Timson hired experienced personnel like Mark Wood from Canada, Andi Schmid from Austria and Danny Holdcroft from the Lawn Tennis Association, who not only looked for the fastest athletes, but those who could acclimate themselves to hurtling face down on ice tracks faster than most cars on an expressway, while using only their bodies to control the sled.
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They found one in Amy Williams, a track athlete, who joined after watching athletes perform on the push-start track got the better of her.
“I lived in the same city it was built,” Williams said. “I kind of discovered the sport and found it, and I sort of got nosy.”
Without a home track, Britain’s athletes trained on the world’s most intimidating ones in places like Altenburg, Germany, and Lake Placid, N.Y. Not having a home-track advantage, over time, became an advantage.
“Although it would be incredible to have our own home track, which would allow for home advantage and testing, by not having one means we all have to learn fast and adapt quickly,” said Shelley Rudman, who won silver for Britain in skeleton at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
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By 2010, Williams felt like Britain had to achieve a gold medal in order for the sport to sustain its funding.
Williams reached down to put her socks on a couple of days before competing at the Vancouver Games and felt her back give. She loaded up on as many painkillers as possible but could barely push her sled. Williams dreaded the faster tracks like the one in Whistler, British Columbia, yet always performed better on them. She pushed from her mind the death of a luge athlete during practice for the Games.