MILAN — Figure skater Amber Glenn didn't even get the chance to try to qualify for the 2022 U.S. Olympic team because she tested positive for COVID-19. Clearly, that sticks with her.
This time around, with the American preparing to contend for an individual medal at the Milan Cortina Winter Games next week, she is relying on ''an insane amount of hand sanitizer'' — defined by Glenn as ''a handbag-full'' — to make sure that sort of thing doesn't sideline her again.
She and other athletes whose Beijing Olympics were waylaid by the pandemic four years ago are still dealing with those memories and those worries.
''We have certain B vitamins, vitamin C, that kind of stuff, that's cleared with the (U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee), that we take. Anything that will keep me from getting sick, I'm like, ‘Give it to me now!' I'm drinking all these green juices,'' said Glenn, a 26-year-old from Plano, Texas, who is the first woman to claim three consecutive U.S. Figure Skating titles since Michelle Kwan two decades ago.
''When you're in such a high-tense environment, and everybody is sweating, and unfortunately snot is going everywhere, and everyone is so stressed, there's so much happening,'' Glenn said. ''And then our bodies come down, and our minds come down, and we're very vulnerable.''
Speedskater Casey Dawson missed the opening ceremony four years ago and then skipped his first event, the 5,000 meters, because he contracted COVID before he was supposed to fly to China.
''Tested positive for 50 straight tests,'' said Dawson, a 25-year-old from Park City, Utah. ''Showed up 12 hours before my 1,500 meters.''
Like Glenn, he's been opting for generous helpings of vitamins and dusting off his masks, which were so ubiquitous at the last Winter Olympics. After finishing eighth in the 5,000 in Milan on Sunday, he's also planning to enter the 10,000 on Friday, the team pursuit and the 1,500.