A. WONDERFUL B.ATTENDANCE C.ENJOYMENT D.DETECTIVEREAD THE FOLLOWING...
32.A.
wonderful
B.
attendance
C.
enjoyment
D.
detective
Read the following passage and mark the letter A, B, C, or D on your answer sheet to
indicate the correct answer to each of the questions from 33 to 40.
WHAT MAKES AN OLYMPIC CHAMPION?
How does a person become an Olympic champion-someone capable of winning the gold? In
reality, a combination of biological, environmental, and psychological factors, as well as
training and practice,
all go into making a super athlete.
Perhaps the most important factor involved in becoming an elite athlete is genetics. Most
Olympic competitors are equipped with certain physical characteristics that
differentiate
them
from the average person. Take an elite athlete's muscles, for example. In most human skeletal
muscles (the ones that make your body move), there are fast-twitch fibers and slow-twitch
fibers. Fast-twitch fibers help us move quickly.
Olympic weightlifters. for example, have a large number of fast-twitch fibers in their muscles-
many
more
than the average person. These allow them to lift hundreds of kilos from the ground
and over their heads in seconds.
Surprisingly, a large, muscular body is not the main requirement to do well in this sport. It is
more important to have a large number of fast-twitch fibers in the muscles.
The legs of an elite marathon runner, on the other hand, might contain up to 90 percent slow-
twitch muscle fibers. These generate energy efficiently and enable an athlete to control fatigue
and keep moving for a longer period of time. When we exercise long or hard, it's common to
experience tiredness,
muscle pain, and difficulty breathing. These feelings are caused when the
muscles produce high amounts of
lactate
and can't remove it quickly enough. Athletes with
many slow-twitch muscle fibers seem to be able to clear the lactate from their muscles faster as
they move. Thus, the average runner might start to feel discomfort halfway into a race. A
trained Olympic athlete, however, might not feel pain until much later in the competition for
some Olympic competitors, size is important. Most male champion swimmers are 180 cm (six
feet) or taller, allowing them to reach longer and swim faster. For both male and female
gymnasts, though, a smaller size and body weight mean they can move
with greater ease, and are less likely to suffer damage when landing on the floor from a height
of up to 4.5 meters (15 feet).
Some athletes' abilities are naturally enhanced by their environment. Those raised at high
altitudes in countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia, and Morocco have blood that is rich in
hemoglobin. Large amounts of hemoglobin carry oxygen around the body faster, enabling these
athletes to run better. Cultural factors also help some athletes do well at certain sports. Tegla
Loroupe, a young woman from northern Kenya, has won several marathons. She attributes
some of her success to her country's altitude (she trains at about 2,400 meters, or 8,000 feet) and
some to her cultural background. As a child, she had to run ten kilometers to school every day.
“I'd be punished if I was late," she says.
Although genetics, environment, and even culture play a part in becoming an elite athlete,
training and practice
are needed to succeed. Marathon runners may be able to control fatigue
and keep moving for long periods of time, but they must train to reach and maintain their goals.
Weightlifters and gymnasts perfect their skills by repeating the same motions again and again
until they are automatic. Greg Louganis, winner of four Olympic diving gold medals, says
divers must train the same way to be successful: "You have less than three seconds from takeoff
until you hit the water, so it has to be reflex. You have to repeat the dives hundreds, maybe
thousands, of times.”
Training this way requires an athlete to be not only physically fit but psychologically healthy
as well. "They have to be," says Sean McCann, a sports psychologist at the Olympic Training
Center in the U.S. ‘‘Otherwise, they couldn’t handle the training loads we put on them.
[Athletes] have to be good at setting goals, generating energy when they need it, and managing
anxiety "
How do athletes adjust to such intense pressure? Louganis explains how he
learned to control
his anxiety
during a competition: "Most divers think too much…," he says. "They're too much
in their heads. What worked for me was humor. I remember thinking about what my mother
would say if she saw me do a bad dive. She'd probably just compliment me on the beautiful
splash.