Meet the engineer, doctors and other clock punchers competing for Team USA in the Olympics (2024)

Former college basketball star Canyon Barry isn't the only Olympian who has to balance 9-to-5 work with preparation for Paris.

But Barry, a hoops scion with a bachelor's degree in physics and a master’s in nuclear engineering, was probably the only Team USA athlete giving a high-level work presentation from Mongolia at 2 a.m. — the afternoon back home in Florida — last month while he was also getting ready for the Olympics.

"It's definitely a grind at times," Barry, who plays 3x3, said in an interview that started 30 minutes behind schedule ... because he had to take a work call. "I'm so fortunate [my employers] are willing to work with me. That's part of the Olympic spirit to do whatever you can try to succeed and pursue that dream."

Scores of elite athletes have to put on their work boots before they lace up sneakers to run down Olympic aspirations. Sports psychologist Mark Aoyagi said the laboring athletes face a uniquely difficult challenge.

“It’s not ideal, certainly,” said Aoyagi, a professor at the University of Denver’s Graduate School of Professional Psychology. “That’s particularly if you’re comparing yourself to other countries where some athletes don’t have jobs — they’re being paid by their government. When you’re a looking at a Russian athlete or a Chinese athlete being paid, it can be challenging.”

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In stark contrast to glitzy promos touting star athletes that will fill airwaves in the coming weeks, many performers on the Paris stage will be unknown Americans who work full- or part-time jobs to support their high-level endeavors.

“How do you do it? Athletes are great at compartmentalization, keeping one part of their life and their experiences from another," Aoyagi said. "From a mental and emotional level, that’s key.”

Barry, the son of NBA Hall of Fame guard Rick Barry, has a strict regimen: up by dawn for weight training and yoga, going to L3Harris Technologies headquarters in Melbourne, Florida, for work, then off to the gym for basketball training after he punches out of the office.

The long days, Barry said, aren’t too different from his time as a College of Charleston undergrad and a University of Florida grad student, having to make the most of 24 hours while he was playing NCAA Division I basketball and taking high-level STEM classes.

"It definitely required good time-management skills," he said. "It's something I learned from college athletics. As you can imagine, a lot of those courses were challenging to take while trying to balance what's basically a full-time job of collegiate basketball. But it prepared me for the real world and being able to manage my time and really figure out how to be efficient. Sometimes you don't get much sleep, but you do what it takes."

Still, Aoyagi worries that even the most well-organized working athlete in a stress-free, non-physically-taxing job could be a step slow.

"When you're an athlete where one one-hundredth of a second is the difference from making the podium or not or the difference between gold and silver, the person who is on their feet for eight hours a day, 40 hours a week, for however many years is going to be at a disadvantage to the person who only has to worry about training and recovery," said Aoyagi, who previously worked for U.S. Track & Field.

In addition to Barry, other working athletes include:

Holmes, the fencer, said her best time management tools are old- fashioned paper and pen.

“I sit down and I write every single due date as far into the future as I can,” Holmes recentlytold CNBC. “When I’m done, I cross it off and I know I don’t have to deal with it.”

While athletes are well-trained to forget about a bad game or individual play, that doesn’t mean they’re well-equipped to deal with even the most mundane day-to-day work headaches that can build stress, Aoyagi said.

An athlete might be able to shake off one moment or one play or one day later. But an unresolved simple workplace squabble, if it’s not hashed out, can have a lingering impact.

“Athletes are typically good at [compartmentalization], but what they're often not good at is going back to unpack it," Aoyagi said. "If all you're doing is stowing things away, they're going to end up exploding at the worst possible time.

"One of the main things that we teach is how to unpack and process it. How do you work through those emotions that you compartmentalize in the moment so you can get on to the next thing?"

David K. Li

Senior Breaking News Reporter

Meet the engineer, doctors and other clock punchers competing for Team USA in the Olympics (2024)

FAQs

Are there doctors at the Olympics? ›

While the athletes are performing at their best, there are many more behind-the-scenes. Dr. James Zaremski is a nonoperative musculoskeletal and sports medicine physician currently serving in the Olympic Village as one of the official doctors for Team USA.

Are there any professionals in the Olympics? ›

Originally the Olympics were restricted to amateur athletes only. However, around the 1970s, the International Olympics Committee (IOC) relaxed its policies, allowing professional athletes to compete in most sports. And by the 1988 games, the IOC made all professional athletes eligible to compete in the Olympics.

