Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
Aug.
2, 2007
Tim Hipps
1st Lt. Mickey Kelly of Fort Carson, Colo., rides Tai Pan in the equestrian
riding portion of the women’s modern pentathlon July 23 at XV
Pan American Games Rio 2007 in Rio de Janeiro. Kelly won the bronze
medal and secured a berth in the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing.
Soldier secures Olympic berth with bronze at Pan Am Games
Tim Hipps
U.S. Army Family Morale Welfare and Readiness Command Public Affairs
RIO DE JANEIRO – U.S. Army World Class Athlete 1st Lt. Mickey
Kelly secured a berth in the 2008 Olympic Games with a third-place finish
in the women’s modern pentathlon July 23 at the XV Pan American
Games Rio 2007.
“I can’t believe I just did that,” Kelly said of winning
a Pan Am Games bronze medal and earning a trip to Beijing, as the second
North American finisher at the Deodoro Sports Complex.
“I’m still in shock. You dream of it and you try to put
everything in position so you can have that,” she said, “and
when it comes true, you’re just like: ‘Whoa, did that really
just happen?’ I’m just ecstatic.”
Brazil’s Yane Marques won the gold medal with 5,484 points. Canada’s
Monique Pinette struck silver with 5,288 points. Kelly took the bronze
with 5,252.
“It was the mission and I am so thankful for everyone who has
helped me along the way,” said Kelly, 29, a native of Chatham,
N.Y., who is stationed at Fort Carson, Colo. “There are so many
people who just put in a nice word of encouragement, and the Army, the
coaches and my teammates.”
Kelly was seventh among 14 competitors in the 10-meter air pistol event
and earned 976 modern pentathlon points.
She finished in a four-way tie for seventh in epee one-touch fencing
for 784 points. Her 200-meter freestyle swim time of 2 minutes, 26.75
seconds was sixth-best for 1,160 points.
Kelly overcame early trouble aboard her horse, Tai Pan, to finish third
in the equestrian show-jumping event for 1,140 points.
On the first of two rail knockdowns, Tai Pan stumbled over the obstacle
and Kelly lost her footing in the stirrup.
“I had to ride the next two jumps with no stirrup,” she
said. “But I had my goal in mind, and I was like ‘OK, we’re
doing this come hell or high water.’”
Kelly got her foot back in the stirrup and scored 1,144 points with
the third-best ride of the competition.
U.S. teammate Sheila Taormina, a two-time Olympian in swimming and triathlon,
drew a horse named Euacao Do Rin that refused eight jumps, costing Taormina
800 points for obstruction penalties and 300 more for failing to complete
the course within the allotted time. She finished 11th overall.
“I felt bad,” Kelly said of Taormina’s misfortune.
“I’ve been there and I’ve done that. Of course, in
the end, it was an advantage for me, but that is pentathlon, and that’s
the hardest thing to grasp about it. Sometimes it’s unfair, but
if you just deal with it and move on, the next time that comes up you
deal with it better.”
Kelly secured the bronze medal with the second-fastest 3,000-meter cross-country
run time of 10:33.55 for 1,188 modern pentathlon points.
Kelly attributes her progression to grasping how modern pentathlon works
and “just rolling with it.”
“You have to because it’s not going to be your best day
in all five events in one day,” she explained. “When we
pray for that, it’s going to be at the Olympic Games, but until
then we’re just going to work up to it.”
Before departing for Brazil, Kelly had dinner in Washington with her
uncle, Sgt. 1st Class Jay Rippel, who shared stories about fighting
the war on terrorism in Afghanistan.
“It was really humbling,” she said. “And I thought
how it would be so wonderful just to be able to represent them (by making
the U.S. Olympic Team) because I’ve trained for it and I’ve
been trying to get there. And to just be able to say: ‘Hey, it’s
for you guys,’ because they are just amazing at what they do.
I’m glad that I’m able to do my part in the same way.”