roll down her cheek. Instantly, she knew she’d found her calling—to prevent other athletes from having the same experience she had. When she was 16 and an aspiring gymnast,…
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11 | Canadian Olympian and Runner Jessica O’Connell: Today, Not Tomorrow
After overcoming multiple injuries to qualify for the 2016 Olympics in the nick of time, 5,000-meter runner Jessica O’Connell faced another series of setbacks as she prepared for the Games. When she arrived in Rio, she was tempted to view her situation as an anomaly. But the more she talked to other athletes, the…
10 | Runner and Writer Jen A. Miller on Trusting Yourself
Jen A. Miller has been writing about running for The New York Times since 2010. The first article on the sport she published there had to do with injury—”dead butt syndrome,” specifically. Last year, she sustained another serious setback, a stress fracture in her tibia. In the weekly running newsletter she now writes for the…
9 | Olympic Pitcher Joey Wagman: Riding the Recovery Roller Coaster
If you ask Joey Wagman to describe his baseball career, he’ll tell you—with a wink—it’s a bit unorthodox. Since his 2013 graduation from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, where he earned All-American honors and served as team captain for two years, he’s played in both the minor leagues and several different independent leagues. Since 2013,…
8 | Paralympic Medalist Amanda McGrory: The Benefit of Perspective
During her long career as a wheelchair racer, Amanda McGrory has accumulated seven Paralympic medals and more marathon finishes than she can count—including first-place and podium finishes at many of the sport’s prestigious Abbott World Marathon Majors. Her half-decade’s worth of experience has also brought her something less tangible but incredibly useful: an ability to…
7 | Cindy and Carrie Redefine Success
One of the biggest challenges of injury is seeing the goals and timelines you once had for your season or your career slip through your fingers. You may know, objectively, that these plans no longer make sense given your new situation. Still, your brain often holds onto these previous targets. Each time you realize you’re…
6 | Triathlete Fiona Ford: Pursue Your Potential
After three years of racing Ironman triathlons as a pro, British athlete Fiona Ford was having the season of her life—she’d finished fourth in Ironman France and felt poised to push through to the next level, all the while building a thriving coaching business. Everything changed in an instant during a training ride on June…
5 | International Yoga Instructor Adam Whiting: Moving with Integrity
You might think of yoga as primarily a way to prevent and perhaps recover from other sports injuries. However, it can also be an intense physical endeavor in its own right—one which, instructor Adam Whiting told us on this week’s Injured Athletes Club podcast, is going through a transformation in terms of how its practitioners…
4 | New York Jets’ Brandon Copeland: Comeback of the Century
From a torn meniscus weeks before his Pro Day to a broken hand shortly before we recorded this podcast, Brandon Copeland—a linebacker for the New York Jets—has had his share of injury-related setbacks. Brandon considers himself much more than a football player; he’s an entrepreneur, philanthropist, father, professor teaching financial literacy, and more. However, being…
3 | Olympic Runner Carrie Tollefson: The Power of Positivity
Anyone who’s met Carrie Tollefson, seen her covering running events on national broadcasts, or listened to her podcast C Tolle Run would likely describe her as a positive person. She’s known for both her Minnesota kindness and her optimistic tagline, “Get after it.” But her athletic career was, as she puts it, “not all…