MARK DOWNEY, ALONG with team-mate Felix English, recently qualified Ireland a spot for the Olympics in track cycling. In his second column for The42, he gives his thoughts on what itโs like for an elite athlete living under lockdown.
The last few mornings, Iโve been getting up late. Normally, when weโre in training camp, weโre getting up pretty early โ eight oโclock or so. Iโve fallen into a bit of a routine ever since these clocks have changed and Iโm getting up at 10 oโclock nearly.
Iโm not really a morning person, so I thrive on people forcing me up. The family are quite early risers. Everyoneโs up at seven oโclock in my house, so Iโm the odd one out at the minute.
Yesterday, I went out for a spin with my mum and dad for a bit of change, just on the road with a mountain bike, which is something I used to do as a kid. Itโs something we havenโt been able to do for years โ ride along and have a chat.
Then we came home and had afternoon tea. My sister was cooking scones all morning.
In the afternoon, I played a bit of PlayStation. I was speaking to the lifestyle coach and he was saying you canโt be wasting your time playing PlayStation these next few weeks, but Iโve a bit of a passion for Fortnite.
Iโve also been doing a bit of work in my dadโs shop. Heโs the type of man who just gathers things up year after year. I hadnโt been about the shop much and decided we were going to clear the place out. Itโs cool looking back at newspaper clippings from when he was racing and weโre just clearing out all those old bikes, different bits and pieces, just trying to keep ourselves busy really.
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Itโs a bike shop, so kidsโ bikes, adultsโ bikes from the โ60s and โ70s โ there was a lot of retro stuff, my first-ever road bike. The size of the wheel you couldnโt even buy anymore, and I remember, as a kid, you couldnโt even buy tubes for it, so when we used to ride it on, every 15 minutes, weโd have to stop to pump it up, because the tyres were going down.
My dad said โthat used to be worth a lot of money,โ but I told him itโs not worth a lot of money now. There is so much stuff from years ago that would have been in fashion โ a funky-looking handle bar or tyres. Bikes have changed over the years, so that shop is just a step back in time.
At the moment, you wake up every morning thinking about what you should be doing to keep your mind occupied. We donโt have any real purpose. Itโs just about getting out before we get back into training.
When I wake up in the morning in Majorca, everythingโs dialled in to the minute. Iโm on the road for 9am, Iโm back in for lunch, youโre straight in to get showered, you have a 40-minute kip. Then youโre packing your bag to go to the track in the afternoon. Then youโre home, cook your dinner, stick on a film and go straight to bed.
Mark Downey pictured with Irish team-mate Felix English. Bradley Collyer
Bradley Collyer
Itโs a lot different now where youโre wondering how to keep busy. Itโs good to mentally switch off when youโre in that robotic function. Time just passes and you donโt even know it.
Time with mum and dad on the bike is time I never really would have got if something like this didnโt happen. I was thinking this is probably the longest time Iโve ever spent at home since Iโve been at school. Iโm enjoying it, but we had a conference call yesterday and our coaches are motivating us now, because weโve got the rescheduled dates for the Olympic Games. Thatโs exciting to get a bit of focus and direction and know where youโre going. We havenโt got a real plan, but theyโre talking about the Europeans in October, which will probably be our first step back.
The lifestyle coach was saying these next few weeks are just for you to focus on the areas youโd like to improve on. The last few weeks enabled me to see there are some things I should have been focusing on the last few years of my career. I can do a lot more core stretches and those sort of things I was neglecting when I was racing.
My coach said โyou need to write all these things down,โ so that when you step back into the bubble, youโll be focused on them and coming back with a clear mind. So I donโt take the time for granted.
Itโs good to get different perspectives from outside, someone who is always second guessing you. Are you good enough in this area? Iโm like, I need to brush up on my languages โ Iโm studying French and Spanish. My lifestyle coach was like: well, what have you done? I havenโt done that much.
Iโve learned a wee bit, but I need to sit down and crack on. Youโre not going to be a professional athlete for all your life. You need to utilise the skills as much as possible when you have so much spare time. So itโs good to be critical of yourself, because weโre all imperfect.
Iโm lucky Iโm spending time with my family. My mum or sister will be like โ right, youโre going to cook the dinner today. So it definitely does help having a lot of people around me.
But for me, from a cycling perspective, itโs a step backwards. Iโm used to knowing what Iโm doing, just going out on the road, the track or the gym. Itโs definitely different with the lack of adrenaline or stress on yourself to focus on your competition.
My psychologist was saying you just need to absorb this time. You havenโt got this time in the last two years. You might get a bit of cabin fever. But Iโll embrace it and once the training time comes back, Iโll get back into shape again and then itโs back to work.
