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Brianna Leverenz conducted a swimming workshop at Sisters of Mary School Girlstown. |
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Brianna Leverenz with basketball coaches of SHS-Ateneo de Cebu at House of Lechon. She had to taste the best lechon in town. |
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Brianna Leverenz talks before student-athletes at SHS-Ateneo de Cebu. |
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Brianna Leverenz and Mary Joy Tabal: Beauties and the beast :) |
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Brianna Leverenz and Jean Marie Cando of CIT-U. |
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Brianna Leverenz with CESAFI Commissioner Felix Tiukinhoy Jr. and CESAFI Athletic Directors. |
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Brianna Leverenz with Moira Erediano. |
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Breaking Barriers with Brianna
When told that it was time to go after 30 minutes of
swimming with the whale sharks in Oslob, she said she wanted to stay longer.
But being the respectful athlete, she abided. If I had my way, I would also
love to have her stay longer in Cebu as she leaves today, but I’ll also have to
abide by her schedule. She is Brianna Leverenz, a magna cum laude graduate from
the University of Tennessee who swam for school’s varsity swimming team that
competed in the US NCAA, Southeastern Conference (SEC) and other competitions.
As part of her advocacy, she is in the Philippines for three months to share
her story with the Mindanao Peace Games network, but thanks to MPG Convenor
Noli Ayo and the whale sharks in Oslob, she agreed to swing by. Cue in the song
“I Love Cebu.”
She has had a full schedule of daily talks, workshops and
chats. Fresh from the airport, she has given talks to coaches at SHS-Ateneo de
Cebu, chatted with their student-athletes and conducted swimming workshops for
the past three days. One of these swimming workshops was at the Sisters of Mary
School-Girlstown where she had a blast teaching the students there, some of who
are swimming for the first time in their lives. She also had a talk with CESAFI
Athletic Directors and coaches, then was the guest speaker at yesterday’s 37th
Sportswriters Association of Cebu–San Miguel Brewery Cebu Sports Awards at SM
City.
But what exactly is her story? Hers is a tale that
contradicts the way I have always perceived college sports in the United
States. To me, I’ve always seen majority of U.S. college sports programs to
have a “win at all cost” mindset. It’s all about the winning and nothing else.
Winning seems to be the only thing in the minds of many college sports
programs, and it gets to the point where some go beyond the rules. Some are
caught and penalized; but some find ways. No thanks to social media, the
internet and the news, you’ll hear of so many sad and horrible stories about
athletes being athletes and forgetting that they are students. Do they earn their
degrees? Do they even study? Make no mistake about it, the same also applies
here to us in the country. But the American model always stands out.
Brianna’s arrival in the country has given us a fresh breath
of air against this “win it all cost” mindset with which we’re bombarded in
school-based sports. I’ve heard and have preached that sports plays a major
role in the lives of athletes, and here we have a live and real-time model.
Sports for her was a major tool in shaping her life. “I practiced 30 hours a
week, went to class and achieved my goals as a student and an athlete,” Brianna
says at all her talks. The result? Magna cum laude (only), a four-year stint in
collegiate swimming and a lady prepared for life up ahead.
“I learned so many life skills from staring at that back
line of the swimming pool,” she recalls, adding that the advantage of swimming
as an individual sport is that it makes oneself the sole cause for one’s
success or failure. She said that sports has amazing ability to “visualize what
you want to achieve and to go beyond yourself.” It shapes people. “I am who I
am today because of sports,” she stresses.
This became larger than life when she broke her spine when
she was 16 years old. She was told that she couldn’t be a swimmer anymore. She
couldn’t go to class and cried herself to sleep. Moreover, she had to re-learn
how to sit and walk all over again. But she overcame all this and even earned a
partial athletic and academic scholarship at the University of Tennessee. “I
worked hard both in practice and in academics and I could’ve just not wanted
it,” she quips.
The coaches and teammates also played a huge role in her
development as a swimmer. She recalls how her coach asked them to write down
their life goals, and not just swimming or technical goals. And this was how
the coaches would guide them through their college careers: not only for
swimming-related matters but more importantly concerns regarding their growing
up as individuals and becoming better versions of themselves. Teammates’
support was very important as they served as best friends who picked everybody
up when they were down and who gave very simple greetings of “Good job” even it
they didn’t have their best races. Teammates become one’s best friends and when
they strive for success together, they are determined to succeed and pursue
that goal together. Did she have a love life? Yes she did and said that
relationships are also important especially when one’s partner respects your
dreams and helps you reach these.
And now that swimming is over, she’s all set and
well-equipped to move on and chase her dreams for the future. Part of that is
her mission to share her story to Filipinos. She has fallen in love with the
country (who wouldn’t) and has been impressed with what she has seen in the 14
different towns or cities that she has visited so far. Thanks Bri. Thanks Coach
Noli Ayo. We are all inspired by your story and may all athletes follow the
path you took and make sports as an integral tool to break down barriers and
reach their dreams in becoming better persons.
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Brianna with SHS-Ateneo Grade School swimmers and parents. |
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Brianna with SHS-Ateneo Grade School Swimming coaches. |
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Brianna with the SHS-Ateneo de Cebu Basketball team |
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Brianna with Apol Bariñan of USC. |
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Brianna is a fan, enjoying the dance of Wilbert Aunzo and Pearl Cañeda. |
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