Current:Home > StocksSarah Hildebrandt gives Team USA second wrestling gold medal in as many nights -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Sarah Hildebrandt gives Team USA second wrestling gold medal in as many nights
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-03-11 07:19:07
PARIS — Over the past four years, Sarah Hildebrandt has established herself as one of the best wrestlers in the world in her weight class. She won a bronze medal at the Tokyo Olympics. Then silver at the 2021 world championships. Then another bronze, at worlds. Then another.
Yet on Wednesday night, Hildebrandt wasn't one of the best. She was the best.
And the Olympic gold medal draped around her neck was proof.
Hildebrandt gave Team USA its second wrestling gold medal in as many nights at the 2024 Paris Olympics, defeating Yusneylys Guzmán of Cuba, 3-0, in the 50-kilogram final at Champ-de-Mars Arena. It is the 30-year-old's first senior title at the Olympics or world championships – the gold medal she's been chasing after disappointment in Tokyo.
➤ Get Olympics updates in your texts! Join USA TODAY Sports' WhatsApp Channel
2024 Olympic medals: Who is leading the medal count? Follow along as we track the medals for every sport.
Hildebrandt's path to the gold was not without drama as her original opponent, Vinesh Phogat of India, failed to make weight Wednesday morning despite taking drastic measures overnight, including even cutting her hair. The Indian Olympic Association said she missed the 50-kilogram cutoff by just 100 grams, which is about 0.22 pounds.
So instead, Hildebrandt faced Guzmán, whom she had walloped 10-0 at last year's Pan-American Championships. And she won again.
➤ The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.
Her gold came roughly 24 hours after Amit Elor also won her Olympic final. Those two join Helen Maroulis and Tamyra Mensah-Stock as the only American women to earn Olympic titles since 2004, when women's wrestling was added to the Olympic program.
Hildebrandt grew up in Granger, Indiana and, like many of the women on Team USA, she spent part of her early days wrestling against boys.
Unlike other wrestlers, however, she had another unique opponent: Her own mother. Hildebrandt explained at the U.S. Olympic trials earlier this year that, during early-morning training sessions with her coach, her mother would come along per school policy. Because the coach was too large for Hildebrandt to practice her moves, she ended up enlisting her mom, Nancy, instead.
"This sweet woman let me beat her up at 5:30 in the morning, for the sake of my improvement," she told the Olympic Information Service.
Hildebrandt went on to win a junior national title, then wrestle collegiately at King University in Bristol, Tennessee. Before long, she was making world teams for Team USA and winning international competitions like the Pan-American Championships, which she has now won seven times.
It all led to Tokyo, where Hildebrandt was a strong contender to win gold but missed out on the final in devastating fashion. She had a two-point lead with just 12 seconds left in her semifinal bout against Sun Yanan of China, but a late step out of bounds and takedown doomed her to the bronze medal match, which she won.
Hildebrandt has since said that she didn't take enough time to process the emotions of that loss. She tried to confront that grief and also revisit some of her preparation heading into Paris.
"I was really hard-headed, stubborn to a fault," she said at the U.S. Olympic trials. "I wasn't listening to my body. Just trained through walls because I thought that's what it took. It's taken a lot to step back from that and just be like 'whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, we're good, we put in the work the last 20 years, we can listen to our body.'"
Contact Tom Schad at [email protected] or on social media @Tom_Schad.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Finland and Sweden set this winter’s cold records as temperature plummets below minus 40
- Doing the Dry January challenge? This sober life coach has tips for how to succeed.
- Peter Magubane, a South African photographer who captured 40 years of apartheid, dies at age 91
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Sophie Turner Calls 2023 the Year of the Girlies After Joe Jonas Breakup
- Taylor Swift dethrones Elvis Presley as solo artist with most weeks atop Billboard 200 chart
- Taylor Swift duplicates Travis Kelce's jacket for New Year's Eve Chiefs vs. Bengals game
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- A crash on a New York City parkway leaves 5 dead
Ranking
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Remembering those lost on OceanGate's Titan submersible
- It's over: 2023 was Earth's hottest year, experts say.
- What's open New Year's Day 2024? Details on Walmart, Starbucks, restaurants, stores
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- How to get the most out of your library
- Amy Robach Reveals What She's Lost Amid Divorce From Andrew Shue
- How Golden Bachelor's Gerry Turner and Theresa Nist Plan to Honor Late Spouses at Their Wedding
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
Barbra Streisand shares her secret for keeping performances honest
Queen Margrethe II shocks Denmark, reveals she's abdicating after 52 years on throne
What happened to Alabama's defense late in Rose Bowl loss to Michigan? 'We didn't finish'
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
It keeps people with schizophrenia in school and on the job. Why won't insurance pay?
The Handmaid's Tale Star Yvonne Strahovski Gives Birth to Baby No. 3
Biden administration approves emergency weapons sale to Israel, bypassing Congress