Pole Vaulter Erica Bartolina – Spikes Magazine Interview
Erica Bartolina: The One-Eyed Pole Vaulter
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US pole vaulter Erica Bartolina cleared a personal best of 4.55m to finish third at the 2008 US Championships. She spoke to spikesmag.com about how she has overcome the loss of an eye to be one of her country’s top vaulters.
How did you lose the sight in your eye?
I lost my eye when I was four months old in a car accident. There were scissors on the dashboard of the pick up… it was pretty traumatic. So the message is: don’t put scissors on the dash [laughs]. My family have always been really good about making it as normal as possible. They didn’t keep me from doing anything or overly protect me. I couldn’t throw or catch very well, but why practise something you are not going to be very good at anyway? I was raised on a farm and I really didn’t have any athletic background to speak of before high school.
How did you get into the pole vault?
I started in high school. I was more of a distance runner but I decided to do some pole vaulting and after that running just didn’t seem that exciting. I was a little adventurous. I like to take some risks and do things that other people don’t tend to do. I was pretty strong and pretty fast and that’s what you need if you are going to clear nine feet to begin with. I just learnt from there.
What are the main difficulties you have to overcome as a one-eyed pole vaulter?
With my natural upper body strength I was told I would be great for the pole vault and then people will say, ‘oh no, wait, you’ve only got one eye.’ At that point I was already excited about doing the event and then I had to fight for it. Without having ever done it I said: ‘there’s no reason why I can’t do it’. I think I probably had a different learning curve than most people.
I used to run with the pole over my head for the first three steps but I don’t think in reality there was that much of a difference between how I learned it and how other people learned it. It was a lot easier for me to pole vault than to catch something coming at me. The [plant] box stays in the same place, so it’s easier for me than something flying at me that I have to judge. I have to be a little more consistent because some people can tell the distance [to the plant box] a lot more and adjust their steps on the runway.
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