CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — It was a couple of weeks before Christmas. Elana Meyers Taylor was in Norway, prepping for a World Cup bobsled weekend. Things were going horribly. Her body was hurting, she wondered if she was doing right by her two deaf children, and the racing results were, well, bad.
So, she texted her husband. The message: I'm done.
''This is just impossible,'' the U.S. bobsledding great wrote. ''It's never going to work.''
Funny how an Olympic gold medal changes things. Barely two months after nearly quitting — her husband, former bobsledder Nic Taylor, flew to Norway after those texts to talk her out of it — Meyers Taylor won the women's monobob gold medal at the Milan Cortina Games. And she was back on the ice Tuesday, prepping with Jadin O'Brien for the two-woman race that starts Friday.
''The only thing that has really changed is I'm sleep-deprived now,'' Meyers Taylor said. ''I'm an Olympic gold medalist with a lack of sleep.''
That's a good problem to have.
At 41, she became the oldest woman to win an individual gold medal in Winter Games history. (Anette Norberg, then 43, was on the Swedish team that won curling gold at the 2010 Vancouver Games.) Meyers Taylor's sixth career Olympic medal tied Bonnie Blair for the most by a U.S. woman in the Winter Games, and it also extended her record for most medals by a Black woman in the winter showcase.
''Oh, I don't think I'm going to process this for a while," Meyers Taylor said. "There were so many moments during this entire season, during this past four years, that we just thought it was impossible, or I thought it wasn't possible. My team around me believed in me the entire time.''