5 Questions with world champion Noelle Pikus-Pace

Published: Saturday, Nov. 14, 2009 11:09 p.m. MST
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 

Orem native and Mountain View High alum Noelle Pikus-Pace is a world champion skeleton athlete favored by many to win a medal in the 2006 Olympic Games. Then in a freak accident in October of 2005, she was hit by a sled and suffered a broken leg that still causes her pain. She won a spot on the U.S. Olympic team in October with the top female time and is on track to earn a long-awaited trip to the 2010 Winter Games. She lives in Eagle Mountain with her husband and 2-year-old daughter. She took some time with Deseret News sports writer Amy Donaldson to answer some questions at the first World Cup of this season in Park City.

Question: How did you avoid sinking into self-pity after the accident?

Answer: I don't think I ever did. I felt I had two choices — move forward or look back. I was planning on retiring after the Olympics in 2006. And then, after the accident, my husband and I both decided it wasn't time for me to be done. My dream has always been the Olympics.

Question: You have said fear and family concerns have been a distraction at times. How have you dealt with that?

Answer: I feel like I'm there now. A lot of it was that my heart was at home with my daughter and my husband. It probably started with the accident and then I have just never been able to get back into that mode. I feel like I am back now. My husband and Lacee, that's why I'm doing this. This is their dream, too.

Question: Your husband built the sled you are using this year. How did that come about and has it made a difference?

Story continues below

A: After the accident, I really wasn't comfortable on the sled. I know people don't randomly build a piece of equipment, but he said, "I really want to do this for you." I really feel comfortable to be on it. … He is as into this as I am and that's what it's taken.

Question: When did you first start to see the Olympics as a realistic goal?

Answer: When I was younger, I played softball and ran track, so I was always looking at the Summer Games. I got involved in the skeleton program (at the Utah Olympic Park) … and just before the 2002 games, I was competing (in skeleton).

Question: What is it like to feel a trip to the Olympics is within your reach?

Answer: It's kind of like a little kid waiting for Christmas, all the anticipation. It isn't just about me anymore. It's more than that. In 2005, there was so much pressure (she was favored to win). This time, it's nice. I can relax. There is no pressure; nobody expects that from me. At the same time, I feel very confident in how I am doing.

Recent comments

It is really hard to care about the Olympics. In Vancouver the city...

Victor | Nov. 16, 2009 at 12:41 p.m.

Image

Noelle Pikus-Pace says knowing that the Olympics are within reach is like being "a little kid waiting for Christmas."

previousnext

Latest comments

Ask just women of childbearing age do they want to decide their reproductive...

Letters: Say heck, not gosh

On behalf of the millions of people worldwide who worship the devine and...

That happened approximately 9 years ago.

Can BYU throw vs. Air Force?

For being a terrible program, Bronco still has one more win than Kyle...go...

3A: Juan Diego wins title

wow, that was a game. #56 for Hurricane seemed to be in on almost every...

That was the most amazing drive and play I have ever seen in high school...

Huntsman blasts media over trip

for stepping up and doing the right thing in challenging portions of the...

A majority of us are apposed to abortion, but we are in even greater...

"Speed kills. Speed beats size everytime. " haha, everytime eh? If that...

Can BYU throw vs. Air Force?

Air Force 35 BYU 21

Advertisements