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It is not particularly unusual for sophomore Sonia Wang to put a team on her back. The Upland, Calif. native has earned four All-Ivy League honors, qualified for the NCAA Championships, and set multiple records throughout the span of her Harvard career. Yet at last weekend’s Ivy League Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships, Wang brought unusual meaning to that common phrase.
Wang came into Friday’s 400-yard individual medley as the event’s defending champion, and she finished holding that same title. However, Wang’s victory came under circumstances distinct from those she faced a year ago. After she missed the entirety of the season up to that point battling a stress fracture in her back, the event marked her first return to the pool.
The road to Wang’s repeat title has been marked by the challenge of an injury, one that has not only been difficult to overcome, but also to pinpoint. Yet, to her teammates, Wang’s determination to compete has been evident throughout her journey.
“They don’t really know what exactly it [her injury] is, but it happened earlier this season,” co-captain Daniela Johnson Restrepo said. “She’s seen a lot of specialists, and they don’t know the actual cause of it, but it’s like a fracture. She’s been trying to rest her back, while also training, which has been crazy.”
“Her coming back, to be able to swim for the team this year was an amazing accomplishment,” co-captain Summer Schmitt said. “It speaks so much to her dedication to the sport and to the team.”
Striving to get back in the pool, Wang has dedicated herself to the process of recovering. Leading up to her return, she sought medical counsel and was instructed to rest. But Wang did not neglect her training while heeding this advice, working diligently to fight her injury.
“She’s been going to the training room,” Johnson Restrepo said. “She had to do a lot of side things to get ready for this weekend.”
Regardless of her performance in the water, Wang’s journey from injury to the Ancient Eight Championships at Brown University would have been notable. However, her performance in the 400 IM truly proved to be a remarkable feat.
Wang started the event out in front, but the swimmers to her right and left slowly began to close in on her lead as the race progressed.
“When [Wang] pushed off in the freestyle leg, I think she could see this one other girl in particular,” Johnson Restrepo said. “You could see, especially on the lap 50, that she just increased her stroke rate, really fought all the way to the wall, and out-touched the other girl.”
While other swimmers may have the tendency to lose steam as a long-distance event progresses, Wang’s teammates claim that the opposite can be said of her.
“She is definitely a distance swimmer and she comes on strong at the end,” Schmitt said. “It’s always fun to watch her race, because she fights all the way to the end.”
“Usually people get slower in the race, but she just kept on getting faster,” Johnson Restrepo said. “It was really inspiring to watch.”
Pulling ahead with her final surge, Wang was able to touch the wall first in a time of 4:14.21. Wang’s mark was enough to not only secure her title as the event’s defending champion, but also to break the Katherine Moran Aquatics Center pool record.
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