Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
>> RACE IMBODEN: I'm Race Imboden and I'm going to the 2012 London Olympics.
>> JED DUPREE: Race is extraordinary for how young and how consistent he is and how much
success he has experienced. >> BILL IMBODEN: His competitors are all ten
years older than he is.
>> JED DUPREE: I've been coaching Race for five years. I think from a very early age
you could see when he was holding his foil that he was very confident and that he really
wasn't intimidated by people who had more experience.
>> RACE IMBODEN: I'm number one in the country and I'm number four in the world.
>> RACE IMBODEN: When you look at the best athletes in the world, usually they have something
that drives them. They have a chip on their shoulder and I think for me that was just
from the get-go, in my sport, I wasn't the average fencer. I wasn't clean cut, I had
long hair. >> FIONA IMBODEN: I still think he likes to
see himself as the underdog and have something to prove.
>> RACE IMBODEN: Fencing, I always say, is the physical chess. It's a complete balance
between physical work and mental work. I had one of the worse mental psyches on this strip.
>> BILL IMBODEN: Race had a terrible time as a youth fencer. He knew what he wanted
to do and sometimes couldn't make it happen technically or things didn't go his way. I
mean, many bouts ended in tears even when he won.
>> JED DUPREE: The real difference between what makes a good fencer and a world class
fencer is how they're able to control their emotions.
>> RACE IMBODEN: Jed taught me that you can use and alter your emotions to help you.
>> FIONA IMBODEN: Race seems to have a more calm presence now. He doesn't have to go crazy.
>> JED DUPREE: Fencing is a combat sport and different from other combat sports,
>> JED DUPREE: you're touching each other, but you're touching each other and within
one touch you have to be able the change how you did it last time.
>> JED DUPREE: In electric fencing the target area where you can touch the other person
is that metal vest that they're wearing. When they touch that, there will be a colored light
that goes on, whether you're on the right or the left side.
>> RACE IMBODEN: The intensity in fencing is such a high level. You have to be able
to trick the person basically over and over again in order to get touches and will the
battle. So it's like your mind is constantly running, constantly running, constantly running
trying to trick the person. I could be the fastest guy in the world but if you have something
that's tactically smarter than I do, you could beat me. And that's difficult.
>> RACE IMBODEN: Growing up, all my competitors were from families with better means than
I had. Fencing is not cheap, the equipment is expensive, the travel you're paying for
yourself. >> BILL IMBODEN: The challenge was, basically,
being able to afford tickets, hotel rooms, and rental cars.
>> RACE IMBODEN: My mother started working again after she hadn't worked for a decade,
and my father was working extra shifts and everybody was trying to chip in to help me
achieve my goals. >> BILL IMBODEN: As soon as he could we started
to try to teach him how to be self-sufficient. We would arrive at an airport and we would
send Race ahead and let him check himself in.
>> RACE IMBODEN: I actually went to my first competition alone when I was fourteen. That
meant me growing up really quickly. >> FIONA IMBODEN: But in the hindsight it
didn't stop him. I think it fired him up, actually, more than it stopped him.
>> BILL IMBODEN: We've never seen Race fence internationally. The very first time that
we'll be able to do that will be at the Olympic Games.
>> RACE IMBODEN: I'm sure there will be some tears shed and my mom is a crier.
>> FIONA IMBODEN: It's very emotional. >> JED DUPREE: Race's greatest strength at
the Olympics is that he lives for big stages. You can say that you want to go to the O lympics
but when that day comes, you know deep down inside if this is an opportunity to make a
mistake or if this is an opportunity for something amazing to happen and I think he sees it as
something amazing potentially can happen. >> RACE IMBODEN: The biggest thing about the
Olympics is that there is nothing else like it. I want to just have my body ready, be
mentally ready and just be ready to fence. When I do well and I see my flag raised there's
nothing else, nothing beats that.