Catching up with: Connie Paraskevin-Young
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Barry Faulkner
The irony is as classic as it comes that five-time Olympian Connie
Paraskevin-Young earned the majority of her athletic fame by spinning her
wheels.
For while the Corona del Mar resident’s prodigious leg drive produced
the repetitive revolutions that propelled her racing bike, it was her
role in a broader revolution that continues to guide her along the path
toward a successful competitive afterlife.
“I’m among the first generation that had an opportunity to make being
an Olympic athlete a career,” said the four-time match race sprint
cycling world champion, who earned a bronze medal in the same event at
the 1988 Seoul Summer Games. “I chose to be an Olympic athlete, make that
my career and do everything else that went along with making that happen.
I had to figure out how to do that and I worked very hard at it. I feel
fortunate I was able to do it, because I competed against women who
couldn’t.”
Paraskevin-Young, a Michigan native who competed in her first two
Olympics as a speedskater (beginning with Lake Placid in 1980) and ended
her competitive cycling career after the 1996 Atlanta Games, no longer
courts the corporate sponsorship that used to pay the bills.
But her experience in the business world -- she is also a corporate
speaker -- as well as the competitive drive that made her world class on
the ice or in the velodrome, is being utilized at the recently opened
Youngs Training Center in Santa Ana. The business, for which her husband
and Olympic cycling coach Roger Young is the leading catalyst, provides
what appears to be an obvious transition for Paraskevin-Young.
“It seems to be a natural place to go and a natural place to be,” she
said. “What do I know best? How to train and how to prepare your body to
compete. Roger is in the forefront; he’s the coach. And while I’ll be
involved in training a limited number of athletes on a regular basis, I’m
a little more behind the scenes. I’ve done a lot with putting the
business together and getting it up and running. That involves a lot of
(the business dealings) I did during my athletic career.”
Paraskevin-Young said the center will provide general, as well as
specialized fitness training. She believes some high-tech cycling
equipment, including an interactive system that can simulate racing on
some world famous courses, makes the facility unique.
“It’s basically a larger version of what was was available to myself
and some of Roger’s other athletes in our training. But, instead of
having to go to several places to use various types of equipment, like we
did, we’ve put it under one roof.”
When not under that roof herself, Paraskevin-Young, 39, still enjoys
spending time on the bike. But her primary competitive outlet comes on
the golf course.
“Unfortunately, because of the level of my game, I lose most of my
golf bets,” she said. “But I love the game because it is so challenging.
It never fails to humble you. I typically shoot between 90 and 100.”
Her competitive career, which began as a skater and cyclist at age 9,
features hundreds of memories. But she considers her 1990 cycling world
championship, six years and a frustrating stream of injuries after her
third world title, as well as her culminating ’96 Olympics on American
soil, her two favorites.
“Competing in Atlanta was really special. It was the culmination of a
career and it came before the family and friends who supported me
throughout my whole career. I feel very good about my career. The Olympic
gold medal is the only thing lacking.”
Her Olympic career began at Lake Placid in 1980 and continued at the
Sarajevo Winter Games in 1984.
She then shifted to cycling, winning world titles in 1982, ‘83, ’84
and the aforementioned ’90.
Between Seoul and Atlanta, she competed in ’92 at the Barcelona Games.
“When people hear I’ve been in five Olympics their typical reaction is
‘Oh my gosh!,’ ” Paraskevin-Young said. “But there was no pro women’s
cycling association, so the Olympics was my career.”
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