Current:Home > FinanceUS rowers Michelle Sechser, Molly Reckford get one more chance at Olympic glory -WealthDrive Solutions
US rowers Michelle Sechser, Molly Reckford get one more chance at Olympic glory
View
Date:2025-04-15 15:22:50
VAIRES-SUR-MARNE, France – It’s the one that got away. For three years it’s driven them and consumed them and filled their dreams.
And on Friday, Michelle Sechser and Molly Reckford will have one more chance to make things right again.
Sechser and Reckford qualified for the lightweight women’s double sculls rowing finals Wednesday with a third-place finish in their semifinal heat at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium.
Sechster and Reckford finished fifth in the same event at the 2020 Olympics, 1 second behind the gold-medal winning Italian team. On Wednesday, Sechster called that race “the best race that's ever happened in the sport of rowing” – less than 2 seconds separated all six finalists – and said she’s looking forward to facing much of the same competition with a medal on the line this week.
Great Britain, which finished 1/100th of a second out of bronze in the last Olympics, won Team USA’s heat Wednesday in a time of 6:59.79, followed by New Zealand (7:02.86). Ireland, Greece and Romania also qualified for the final.
2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.
Both Great Britian (Emily Craig and Imogen Grant) and Ireland (Aoife Casey, Margaret Cremen) return their same boats from Tokyo.
“It's been a carrot, it's been a demon, it’s been a lot of things over the past three years,” Sechser said. “But I can say, and I think we both feel this way, it's been a very different experience and it's been a very enjoyable experience. To get to work again at something we love every day is, I don't know what else I could ask for.”
Sechser, 37, likely is rowing in her last Olympics as lightweight doubles will be replaced by coastal rowing at the 2028 Games in Los Angeles, part of a push by the International Olympic Committee to do away with weight-class division in non-combat sports.
She said getting a chance at a medal in a race that’s fueled her training for three years is “the most beautiful gift I could ask for and I am just thrilled that we get to be a part of it on Friday.”
“I’ve been dreaming about another chance to race in this lightweight double Olympic final again since Tokyo,” she said. “For anyone who's seen that race or has not seen that race, please go back to NBC or wherever you can find the footage, rewatch the Tokyo 2021 Olympic lightweight women's double final. It's incredible. I'm obviously biased, I think it's the best race that's ever happened in the sport of rowing.”
Sechser and Reckford won a silver medal in the world championships in 2022, finishing about 3 seconds behind Great Britian, and Sechser and Mary Jones took silver behind Great Britain again the next year, when Reckford rowed quadruple sculls in the open-weight division.
Sechser and Reckford reunited this spring and haven’t missed a beat on their way to the finals, though the pressure to win will be even more intense Friday.
“We have come home with hardware and have been performing well on the international stage,” Reckford said. “And so you internalize that pressure a little bit. And so in some ways I know that Michelle and I are fast enough to get it done, but there's also, that makes it more serious when people say, ‘Come home with gold.’ Because it's like, ‘Well, we actually (might).’ It's too close to possible to feel safe.”
Sechser said rowing with Reckford “is the most grounding and familiar thing that's in my life and I love that we get to do that together,” and when she paused while telling two reporters how meaningful it was to qualify for the final again, Reckford urged her to go on.
“You can to it, it’s OK,” she said.
“I've dreamt about having another chance at that race since then,” Sechser said. “There's so many steps along the ways. Over the past three years, everything Molly and I have gone through under the new system of rowing and rowing different boat classes and finding each other back together again that now that we're in position to have that second shot, which is something that never happens in sport, that I'm just so happy that on Friday we get to see our dear friends one last time.”
veryGood! (91727)
Related
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- How Olivia Wilde Is Subtly Supporting Harry Styles 7 Months After Breakup
- NOAA’s ‘New Normals’ Climate Data Raises Questions About What’s Normal
- Abortion pills should be easier to get. That doesn't mean that they will be
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- What Has Trump Done to Alaska? Not as Much as He Wanted To
- From Brexit to Regrexit
- Charleston's new International African American Museum turns site of trauma into site of triumph
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- At One of America’s Most Toxic Superfund Sites, Climate Change Imperils More Than Cleanup
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Warming Trends: Mercury in Narwhal Tusks, Major League Baseball Heats Up and Earth Day Goes Online: Avatars Welcome
- Video game testers approve the first union at Microsoft
- Are you being tricked into working harder? (Indicator favorite)
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Environmental Groups Don’t Like North Carolina’s New Energy Law, Despite Its Emission-Cutting Goals
- FBI looking into Biden Iran envoy Rob Malley over handling of classified material, multiple sources say
- Transcript: Ukrainian ambassador Oksana Markarova on Face the Nation, July 9, 2023
Recommendation
San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
In Afghanistan, coal mining relies on the labor of children
Senate 2020: Mitch McConnell Now Admits Human-Caused Global Warming Exists. But He Doesn’t Have a Climate Plan
How Maksim and Val Chmerkovskiy’s Fatherhood Dreams Came True
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Warming Trends: A Global Warming Beer Really Needs a Frosty Mug, Ghost Trees in New York and a Cooking Site Gives Up Beef
Video: As Covid-19 Hinders City Efforts to Protect Residents From the Heat, Community Groups Step In
Text: Joe Biden on Climate Change, ‘a Global Crisis That Requires American Leadership’