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She was a star athlete at Herriman High School with 16 state titles in track and field. Kaysha Love was also named the Gatorade Athlete of the Year her senior year at Herriman High. Now, her drive, tenacity, work ethic and natural ability has Kaysha going for a gold medal in bobsled at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
On this episode of the Supercast, Kaysha Love joins us from the Olympic Village in Beijing, China to talk about how her experiences at Herriman High School, along with a fierce, competitive nature prepared her for competing on the world stage. It is an inspiring conversation with Kaysha that you don’t want to miss.
Anthony Godfrey:
We are excited to have Kaysha Love on the Supercast today, an Olympic athlete and a graduate of Herriman High School. Kaysha, thanks for joining us.
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
As far as our roles, I'm the brake woman. So for women, we only compete in Monobob and Two Man. So Monobob is just one person and that's just the pilot. And then the other discipline is Two Man and my pilot's in front and then I'm in the back as the brake woman. Basically my job and my duties as a brake woman are to accelerate the sled as fast as possible to get us the fastest velocities. The track doesn't get necessarily like faster or slower at the end of the track. Like all the speed that you've generated comes from the very top of the track. Like you can't jump out in the middle of the track, start trying to push again or try to magically find some extra speed somewhere. All the speed and all the times that you're getting is genuinely coming from that push time. So my job is to give my pilot the best opportunity with the best speeds to potentially put down some really good numbers at the end of track.
Once I load into the sled, like then my job is basically like a relay. Like I pass it on to my pilot and she drives down our tracks. And like we mentioned earlier, each track's different. So it's her job to study all the lines of all the different tracks and to make sure that she's fully aware of what lines will be the fastest, what runners to use, how to like efficiently go about the track. And then once you pass the finish line, it's kind of my job as well, to be aware of where we're at in the track. I like to count the curves, it helps me know where we're at, so I can kind of move one with the sled and one with my pilot. At end of the course as the brake women, it's our job to pull the brakes. So there's no brakes in the front of the sled. So if I don't pull the brakes, the sled doesn't stop. So, yep, my job is to accelerate it, get as fast velocities and pull the brakes at the end.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Break:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
And then starting high school, I had just kind of told my mom like, ‘Hey, I'm scared to start high school. Like, I don't have friends.’ Like all of my gym friends lived in the Bountiful area or Draper or just like Salt Lake City. I didn't have any friends who were gonna be in my high school and I was kind of nervous about it. And so she kind of just mentioned like, ‘you know, this might be like a good chance, an opportunity for you to take on a new opportunity, a new sport. So how about we just try track? I'm not asking you to give up gymnastics, but how about we just try both?’ And so I went out and tried track at Herriman and I loved it. I loved the social aspect of it. I actually liked the workouts and the competition and just running and feeling like free in that sense. And so that's when I started taking on track. Then it was my first season at Herriman when I broke the 100M state record. From that point forward, like the entire four years being there, Herriman just had a stacked track team. Like we were state champions in basically every event. We were state champions in the sprint events. We were state champions in the distance and throws events and even had some top three medalists in all the jumping events too. So our track team was just incredible, like as a whole.
Looking back at those years, I really owe a lot of my success and a lot of like who I am as a person to my high school coach. Coach Fletcher was somebody who at that moment in time was like my father figure. He was like a coach who believed in me and was kind of being like a pillar of showing me what it was to be a successful athlete. How it was to kind of like excel in life period and also to be like a very faithful and spiritual person and to kind of just be who it is that you wanna be. Then just the support at Herriman was just unreal. Like when I look back at the high school experience, just the things that they did for not only like myself, but for like our track team and for like the athletes at Herriman was just unreal.
Like I remember there was a time where our head coach, Coach Garlick, he created a photo shoot. And that was just so like kind of unheard of for the high schools at that time. Nobody was doing photo shoots for the track and field athletes. Like for football, of course, like basketball, sure. Those are like our big revenue sports. But for a photo shoot for track athletes, it's kind of just like a different thing. So we did this photo shoot and we show up at Herriman like a week later and draped from the football stadium is this huge, like 50 feet by 50 feet, track and field banner that just had our whole track team showcased on this huge banner on the back of the football stadium. They just made it so memorable and then for us to be like a fairly new high school when I was there, it was like, the experience was incredible and I wouldn't have changed it for the world.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Especially for like my mom who's been there from everything. My mom never missed one gymnastics meet. She really didn't even miss any gymnastics practices. Like she was juggling her full-time job, my 30 hour practices and somehow magically able to go to work and watch my practices and go to the competitions and just never, never missed a single thing. And then for us to go into high school track, she was at every track meet. Rain, shine, snow, whatever it was. She was out there with a little heater buddy and her blanket, her and my grandma, just everything. They didn't miss a single thing.
