Bobsledder speaks to ‘media’ about his journey, hopes and dreams after historic silver medal at Gangwon Winter Youth Olympics
Two years ago, 17-year-old Tunisian athlete Jonathan Lourimi did not know what bobsleigh was, living his life like any other teenager and playing football for a local team in his city.
However, everything changed when he received a call asking him to join a list of promising athletes from countries with little to no snow, to train in winter sports with the aim of competing internationally and eventually joining the next Winter Olympic Games.
That one call led Lourimi to earn Tunisia’s first ever Winter Youth Olympics medal in Gangwon South Korea last month – making history as one of the first African and Arab athletes to achieve such a result at the Games.
Speaking to media from his home in Stockholm – only a few weeks after his win – Lourimi described the sensational feeling he had when he realised that he is now an Olympic medal-winner.
“I still can’t believe it, when I look back, and that feeling when I went through the finish line and realised that I’ve done it and got a medal, it was an amazing feeling,” he recalled.
Lourimi took home the silver medal after finishing 1.33 seconds behind winner So Kaehwan of South Korea and followed by Chi Xiangyu from China. Lourimi said he was even more overwhelmed when he saw the reaction not only of his family and the Tunisian Olympic Committee but also that of non-Tunisian fans and competitors who were genuinely happy for him.
“Everybody was happy for Tunisia because it was a small country and wanted to lift it up,” he added.
Lourimi described his journey towards the 2024 Winter Youth Olympics as a “crazy” one.
“It’s a crazy story, two years ago I did not know what bobsleigh was, I had heard of it but I did not know what it was and how you compete in it,” he explained.
“I got a call from the Tunisian [Olympic] Federation to join a camp in [South] Korea for athletes from countries that did not have snow to try winter sports.”
Lourimi said that on joining the camp he tried out various winter sports and initially focused on Alpine skiing, which he had tried before, but later on, as his performance in bobsleigh improved, his focus shifted towards it.
“As I got more results in the qualifications process, a lot of people started turning their heads and were like maybe there is a new candidate for the podium at the Olympic Games,” he said.
Like many people, Lourimi did not know much about bobsleigh when he started learning the sport a year ago, but once he came to realise that he had the exact skills required to excel, it became a much more enjoyable and thrilling experience for him.
“Before even going there I was really strong and fast but combined [strength and speed] I was really good at it, I was able to push the sled and I had great times and results,” he said.
Bobsleigh is a sport invented by the Swiss in the 1860s in which teams or individuals race down narrow, twisting, frozen tracks on a sled.
Lourimi said that he was not necessarily focused on winning and instead just wanted to enjoy his first appearance at the Winter Youth Olympics.
“I said it a lot of times, when I was there [in Gangwon] competing I was not thinking about any medals in the Olympics, I did not think of the results before I was sliding, I only thought about having fun and enjoying the [bobsleigh] track … I had to make it count,” he said.
For the first time in its history, Tunisia sent a team of three bobsledders to the Winter Olympics. The team included Lourimi as well as 15-year-olds Sophie Ghorbal and Beya Mokrani.