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Liz Short wrestles her way
through life with USOEC program
Colleen O'Reilly USOEC
01/09/2007
MARQUETTE MICH. – Imagine this. It’s
5:00 a.m. You’re buried under three of your most comfortable
blankets snug and warm, and then you hear it, that loud “beep,
beep, beep!” It’s time for United States Olympic Education
Center athlete Liz Short to wake up and start another grueling
day.
After hitting the snooze button a few times, Short
is up by 5:15 a.m. She spends about a half hour getting ready
and heads out the door.
Unlike most Northern Michigan University students,
however, she isn’t on her way to class. Instead, she is
on her way to the first freestyle wrestling practice of the day.
Only after an intense two-hour training session of running, weightlifting,
rope climbing, pull ups, push ups and live wrestling, is it time
to focus on academics.
The NMU senior athletic training major attends
four hours of class, takes in an afternoon practice and heads
to the PEIF’s Care Clinic. She doesn’t go to the clinic
for her own treatment; however, she goes to help others. Short
uses her time in the clinic to gain experience for her future
career.
She evaluates members of the university community
and provides primary treatment for sport and physical activity
related injuries. Short plans to put her experience to use in
her professional and athletic careers.
“Through athletic training, I am able to
better understand how my body works and how my competitor’s
body works. I think this knowledge gives me an advantage on and
off the mat,” says Short.
For most students, dinner time signals the end
of the day; they’re ready to head home for the night. But
for Short, it’s back to school.
Following class, she takes a one-hour break for
dinner and hits the books. She studies as long as she can, but
finds her eyelids getting heavy after such a long, challenging
day.
Aside from having a great support system, which
she credits to her professors, coaches, family and the USOEC,
she maintains an internal drive to help her get through each day.
“The thought of earning my degree and becoming
an Olympic champion keeps me going. It is my motivation,”
she says.
Short’s athletic and academic successes are
the results of her hard work, but she’s not the only athlete
with dreams of Olympic gold and a college degree. About 90 resident
USOEC athletes on the campus of NMU are striving to achieve their
own academic and athletic goals.
To learn more about them and how to support their
efforts, please go to: www.nmu.edu/USOCED
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