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Olympic Gold Medalist Connor Fields
- Las Vegas, NV
- Athlete/Sports Speaker
- Travels nationwide
- $5000-$7500
Overview
In today’s fast-paced world, it's impossible to predict every outcome. You can control as much as possible, but you have to be ready to adapt to the unexpected. As the only athlete to win the Olympics and nearly die while competing at the Olympics, Connor has truly faced the entire spectrum. From setting the initial goal, to coming up short, succeeding, and catastrophically failing. After each of the 4 major moments he faced the question: Now what?
Connor shares strategies to reach your gold medal moments and tools for what to do after any type of outcome, moving forward with grit and resilience each time. Connor leaves audiences motivated, inspired, and prepared to face any challenge.
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Booking Info
Price Range: $5000-$7500
Gig Length: 30 - 90 minutes
Languages: English
What to Expect
If the goal is to have your audience motivated with a new understanding of resilience and immediately applicable takeaways...you are in the right place.
If the goal is to go through a roller coaster of emotions while hearing one of the wildest Olympic stories ever...you are in the right place.
Through engaging and entertaining storytelling, Connor weaves in immediately applicable strategies for things like increasing accountability when sticking to goals, peak performance, mindset, and audiences ultimately gain new perspective on resiliency and grit.
Connor will work with you to meet the goals of your event, and each presentation is customized to meet these goals.
About
Connor Fields is a three-time Olympian, two-time World Champion, and the first American to win Olympic BMX Gold.
He is also the only Olympic athlete who has both won the Olympics….and nearly died while competing at the Olympics.
As one of the world's all-time greatest BMX racers, Connor has represented the United States 50+ times in 25+ countries. At 17 Connor became the youngest rider to ever podium a BMX World Cup, and was the youngest athlete in his sport at the London 2012 games. However, his racing career was not always marked by triumphs. At the 2021 Tokyo Games, as the number one seed in his semi-final and on pace to defend his gold medal from 2016, Connor went down in one of the worst accidents in Summer Olympic history. Based on previous results, Connor still qualified for the 2021 Olympic BMX final, but instead of competing in that final race, he fought for his life in an ambulance. Connor sustained multiple injuries - broken ribs, a collapsed lung, torn shoulder and bicep ligaments, brain swelling, and four life-threatening brain hemorrhages.
The road to recovery took him through surgery, therapy, and intense physical and cognitive rehabilitation. Connor had to regain the energy to do simple tasks, strengthen short-term memory, relearn vocabulary, and even learn how to speak correctly. He learned firsthand that Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) survivors go through physical, mental, and emotional changes throughout their recovery. Not only did he face the pain of being denied the chance to defend his Gold Medal, but Connor also has no memory of competing in his final Olympics – the moment he trained his entire life for.
In the blink of an eye, his career ended.
Connor realized that, just like in training, life is not about being perfect or getting everything 100% correct. People focus on the last 1% when it’s the 99% that creates champions. It wasn’t the last 1% - a second Olympic Gold - that would make Connor a champion—the 99% of who he already was made him a winner. Connor learned the importance of mental health and having to rebuild yourself when everything goes completely wrong.
After a year of rehabilitation, he was fully recovered and cleared to ride again. Determined not to let his final race define 22 years of riding, he jumped on his bike and rode again on day one to conquer the fear that threatened to keep him off the track. Understandably anxious to hit routine jumps, he took them on and beat the demons that chased him. In his words: “I wanted to go out on my own terms”
Connor found new passions, as the host for PBS hit show “Outdoor Nevada” as well as using his story to inspire others around the country. Connor continues to provide commentary for BMX events, including for NBC Olympic broadcasts. He also occasionally rides and coaches BMX, with no passion for his sport lost to the worst of Olympic scenarios The Today Show, Sports Illustrated, and Vanity Fair Magazine have featured his story. He was part of the Polo Ralph Lauren Sport campaign, has been a guest at the White House, and was nominated for a Nickelodeon Kids Choice Award.
In his presentations, Connor opens the curtains to the rarely seen experience of winning sport's most fantastic prize and overcoming extreme adversity. Through authentic and engaging storytelling, Connor provides real-world strategies for peak performance. He directs his audience to identify their own Gold Medal Moment, and provides immediately applicable techniques to be prepared when that moment arrives. He openly shares his journey of recovery and self-discovery with audiences inspiring resiliency and motivating audiences toward tremendous success. Through authentic and engaging storytelling, Connor provides real-world strategies for peak performance, inspires resiliency, and motivates audiences to move forward after any outcome.