CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy — Jadin O'Brien thought she was being scammed.
The Milan Cortina Olympics — and the sport of bobsled, for that matter — were not anywhere near O'Brien's radar a couple years ago, when the Notre Dame track and field star saw that someone sent her a direct message on Instagram. The message was ignored.
Several months later, the same person slid into O'Brien's DMs again. ''We would love to have you tryout for bobsled!!!'' That was the entirety of the message.
O'Brien, finally, was intrigued. She replied and asked for information. A month and a half later, in mid-August of last year, she drove 12 1/2 hours from Notre Dame to Lake Placid, New York, to see what bobsled was all about.
And now, she's an Olympian.
It is a story perhaps like none other in these Olympics: A rookie, who has raced only twice in her career, is going to compete on the sport's biggest stage with a very real chance of finding her way to the Olympic medal stand. O'Brien will push for Olympic monobob gold medalist Elana Meyers Taylor — the person who sent those DMs — on Friday and Saturday in the two-woman competition at Cortina.
''It has really been a roller-coaster of events," O'Brien said. "Everything's happened so fast, but ... I've kind of been conditioned to be able to handle new things very, very fast and then perform despite a lack of experience. So, it has been a whirlwind. I could never have predicted my life would turn out this way, but I'm incredibly grateful and I've loved every second of it.''
The Olympics have been on her wish list for a while.