Current:Home > NewsIndexbit Exchange:After losing an Olympic dream a decade ago, USA Judo's Maria Laborde realizes it in Paris -Summit Capital Strategies
Indexbit Exchange:After losing an Olympic dream a decade ago, USA Judo's Maria Laborde realizes it in Paris
Poinbank View
Date:2025-04-10 01:50:07
PARIS – At the time,Indexbit Exchange Johnny Prado knew Maria Laborde. Most judo insiders knew about her.
She was a rising star. Ranked third in the world in her weight class. Bound for the 2016 Olympics in Rio, where she’d represent her native Cuba.
Then one day, Prado – a judo coach in the United States – got a surprising phone call.
It was Laborde. She had defected from Cuba, traveling to Texas during a tournament in Mexico. She intended to take those qualification points and use them to represent the U.S. in Rio.
“I’m like, 'No, Maria. It doesn't work like that. You need to start from scratch. You need to be an American citizen,’” Prado said.
Meet Team USA: See which athletes made the U.S. Olympic team and where they are from
With that, Laborde’s Olympic dream nearly died at age 24.
It took until 33 for her to revive it.
Laborde has finally made it. She’ll compete on Saturday in the 48 kg division, having earned a spot in the Paris Olympics with an against-the-odds career refresh that waited on her to become an U.S. citizen in 2022. Despite her initial retirement and lengthy hiatus, she’s likely still Team USA’s best shot at a judo medal in Paris – which makes one wonder what could have been. Just how much success did she miss out on during her 20s?
“I wonder that all the time,” she said.
Leaving family to 'start a new life'
She arrived in the United States on Nov. 28, 2014, headed to Houston after making a difficult, life-altering decision to “give up everything I had before and start a new life.”
Why?
"In Cuba, we don't have so many things,” Laborde explained. “Even if you are a world champion or Olympic champion, it's trouble with everything – food, medicine, the basic stuff we need for athletes. I said, 'Well, maybe if I compete for another country, I can have a better life. And also, I can be able to help my family,' because as Cuban athletes, you can only be able to help so much.”
Laborde hasn’t been back to Cuba since. “They block you for eight years,” she said. “So you cannot come back to the country for eight years.” She could have ended up anywhere in the U.S.
Who’d have guessed Kenosha, Wisconsin?
Years ago, Laborde took a job in Wisconsin teaching mixed martial arts. Harsh winters aside, she said she likes it there. It’s quiet.
Meanwhile, she’s planning a return visit to Cuba after the Olympics, allowing her to finally reunite with family. Like her father or grandmother who she misses terribly.
It was her grandmother – Julia Albarez – who first steered her toward judo at age 12. That was a year after Laborde’s mother Luz Delia died of breast cancer.
“When she passed away,” Laborde said, “I was feeling very lost. That's the thing I started judo for, because I was a really bad kid. I was fighting in school. I was angry all the time. Because my mom was my biggest supporter. Then when she passed away, I really lost myself completely. I was 11 years old.”
An improbable Olympic debut
Judo is a sport. But more accurately, it’s a brawl. They’re scrapping out there, throwing people around, trying to physically survive and impose will on a competitor to win. Takes determination. That suited Laborde from the start, even if she doesn’t look like the brawling type.
She’s barely 5-foot tall. Her weight class in the smallest, as 48 kg equals about 105 pounds.
Back when Laborde first tried judo, she was so small that her first coach in Cuba told her to forget it. Undeterred if not additionally motivated, she kept showing up “every single day,” she said.
“Two months later, I had my first national media,” Laborde said. “And they were so impressed, so surprised, like 'oh wow, you really can do it.' That made me realize judo is for me.”
And it still has been. The past two years, Laborde has routinely ranked in the Top 10 at world events. According to USA Judo, Laborde has been expected to be seeded No. 10 in Paris, the highest of any of the four Americans who qualified for this Olympics.
What Laborde is doing is rare, said Prado (now her coach). That's true in any sport, but especially this one.
“In judo, it's something that if you stop doing the sport, you lose,” Prado said. “You lose skill. You lose your speed. You put on some weight. It's really hard.”
Nonetheless, she’s here. She made it. She’s an Olympian.
And no matter what happens, Laborde can always be proud to say what she did Wednesday in Paris:
“I fulfilled my dreams.”
Reach Gentry Estes at gestes@gannett.com and on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) @Gentry_Estes.
veryGood! (82)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- 'Organs of Little Importance' explores the curious ephemera that fill our minds
- Apple introduces a new, more affordable Apple Pencil: What to know
- Kansas is poised to boost legislators’ pay by $28,000 in 2025, nearly doubling it
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- 'Killers of the Flower Moon' cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro headline new Scorsese movie
- Discovery of buried coins in Wales turns out to be Roman treasure: Huge surprise
- Mayim Bialik was 'ashamed' by the 1995 'SNL' sketch parodying her with 'a big, fake nose'
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Bottle of ‘most-sought after Scotch whisky’ to come under hammer at Sotheby’s in London next month
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Cities: Skylines II makes city planning fun, gorgeous and maddening
- Aid deal brings hope to hungry Gaza residents, but no food yet
- ICC drops war crimes charges against former Central African Republic government minister
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- DIARY: Under siege by Hamas militants, a hometown and the lives within it are scarred forever
- West Virginia official accused of approving $34M in COVID-19 payments without verifying them
- Sister Wives' Janelle Brown Reveals If She's Open to Another Plural Marriage After Kody Split
Recommendation
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Pioneering L.A. program seeks to find and help homeless people with mental illness
Chicago-area man charged with hate crimes for threatening Muslim men
Mortgage rates climb to 8% for first time since 2000
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Dutch court convicts man who projected antisemitic message on Anne Frank museum
West Virginia official accused of approving $34M in COVID-19 payments without verifying them
IAEA team gathers marine samples near Fukushima as treated radioactive water is released into sea