March 06, 2025 - 9:44 AM
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) — The latest addition to the list of amenities available to athletes at the bobsled and skeleton world championships is a room inside a lodge just down the hill from the finish line. There are some stuffed animals, tons of toys, Mickey Mouse coloring books and big boxes of crayons.
This is the family space. These days, it’s a needed part of the sliding circuit.
There are four mothers expected to compete in the world championships that got officially underway Thursday in Lake Placid — U.S. skeleton athlete Kelly Curtis, Swiss bobsledder Nadja Pasternack, and U.S. bobsledders Elana Meyers Taylor and Kaillie Humphries. It’s believed to be the highest number of mothers racing at a world championships.
“They haven’t forgotten about us,” Curtis said.
All four women missed time from competing during their pregnancies — for Meyers Taylor, it’s been two absences, since she’s a mom of two now. But the International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation, the governing body for those two sports, decided in recent years to protect women who wanted to add to their families by ensuring that they didn’t lose their world rankings while taking the time off.
That means they were able to jump right back into World Cup racing when they were ready to do so — and not having to start from the bottom of the rankings means the path to qualify for the next Olympics in February 2026 became a bit easier for all of them.
“I wanted to be able to prove to myself that I could come back,” said Humphries, the only three-time Olympic gold medalist in women’s bobsled history. “I didn’t want to feed into what I heard for the majority of my career, that having a baby ends your career. I didn’t want that to be the case. And so, a big part for me was proving I could come back and do it, regardless of the results, regardless of how it all plays out.”
The kids seem to have their own followings at the track at this point. Bobsled and skeleton sliders are relatively close-knit, with people seeing the same people at tracks around the world all winter. Meyers Taylor, Humphries and Curtis have all said since becoming mothers that they rely on their friends and teammates for help when needed, and for the most part they travel with their partners or families for support.
In a social media post earlier this year, Meyers Taylor discussed how her sons were both born deaf and how one also has Down Syndrome — and how the decision to have them with her on the World Cup circuit was not an easy one to make.
“My fears were quickly laid to rest as I quickly realized not only would they have the opportunity to see the world, they would have an immense amount love poured into them on a daily basis by my (U.S.) teammates and the many, many friends I’ve made throughout my years with bobsled,” wrote Meyers Taylor, who has a record five women’s Olympic bobsled medals.
Pasternack — who gave birth in December 2023, after going into labor while cheering Swiss teammates on at a race in La Plagne, France — returned to sliding just 12 weeks ago, and made her way into the world championships with relative ease.
“Back like she never left,” German bobsledder Laura Nolte said.
Meyers Taylor and Humphries were tied for sixth in the World Cup standings this season in two-woman bobsled. Meyers Taylor was eighth in the world monobob standings this season with a pair of wins and conceivably could have been as high as fifth if the Americans hadn’t skipped the last race of the season to prepare for worlds. Curtis — who is a member of the U.S. Air Force, stationed in Italy, and someone who gave birth a little over a year ago — struggled for much of the season before hitting her best stride at the end; back-to-back seventh-place showings got her into the world championships.
It’s not new for moms to be competing as sliders. Curtis remembers the scene at the 2014 Olympics when U.S. skeleton athlete Noelle Pikus-Pace — then a mother of two — won a silver medal in Sochi and ran into the stands to celebrate with her family. That was the moment when Curtis decided to try sliding.
“The postpartum period, hormones, everything, the recalibration calibration has kind of taken me by a little bit more of a surprise,” Curtis said. “Physically, I’m back pushing to where I used to be, and I think the mind-body connection for the actual sliding, relaxation, part is taking longer to come back than I thought.”
No matter what happens over the next two weeks, whether medals are won or lost, the kids won’t care much. Humphries — one of the most driven athletes in the sport — says the challenge just of getting pregnant (she and her husband spent a fortune on fertility treatments before finally having success) and now being a mother has brought newfound perspective.
It’s a challenge for dads, too. U.S. bobsledder Frank Del Duca doesn’t have his child with him when he travels the world and makes no secret of how difficult that is. But he marvels at what Curtis, Humphries, Meyers Taylor and Pasternack can do.
“To have their body go through that transformation hormonally and to be able to provide for another human being, then to turn around and start lifting weights, sprinting, traveling, competing and winning on the world stage is one of the most impressive things I’ve witnessed in sport,” Del Duca said. “And they do it with a smile.”
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