WELLINGTON, New Zealand — As a child, Portia Woodman-Wickliffe had competing dreams of sporting success.
She adored New Zealand rugby great Jonah Lomu and wanted to be like him on the wing. But at the time, the pathway for girls in rugby was narrow and difficult to follow.
Woodman-Wickliffe also hoped one day to represent New Zealand at the Olympics. In pursuit of that dream, she regularly took three buses after school to an Auckland sports stadium where she could run track, mostly sprints.
Dreams of rugby and Olympic success didn't mesh until a women's world series launched in 2012, three years after the IOC voted rugby sevens into the Games. When it made its Olympic debut in 2016, Woodman-Wickliffe was in the New Zealand team that won silver in Rio de Janeiro. She went one better in Tokyo in 2021, winning gold for her rugby-mad country.
This July, Woodman-Wickliffe hopes to elevate her game even higher when New Zealand will defend its title at the Paris Games.
The 32-year-old Woodman-Wickliffe is arguably the best-known women's rugby player on the planet, just as Lomu in his heyday was the best-known player in the game.
Lomu reshaped rugby in the 1990s with the mixture of size, speed and strength he brought to his position as a winger. Woodman-Wickliffe has done the same for women in her 12-year international career.
She's been the world player of the year in sevens and 15s, the sport's traditional format. In May, she became the first woman to score 250 tries in the rugby sevens world series. She's already the leading try-scorer in women's 15s.