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'Time with mum and dad is time I never really would have got if something like this didn't happen'
MARK DOWNEY, ALONG with team-mate Felix English, recently qualified Ireland a spot for the Olympics in track cycling. In his second column for The42, he gives his thoughts on what itโs like for an elite athlete living under lockdown.
The last few mornings, Iโve been getting up late. Normally, when weโre in training camp, weโre getting up pretty early โ eight oโclock or so. Iโve fallen into a bit of a routine ever since these clocks have changed and Iโm getting up at 10 oโclock nearly.
Iโm not really a morning person, so I thrive on people forcing me up. The family are quite early risers. Everyoneโs up at seven oโclock in my house, so Iโm the odd one out at the minute.
Yesterday, I went out for a spin with my mum and dad for a bit of change, just on the road with a mountain bike, which is something I used to do as a kid. Itโs something we havenโt been able to do for years โ ride along and have a chat.
Then we came home and had afternoon tea. My sister was cooking scones all morning.
In the afternoon, I played a bit of PlayStation. I was speaking to the lifestyle coach and he was saying you canโt be wasting your time playing PlayStation these next few weeks, but Iโve a bit of a passion for Fortnite.
Iโve also been doing a bit of work in my dadโs shop. Heโs the type of man who just gathers things up year after year. I hadnโt been about the shop much and decided we were going to clear the place out. Itโs cool looking back at newspaper clippings from when he was racing and weโre just clearing out all those old bikes, different bits and pieces, just trying to keep ourselves busy really.
Itโs a bike shop, so kidsโ bikes, adultsโ bikes from the โ60s and โ70s โ there was a lot of retro stuff, my first-ever road bike. The size of the wheel you couldnโt even buy anymore, and I remember, as a kid, you couldnโt even buy tubes for it, so when we used to ride it on, every 15 minutes, weโd have to stop to pump it up, because the tyres were going down.
My dad said โthat used to be worth a lot of money,โ but I told him itโs not worth a lot of money now. There is so much stuff from years ago that would have been in fashion โ a funky-looking handle bar or tyres. Bikes have changed over the years, so that shop is just a step back in time.
At the moment, you wake up every morning thinking about what you should be doing to keep your mind occupied. We donโt have any real purpose. Itโs just about getting out before we get back into training.
When I wake up in the morning in Majorca, everythingโs dialled in to the minute. Iโm on the road for 9am, Iโm back in for lunch, youโre straight in to get showered, you have a 40-minute kip. Then youโre packing your bag to go to the track in the afternoon. Then youโre home, cook your dinner, stick on a film and go straight to bed.
Itโs a lot different now where youโre wondering how to keep busy. Itโs good to mentally switch off when youโre in that robotic function. Time just passes and you donโt even know it.
Time with mum and dad on the bike is time I never really would have got if something like this didnโt happen. I was thinking this is probably the longest time Iโve ever spent at home since Iโve been at school. Iโm enjoying it, but we had a conference call yesterday and our coaches are motivating us now, because weโve got the rescheduled dates for the Olympic Games. Thatโs exciting to get a bit of focus and direction and know where youโre going. We havenโt got a real plan, but theyโre talking about the Europeans in October, which will probably be our first step back.
The lifestyle coach was saying these next few weeks are just for you to focus on the areas youโd like to improve on. The last few weeks enabled me to see there are some things I should have been focusing on the last few years of my career. I can do a lot more core stretches and those sort of things I was neglecting when I was racing.
My coach said โyou need to write all these things down,โ so that when you step back into the bubble, youโll be focused on them and coming back with a clear mind. So I donโt take the time for granted.
Itโs good to get different perspectives from outside, someone who is always second guessing you. Are you good enough in this area? Iโm like, I need to brush up on my languages โ Iโm studying French and Spanish. My lifestyle coach was like: well, what have you done? I havenโt done that much.
Iโve learned a wee bit, but I need to sit down and crack on. Youโre not going to be a professional athlete for all your life. You need to utilise the skills as much as possible when you have so much spare time. So itโs good to be critical of yourself, because weโre all imperfect.
Iโm lucky Iโm spending time with my family. My mum or sister will be like โ right, youโre going to cook the dinner today. So it definitely does help having a lot of people around me.
But for me, from a cycling perspective, itโs a step backwards. Iโm used to knowing what Iโm doing, just going out on the road, the track or the gym. Itโs definitely different with the lack of adrenaline or stress on yourself to focus on your competition.
My psychologist was saying you just need to absorb this time. You havenโt got this time in the last two years. You might get a bit of cabin fever. But Iโll embrace it and once the training time comes back, Iโll get back into shape again and then itโs back to work.
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column Mark Downey Olympics positives tokyo 2020 Track Cycling