TEL AVIV — Feel the rhythm, feel the rhyme. Get on up, Israel, it's bobsled time!
A handful of diverse athletes — a pole-vaulter, sprinter, shot-putter, rugby player, and former Olympian in skeleton — will compete as Israel's first bobsled team during this year's Milan Cortina Winter Games, unlikely ambassadors of their diplomatically isolated nation.
Most of these guys had never touched a sled before this season. Their leader, AJ Edelman, is believed to be the first Orthodox Jew to ever compete in a Winter Games. Another founding member of the team, Ward Farwaseh, will likely to be the first Druze Olympian.
Their participation comes at a time when Israel's presence in international sports has been met with boycotts, bans and backlash over the humanitarian toll of the war in Gaza, which has killed more than 71,800 Palestinians, according to the territory's health ministry, and devastated the strip.
The athletes say they are proud to represent Israel. They hope to be role models for young Israeli athletes and lay the groundwork for future gold in the sport.
''I used to be at the bottom of the pack athletically, and I made it here to the Olympics, so there must be some self-selection process,'' said Edelman, speaking to AP from Italy. ''I'm very sure that with this program now — with the infrastructure that has been set up — Israel will become a force in bobsled.''
As for how Edelman describes his long journey to Italy?
He puts his own spin on the 1993 movie ''Cool Runnings,'' based somewhat on the Jamaican bobsled team's Olympic team from 1988. Using the Yiddish word for synagogue, he says he is thinking of this one as ''Shul Runnings.''