BEIJING (AP) ā There are no rear-view mirrors on a bobsled, which is fitting when considering Francesco Friedrichās approach to the sport.
He doesnāt look back. Only forward.
Thatās why the greatest menās bobsledder in the world right now ā and probably ever ā has no desire to talk about his legacy or what heās already accomplished to this point. His mind is always on the next thing, the next race, the next challenge. And right now, that means the Beijing Olympics, where the start of the menās bobsled competition comes Monday with the first two runs of the two-man event.
āHeās a special guy,ā U.S. bobsledder Carlo Valdes said. āHeās going to go down as the best, most successful, pilot in history. Heās been doing this for a long time and thereās a reason why he wins so many medals, world championships, gold and gold in the Olympics in 2018. Itās cool to be able to compete against him. Itās also annoying: He wins all the time and weāre like āHey, we get it.āā
Valdes, good-naturedly, approaches Friedrich most every race week with a message: āItās not going to be your week,ā Valdes tells him.
And that prediction is usually very wrong.
Itās not correct to say that Friedrich always wins. Itās pretty close, though. Going back to the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics, Friedrich has competed in 71 major international races ā meaning Olympics, World Cups and world championships.
Heās won 58 of those, or an absurd 82%.
Heās medaled in 67 of those, an even more absurd 94%. His worst finishes in the last four years: two fourth-places, one fifth-place and one 12th-place. Thatās it.
āThatās what we do,ā Friedrich said. āThatās our job.ā
He dominates his sport like very few others have. He beats just about everyone every single week. It would seem to be a recipe for resentment among his competitors.
It isnāt.
Friedrichās name is everywhere in bobsledding ā the record books, Olympic history, European history, and even U.S. sleds. Yes, really. When the American menās team was fundraising before this season began, anyone who donated at least $500 was going to get rewarded by having their name added to the side of one of the teamās bobsleds.
Friedrich gave $500. True to their word, the Americans put his name on the sled.
āHeās one of my idols in the sport,ā U.S. pilot and first-time Olympian Hunter Church said. āI remember when he won his first world championship medal and he got asked about his next goal, and he said, āthis is a great victory but it doesnāt matter until I am the best bobsled driver of all-time.ā It was his mission to be one of the greatest. To strive for consistent greatness, or be better than you were the day before, itās what heās done and itās what will keep me going.ā
Bobsled is one of those super-secretive sports. Itās an unwritten rule: Donāt ask pilots about the technology that goes into their sleds, donāt ask about technique, donāt ask about setups. Some teams get upset if they see anyone from another nation even daring to look at one of their sleds.
Friedrich goes the other direction. He doesnāt share all his secrets, but enough. The $500 gift to the U.S. program was far from the first time heās donated money to other teams; he also got his name on Benjamin Maierās sled for Austria this season after sponsoring that program, too.
āFrancesco thought it would be funny if his name was on my sled,ā Maier said.
Thing is, Friedrich doesnāt really think itās funny. He gives money because he can, because itās the right thing to do ā and because he feels a responsibility to grow the sport, even if that means helping rivals.
āThe day that thereās a limited amount of sleds on the World Cup tour is the day the sport dies,ā Valdes said. āYou can see that heās just trying to do his part to keep it going.ā
Hereās perhaps the best example of that: The four-man sled that Friedrich used to win gold in Pyeongchang is here at the Beijing Games ā now painted in Canada colors.
He sold it to them.
āHe definitely wouldnāt have sold the sled if he didnāt have something better, right?ā said Canadian pilot Justin Kripps, who tied Friedrich for the two-man gold at the Pyeongchang Games. āItās a very expensive item to have sitting in your garage unused, so I can see why he sold it.ā
Kripps and Friedrich are close friends. Kripps is one of the very best in the world at what he does, a true medal contender. And even he has no doubt about who the favorite is in Beijing.
āHe wins everything, right? So, obviously, people would consider him the one to beat,ā Kripps said. āI think they also considered him the one to beat going into 2018, and heās even more dominant now.ā
Friedrich wants no part of that thinking.
Heās modest, almost to a fault. He talks about how much he enjoys working on his sled, building relationships with his teammates, supporting others. Heāll talk about almost anything.
Anything, that is, except his own success. Maybe someday. Not yet. Thereās more to win.
āThat doesnāt matter in this moment,ā Friedrich said. āWe have to prepare in the moment for this. When that is over, we can talk about it. I have a job and I do what I can do. Thatās what is fun to me and thatās my motivation. Every day, I have fun.ā
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Tim Reynolds, The Associated Press