Here’s What Drives Olympians In Unpopular Sports – Huffington Post
American fencer Dagmara Wozniak is ranked second in the United States and fifth in the world in her sport. Now Wozniak, 28, is competing in her second Olympic Games. Although Wozniak lost her individual sabre event earlier this week, she’s still in the running for gold in the team sabre competition.
But unless you follow fencing, you’ve probably never heard of her. Besides the Olympics, only one fencing tournament in the United States is televised, and it was founded in 2010.
“It’s not necessarily spectator-friendly,” Wozniak said of fencing, noting that the sport is more popular in Europe, where it originated, than in the United States.
For the most part, Wozniak says getting less attention than athletes who compete in blockbuster sports like women’s soccer or beach volleyball doesn’t really bother her.
For high-performing, under-appreciated athletes like Wozniak, an intrinsic motivation to play or compete in that sport is especially important, says sports psychologist Stephen Graef of The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.
Gold medal winner Brandon Slay, whose sport of wrestling was nearly axed from the Olympics altogether in 2013, emphasized this intrinsic motivation in an open letter he wrote to Olympic medalists in The Players’ Tribune Monday.
“Why am I doing this? Why am I running sprints until I dry heave? Why am I cutting weight?” Slay said he asked himself before the 2000 Sydney Olympics. “To me, it wasn’t about the medals or the glory or the accolades. It was just about my love for the sport, and everything surrounding it.”
That’s an important distinction to make for athletes in less popular sports, where glory from performing exceptional athletic endeavors ― and the ability to make money from of those endeavors ― is often fleeting.
“You can win the gold medal in fencing, but you still might not make the Wheaties box,” said Graef.
‘Intrinsic motivation’ doesn’t pay the bills
Outside of the U.S. women’s soccer team’s recent push for equal pay, money is not a topic that Olympic athletes regularly reference in interviews. Still, it’s an extrinsic factor that can weigh heavily on athletes in less popular sports.
“I do a good job at making sure that all my expenses are necessary and I’m not just frolicking around town and having a good time, but it’s difficult,” Wozniak said of supporting herself on a fencer’s salary.