Time Is the Most Valuable Currency in the World. Paralympian Michael Kneeland Spends It With Others.
Meet the 20-year-old Paralympic Nordic skier who believes time is our most valuable currency. Michael Kneeland found out he made the team fourteen days before the Games. His family couldn't come. Now he's plotting his return and is not wasting a second.
The Sanding Party Philosophy: 2x Olympian Kaysha Love Is Shaping the Future of U.S. Bobsled
Kaysha Love was warned that sanding was the worst part of bobsled. She responded by throwing on a JBL speaker, buying candy, and hosting sanding parties. That same instinct to find the purpose inside the hard thing and bring everyone with you is what led her to attempt one of the boldest transitions in U.S. bobsled history. She decided to become a pilot when everyone said the timeline was impossible.
Two Weeks, Two Races, Two-Woman Bobsled, One Olympic Dream for Jadin O'Brien
Jadin O'Brien learned how to bobsled two weeks before she made the World Cup team. Two weeks to go from heptathlete to brakeman. Two weeks before she found herself hurtling down ice alongside one of the greatest bobsledders in American history.
Nurse. Paralympian. The Two Jobs That Make Erin Martin Unshakeable
Erin Martin is a pediatric nurse at Seattle Children's Hospital. Then she goes home, trains for the Paralympics, and does it all over again. What sounds like an impossible balance turns out to be her biggest competitive advantage.
Mike Schultz Lost His Leg. Then Built the Equipment That Changed the Sport.
Mike Schultz didn't set out to become a Paralympic medalist. Nor a CEO for that matter. He just refused to stop moving. This is the story of a builder, a competitor, and a founder who has spent the last 12 years doing all three at once.