Who was able to compete in or watch the Olympic Games? ›

All free Greek males were allowed to take part, from farmhands to royal heirs, although the majority of Olympians were soldiers. Women could not compete or even attend. There was, however, a loophole to this misogynistic rule – chariot owners, not riders, were declared Olympic champions and anyone could own a chariot.

Who competes in olympics? ›

Competing and being part of the Games

There are no countries participating in the Olympic Games, but rather athletes from National Olympic Committees (NOCs). Athletes from the territories of 206 National Olympic Committees and the IOC Refugee Olympic Team (EOR) will take part at the Olympic Games Paris 2024.

Who is the team USA physician for the Olympics? ›

Five UCLA Health sports medicine physicians — Calvin Duffaut, MD (Link opens in new window); Sharon Hame, MD (Link opens in new window); Kristofer Jones, MD (Link opens in new window); Thomas Kremen, MD (Link opens in new window); and Daniel Vigil, MD (Link opens in new window) — will be team doctors for the United ...

Who is the Olympian who is now a doctor? ›

Australian javelin thrower Mackenzie Little has balanced being a first-year, full-time doctor at a Sydney hospital in the lead-up to this year's Olympic Games.

Do Olympians get paid? ›

It varies depending on the medals earned, but Team USA pays $37,500 in bonuses for a gold medal, $22,500 for a silver medal, and $15,000 for a bronze medal, according to data from Live Sports on TV.

How much do Olympians get paid by country? ›

There's a wide range of compensation offered to gold medalists by country.Here's a look at the pay for 2024 Paris Olympics gold medalists by country, according to multiple reports, citing data from National Olympic Committees and local reporting.The figures have been converted into U.S. dollars and rounded up to the ...

Do US Olympians have jobs? ›

Most of the athletes competing at the 2024 Olympics don't make a living solely from their sport. Here's a deep dive into the regular jobs being done by swimmers, rowers, boxers, and more.

Who could not compete in the Olympics? ›

Team Russia is barred from these Games because of the war in Ukraine. A World Athletics ruling means that track and field stars from Russia aren't even allowed to compete as neutral athletes. And, for Mariya, that hurts. “I can't even bring myself to follow the athletics at these Olympic Games,” she tells me.

Who pays for Olympics to compete? ›

The IOC contributes a large part of the finances needed to stage an Olympic Games. The IOC also provides the possibility to the Games organisers to commercialise the Olympic rights in their territory as well as to manage the ticketing of the event.

Who was not allowed to watch or compete in the Olympic Games? ›

Married women were not allowed to participate in, or to watch, the ancient Olympic Games.

What is the only country not in the Olympics? ›

There's only one UN-recognized independent country that's never been eligible for the Olympic Games. That's Vatican City, the independent Catholic Church headquarters in Rome, which has never applied to join, though it's recently started working towards that.

Who is the oldest Olympic competitor? ›

This is Source Notes, a column about the internet's information ecosystem. With the 2024 Paris Olympics underway, it is fitting that the oldest living Olympian is a French former athlete. Yvonne Chabot-Curtet, age 104, proudly represented her country in long jump during the 1948 London and 1952 Helsinki games.

What is the age limit for the Olympics? ›

There is no specific age limit for taking part in the Olympics, according to the International Olympic Committee.

How to become an Olympic doctor? ›

How to get to the Olympics as a physician: 6 steps
  1. Be licensed or certified.
  2. Have at least three years of experience.
  3. Have no felonies, disciplinary actions, or sanctions.
  4. Have a current DEA registration.
  5. Have at least $1 million in malpractice insurance.
  6. Have current certification in using CPR and external defibrillators.
Feb 8, 2018

Do professional sports teams have doctors? ›

While sports teams at the high school or college level may just have one or two dedicated sports medicine physicians, professional football teams have multiple specialists with specific areas of expertise. They can include orthopedic surgeons and primary care sports medicine physicians like Dr.

Do people in the Olympics have jobs? ›

Most of the athletes competing at the 2024 Olympics don't make a living solely from their sport. Here's a deep dive into the regular jobs being done by swimmers, rowers, boxers, and more.

Does the Olympics hire nurses? ›

The official U.S. Olympic Committee's Sports Medicine Division recruits a crew of volunteer doctors — as well as orthopedists, chiropractors, nurses, sports therapists, massage therapists, and more — every two years.

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