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Ep 201: What is the ultimate prize?

An Olympic athlete shares

Photo by Chris Cooper - email, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=94792508

Olympic glory is often seen as the ultimate prize for athletes. But how much of this defines an athlete's worth? We speak to an Olympian about her quest for Olympic Gold and how she's found a prize even greater than an Olympic medal.

Our guest: Nicola McDermott. Nicola is an Australian high jumper who holds the Australian and Oceanian records with a personal best 2.00 m jump on 18 April 2021. She is the only Australian woman to have ever jumped 2 meters.

Check out Nicola breaking the Australian record and then her her first interview after jumping 2m.

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Bigger questions asked in the conversation

Nicola - congratulations, you hold the Australian record and are the only Australian woman to have ever jumped 2m - what was it like soaring over the bar when you broke that record?

So you’re a high jumper, do you often get jokes about walking into a bar? Or always raising the bar?

Smaller Questions

Now we like to kick off Bigger Questions with some smaller questions to get us thinking. Today we’re asking Olympian Nicola McDermott about the ultimate prize. So Nicola, our smaller question to you today is about the ultimate prize for athletes.

The importance of the Olympics

So just how important are the Olympics to elite athletes?

Are they different to other sporting titles? Australian boxer Jeff Fenech once claimed that "An Olympic medal is the greatest achievement and honor that can be received by an athlete” and he said he would swap “any world title to have won gold at the Olympics."

You have to train so hard to even get to the Olympics. Can you tell us a bit about what your training looks like? I take it you don’t just jump fences and run around the block?

So how are you feeling about the Olympic Games?

Nicola’s story (12:00)

So what got you into high jump in the first place?

When you broke the Australian high jump record, you thanked all those who helped you: your family, your sponsors, your coaches and everyone who helped you. But you said they were all like beads in a necklace, but it was your faith in God which was like the string which holds it all together. So can you explain what you mean by that, how does your faith in God hold it all together?

Nicola’s testimony

So Nicola, you are a believer, but what convinced you this was true and worth following in the first place?

It appears a big challenge for athletes is that they often find their identity, their worth in their performance - hence the Olympics are seen as the ultimate test of an athlete's worth, so how big a challenge is this for elite athletes?

Bible's answer: an eternal crown

Now Nicola, today’s big question is about the ultimate prize, and the Bible speaks about an ultimate prize. In the book of 1 Corinthians, written by the Apostle Paul to a church in the Ancient city of Corinth, he comments on the sacrifices of athletes where he says in 9:24-25

"Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever.

You have this passage on your personal website - why is this important to you?

You've described having peace and freedom when you jump, what does that mean?

The Big Question

So Nicola, what is the ultimate prize?

Bible reference(s):
1 Corinthians 9.24-25