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Nick Symmonds' Voice is Strong

Published by
DyeStatPRO.com   Nov 21st 2013, 7:47pm
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Olympic Runner Makes Statements On & Off the Track

Published by Here and Now on November 20, 2013

Nick Symmonds is one of the best 800-meter runners in the world. He brought a silver medal home from the World Track and Field Championships in Moscow this summer, when he finished second to Ethiopian teenager Mohammed Aman in the final. Symmonds also finished 5th in the 800-meter final in the Olympics in London in 2012. That was one of the fastest races ever over that distance. Symmond’s time — 1:42:95 — was a personal best and would have been good enough for a medal in every other Olympic 800-meter final in the history of the games. But the winner of that race, David Rudisha, just happened to set a world record.

“Too often, athletes go into a press conference and are asked difficult questions and they say ‘no comment.’”

Today Nick Symmonds has his sights set on the 2016 games in Rio de Janeiro. “That would be my third Olympic team,” he tells Here & Now’s Meghna Chakrabarti. “I have the speed there, I just need to have it shake out for me in the finals. Finishing second in Moscow proved to me that I can get it done. I just have to stay healthy, continue working closely with my coaches and — if I can make the team in 2016 — and hopefully come home with a medal, an Olympic medal.”

Symmonds doesn’t only make waves on the track. He’s also outspoken on hot button social issues like gay rights and gun control. In Moscow, he dedicated his silver medal to his gay and lesbian friends as a protest against Russia’s anti-gay laws. And recently Symmonds wrote a column in Runner’s World, in which he called on Congress to ban assault weapons and handguns for everyone but police and military personnel. This stance comes from someone who grew up around guns in a hunting family.

He says he takes some heat from other athletes for his outspoken opinions, but he’s not apologizing for expressing them. “Too often, athletes go into a press conference and are asked difficult questions and they say ‘no comment’ and I never wanted to be that kind of athlete. I have opinions on everything and I have logical reasons why I have come to those conclusions and I’ll tell you why I feel that way.”



Read the full article at: hereandnow.wbur.org
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