And they were also there for all the downs that we've had too. And there've been so many things in just my life as a whole that I had to like learn to get through and conquer. There were a lot of journeys and stuff that I had to figure out what it is I wanted for myself. And there were a lot of down moments and my mom and my grandma were always there for all of it. So for them to see like all of our hard work, like it wasn't even just my hard work, it was theirs too. Like my whole family made sacrifices and like this dream became our dream. So for me to call them just in tears, when I figured out I was going to the Olympics is probably very, so emotional for all of us. We just cried and cried and realized that we were like one step closer to like achieving the things that we all felt and worked so hard for.
Then coming back to Bobsled, like people are surprised like,’ ‘oh, like a year and a half of being in the sport. That's such a short time to now magically become like an Olympian.’ And the way I see it is like, I've been training for this for the last eight years, for sure. Because I feel like track really transitions really well into bobsled. And I just didn't realize I was training for bobsled in these eight years. I just thought I was running track and trying to be the most successful track athlete I could be. Little did I know that all of those experiences and journeys and lessons were not for that moment, but they were for the moment I'm doing and living in now.
Especially like being in the moment today, I look back and yeah, all those things that I wondered why this happened or how did it happen like this? Or like I wanted it to plan out like this and it didn't, I couldn't figure out why. And now looking back, like I'm like it had to work out like that. Like God had to plan because things had to fall in motion and had to be prepared for the moment I'm living in today. And those family and friends, especially like my mom and my grandma, but my whole family, honestly, they were there for every step of it. So they, for anybody, genuinely knows how hard and all the sacrifice and emotions and things that it took for us to get here.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
I will say that coming into Opening Ceremonies is like, I'm not even like allowing myself to kind of put up like, ‘oh, it's gonna feel like this, or it's going to be like this.’ Like I genuinely just wanna take it in for what it is. Whether that emotion is like excitement or like tears of joy or just like straight proudness. I don't know what I'm gonna feel in that moment, but whatever it is, I'm going to feel like I just wanna have that genuine feeling of, ‘okay, I'm not putting any expectations on it. This is how this is meant to feel. And this is, this is where I'm meant to be.’ So I'm very excited to feel whatever emotion it is that I feel when I walk into that stadium tonight. But I'm excited for whatever is to come.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
By Jordan Supercast4.7
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She was a star athlete at Herriman High School with 16 state titles in track and field. Kaysha Love was also named the Gatorade Athlete of the Year her senior year at Herriman High. Now, her drive, tenacity, work ethic and natural ability has Kaysha going for a gold medal in bobsled at the 2022 Winter Olympics.
On this episode of the Supercast, Kaysha Love joins us from the Olympic Village in Beijing, China to talk about how her experiences at Herriman High School, along with a fierce, competitive nature prepared her for competing on the world stage. It is an inspiring conversation with Kaysha that you don’t want to miss.
Anthony Godfrey:
We are excited to have Kaysha Love on the Supercast today, an Olympic athlete and a graduate of Herriman High School. Kaysha, thanks for joining us.
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
As far as our roles, I'm the brake woman. So for women, we only compete in Monobob and Two Man. So Monobob is just one person and that's just the pilot. And then the other discipline is Two Man and my pilot's in front and then I'm in the back as the brake woman. Basically my job and my duties as a brake woman are to accelerate the sled as fast as possible to get us the fastest velocities. The track doesn't get necessarily like faster or slower at the end of the track. Like all the speed that you've generated comes from the very top of the track. Like you can't jump out in the middle of the track, start trying to push again or try to magically find some extra speed somewhere. All the speed and all the times that you're getting is genuinely coming from that push time. So my job is to give my pilot the best opportunity with the best speeds to potentially put down some really good numbers at the end of track.
Once I load into the sled, like then my job is basically like a relay. Like I pass it on to my pilot and she drives down our tracks. And like we mentioned earlier, each track's different. So it's her job to study all the lines of all the different tracks and to make sure that she's fully aware of what lines will be the fastest, what runners to use, how to like efficiently go about the track. And then once you pass the finish line, it's kind of my job as well, to be aware of where we're at in the track. I like to count the curves, it helps me know where we're at, so I can kind of move one with the sled and one with my pilot. At end of the course as the brake women, it's our job to pull the brakes. So there's no brakes in the front of the sled. So if I don't pull the brakes, the sled doesn't stop. So, yep, my job is to accelerate it, get as fast velocities and pull the brakes at the end.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Break:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
And then starting high school, I had just kind of told my mom like, ‘Hey, I'm scared to start high school. Like, I don't have friends.’ Like all of my gym friends lived in the Bountiful area or Draper or just like Salt Lake City. I didn't have any friends who were gonna be in my high school and I was kind of nervous about it. And so she kind of just mentioned like, ‘you know, this might be like a good chance, an opportunity for you to take on a new opportunity, a new sport. So how about we just try track? I'm not asking you to give up gymnastics, but how about we just try both?’ And so I went out and tried track at Herriman and I loved it. I loved the social aspect of it. I actually liked the workouts and the competition and just running and feeling like free in that sense. And so that's when I started taking on track. Then it was my first season at Herriman when I broke the 100M state record. From that point forward, like the entire four years being there, Herriman just had a stacked track team. Like we were state champions in basically every event. We were state champions in the sprint events. We were state champions in the distance and throws events and even had some top three medalists in all the jumping events too. So our track team was just incredible, like as a whole.
