Given Andy Bisek's weighty credentials — including two bronze medals from the world championships and a No. 5 world ranking — it seems reasonable to wonder whether he feels any pressure going into the Rio Olympics. Ask him about it, and you'll see a knowing smile form under his famously bushy mustache.
Bisek, a Greco-Roman wrestler from Chaska, knows the burden of genuine stress. In 2012, a defeat at the Olympic trials cost him his place on the U.S. national team, along with his monthly stipend and health insurance. His wife, Ashley, was expecting their first child. Then a serious neck injury kept him out of competition for several months, leaving him unable to earn any prize money.
With a family to support and few options, Bisek began working at a liquor store in Colorado Springs, squeezing five shifts a week between twice-daily wrestling workouts. It left him exhausted, but not defeated. "I'd get to that afternoon practice, and I'd be so wiped out," Bisek recalled. "My feet would be on fire from standing and running all day on a tile floor. And I thought, 'If I can handle this, I'm going to be just fine when it comes to tournament time.' "
Since then, nothing has been able to slow him down. Bisek, 29, won the 75-kilogram (165-pound) weight class at the Olympic trials in April to secure an invitation to the Rio Games, becoming a first-time Olympian after 12 years of toil.
A product of the U.S. Greco-Roman development program at Northern Michigan University, Bisek has lived and trained in Colorado Springs since 2010. During their first six months there, he and Ashley lived on $275 a month; he ate his meals at the U.S. Olympic training center and brought extra food home for her.
His dogged nature kept him plugging away through injuries, disappointment and debt. Those hardships made the payoff feel that much sweeter. In 2014, Bisek ended a five-year medal drought for the U.S. Greco-Roman team at the world championships, bringing home a bronze, and he won a second bronze at the 2015 worlds.
"Andy has always wanted to be challenged," said Bisek's father, Tom, of Chaska. "And he's had to work for everything. It hasn't been easy for him, but he just figures out what to do to make things work."
He does the same thing in miniature on the mat, which has pushed him into the upper ranks of his sport. A superb technician, Bisek never gives up on a match, and his superior conditioning gives him an edge when time is winding down.