Looking back at those years, I really owe a lot of my success and a lot of like who I am as a person to my high school coach. Coach Fletcher was somebody who at that moment in time was like my father figure. He was like a coach who believed in me and was kind of being like a pillar of showing me what it was to be a successful athlete. How it was to kind of like excel in life period and also to be like a very faithful and spiritual person and to kind of just be who it is that you wanna be. Then just the support at Herriman was just unreal. Like when I look back at the high school experience, just the things that they did for not only like myself, but for like our track team and for like the athletes at Herriman was just unreal.
Like I remember there was a time where our head coach, Coach Garlick, he created a photo shoot. And that was just so like kind of unheard of for the high schools at that time. Nobody was doing photo shoots for the track and field athletes. Like for football, of course, like basketball, sure. Those are like our big revenue sports. But for a photo shoot for track athletes, it's kind of just like a different thing. So we did this photo shoot and we show up at Herriman like a week later and draped from the football stadium is this huge, like 50 feet by 50 feet, track and field banner that just had our whole track team showcased on this huge banner on the back of the football stadium. They just made it so memorable and then for us to be like a fairly new high school when I was there, it was like, the experience was incredible and I wouldn't have changed it for the world.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Especially for like my mom who's been there from everything. My mom never missed one gymnastics meet. She really didn't even miss any gymnastics practices. Like she was juggling her full-time job, my 30 hour practices and somehow magically able to go to work and watch my practices and go to the competitions and just never, never missed a single thing. And then for us to go into high school track, she was at every track meet. Rain, shine, snow, whatever it was. She was out there with a little heater buddy and her blanket, her and my grandma, just everything. They didn't miss a single thing.
And they were also there for all the downs that we've had too. And there've been so many things in just my life as a whole that I had to like learn to get through and conquer. There were a lot of journeys and stuff that I had to figure out what it is I wanted for myself. And there were a lot of down moments and my mom and my grandma were always there for all of it. So for them to see like all of our hard work, like it wasn't even just my hard work, it was theirs too. Like my whole family made sacrifices and like this dream became our dream. So for me to call them just in tears, when I figured out I was going to the Olympics is probably very, so emotional for all of us. We just cried and cried and realized that we were like one step closer to like achieving the things that we all felt and worked so hard for.
Then coming back to Bobsled, like people are surprised like,’ ‘oh, like a year and a half of being in the sport. That's such a short time to now magically become like an Olympian.’ And the way I see it is like, I've been training for this for the last eight years, for sure. Because I feel like track really transitions really well into bobsled. And I just didn't realize I was training for bobsled in these eight years. I just thought I was running track and trying to be the most successful track athlete I could be. Little did I know that all of those experiences and journeys and lessons were not for that moment, but they were for the moment I'm doing and living in now.
Especially like being in the moment today, I look back and yeah, all those things that I wondered why this happened or how did it happen like this? Or like I wanted it to plan out like this and it didn't, I couldn't figure out why. And now looking back, like I'm like it had to work out like that. Like God had to plan because things had to fall in motion and had to be prepared for the moment I'm living in today. And those family and friends, especially like my mom and my grandma, but my whole family, honestly, they were there for every step of it. So they, for anybody, genuinely knows how hard and all the sacrifice and emotions and things that it took for us to get here.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
I will say that coming into Opening Ceremonies is like, I'm not even like allowing myself to kind of put up like, ‘oh, it's gonna feel like this, or it's going to be like this.’ Like I genuinely just wanna take it in for what it is. Whether that emotion is like excitement or like tears of joy or just like straight proudness. I don't know what I'm gonna feel in that moment, but whatever it is, I'm going to feel like I just wanna have that genuine feeling of, ‘okay, I'm not putting any expectations on it. This is how this is meant to feel. And this is, this is where I'm meant to be.’ So I'm very excited to feel whatever emotion it is that I feel when I walk into that stadium tonight. But I'm excited for whatever is to come.
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:
Kaysha Love:
Anthony Godfrey:

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