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Olympian Sanya Richards-Ross is having a big week.


She's on the August cover of Women's Running magazine -- her first solo magazine cover -- and her new reality TV show, "Glam and Gold," premieres on WeTV.


We caught up with the gold medalist and American record holder (in the women's 400 meter, with a time of 48.70 seconds) to talk motivation, determination and, of course, breakfast[1] .


What was it like shooting your first cover?

It was amazing. Women's Running is amazing. Plus, I'm a woman that runs, so it was awesome to be on there and help inspire other women to the do the same. Running has brought me so much joy and happiness and of course success. Of course, I've had my failures and obstacles too, but those have helped shape my character. This is my first solo cover, so that's a big deal. It was an amazing opportunity.


In the Women's Running interview you discuss some of those obstacles, as well as the fact that you're always training. How do you keep going without burning out?

I set intermediary goals. I always have long-term goals, like starting to train for the Olympics, but I log training and enjoy getting closer and closer to my ultimate goal. I like to say I have a bad memory -- I quickly forget my successes and start to set new goals very quickly. I learned not to hold on to the good or the bad too long to keep pursuing the next goal.


Speaking of the Olympics, what are you hoping for in Rio?

London was amazing, it was my first time winning an individual gold, I got to accomplish a dream I had since I was 9 years old. I say it was running into my destiny. I really want to defend that title. I hope to get healthier -- I've been kind of sidelined by toe surgery -- but I have three more years to get ready and train really hard.


Did you have any favorite cross-training activities that you did while you've been recovering?

I ended up doing a lot of biking. It's okay... but I realized when I had to do other workouts that running is what I enjoy the most. I would just wish I could be on the track! I did a lot of pool work. And I did a lot of running on an AlterG treadmill[2] .


What helped you stay motivated through that?

I've had my share of obstacles -- we all have. In 2007 I was diagnosed with an autoimmune disease and I wasn't sure I'd be able to continue running. In 2010 I pulled my quad. I have great faith and I believe everything happens for a reason. I stay very encouraged because I feel like my best is still yet to come. The benefit of obstacles is they give you additional motivation. I'm looking forward to giving it 110 percent in my training.


How does diet and nutrition factor into your training? We're crazy about breakfast here!

I am crazy about breakfast, too! I never miss breakfast. If I do I am the most grumpy person in the world. I have peppermint green tea, egg whites or something full eggs, then I have some fruit and either a bagel or pancakes for some carbs. If I don't have eggs I'll have oatmeal. For lunch, I'll have a grilled chicken salad or tuna sandwich on wheat bread. Especially when I'm training I'll supplement my meals with a protein shake. Then dinner is grilled salmon, a baked potato and vegetables. I'm a really boring eater. I don't try a lot of things. It's easy for me to stick to a healthy diet because I'm so picky.


This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity and length. As told to Sarah Klein.





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  • Eric Shanteau


    At only age 24, just a week before the Olympic Trials for the 2008 Games in Beijing, the American swimmer faced what he has called <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/08/01/eric-shanteau-olympic-swimmer-cancer-survivor_n_1727894.html" target="_hplink">a "devastating" diagnosis</a>: testicular cancer. He was able to postpone treatment until after competing in Beijing; he had surgery to remove the tumor in August and has been cancer-free since, BSU reported.

    After becoming involved with the LIVESTRONG Foundation, Shanteau then started <a href="http://shanteauopenwater.com/" target="_hplink">Swim For Your Life</a>, an awareness-raising event now in its third year. All proceeds <a href="http://shanteauopenwater.com/about-2/" target="_hplink">benefit the programs and services of the Lance Armstrong Foundation</a>, according to the Swim For Your Life website. Shanteau made it to the semi-finals in the <a href="http://www.nbcolympics.com/swimming/event/men-100m-breaststroke/phase=swm031200/doc=summary.html" target="_hplink">men's 100-meter breaststroke</a>, and will compete in the <a href="http://www.nbcolympics.com/athletes/athlete=eric-shanteau/index.html" target="_hplink">men's 4x100-meter medley relay on Friday</a>.




  • Dana Vollmer


    On Sunday, the 24-year-old American swimmer became the <a href="http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/31/overcoming-a-heart-condition-to-win-olympic-gold/" target="_hplink">first woman ever to swim the 100-meter butterfly in under 56 seconds</a>.

    But when she was just 15, Vollmer was <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/27/dana-vollmer-heart-condition_n_1711515.html" target="_hplink">diagnosed with long QT syndrome</a>, an electrical disorder of the heart that could lead to sudden cardiac arrest, Everyday Health reported in a recent profile of the swimmer.

    While many athletes with similar conditions are sidelined by their health, Vollmer was allowed to continue swimming, provided an external defibrillator was nearby every time she hit the pool.

    Today, it seems Vollmer has outgrown long QT -- doctors can't find any signs of the syndrome, Everyday Health reported. "It's amazing... to be healthy and really enjoying the sport again," she told the site.

    Along with mom Cathy, Vollmer <a href="http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1277879-dana-vollmer-olympic-gold-medalist-has-the-heart-of-a-champion" target="_hplink">volunteers for the American Heart Association</a>, giving speeches and making appearances to help raise awareness around heart disease, according to Bleacher Report. Now that she's got her gold, she'll also compete in the upcoming 4x200-meter freestyle relay.




  • Jake Gibb


    The American beach volleyball player was flagged for abnormal hormone levels by a drug tester -- the reason, it turned out, was that <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/us-beach-volleyball-player-jake-gibb-recovers-from-cancer-to-make-olympics-_-twice/2012/07/30/gJQAduOiKX_story.html" target="_hplink">he had testicular cancer</a>. Doctors were able to successfully remove the tumor, meaning Gibb didn't need chemotherapy and could return to the beach with enough time to qualify for the 2012 Games, where he and partner Sean Rosenthal <a href="http://www.london2012.com/beach-volleyball/event=beach-volleyball-men/" target="_hplink">continue to compete</a>.

    "I realized the things that matter most to me, and that's health and family," he said of the experience <a href="http://www.jakegibb.com/" target="_hplink">in a video on his website</a>.




  • Carrie Johnson


    In 2003, when she should have been training for her first Olympics, the American kayaker was struggling with stomach symptoms doctors couldn't quite put their fingers on.

    "It started with symptoms of fatigue and it kind of escalated to increasingly worse GI symptoms," she told <em>USA Today</em>. Six months later she was <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/london/canoe/story/2012-06-06/carrie-johnson-modifies-training-crohns-disease/55480360/1" target="_hplink">diagnosed with Crohn's disease</a>, the paper reported, a <a href="http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/crohns-disease/DS00104/" target="_hplink">chronic inflammatory bowel disease</a>.

    While navigating treatment options -- "It's basically a trial and error process," she has said -- she has been able to compete in both the 2004 and 2008 Games, and will kayak in the <a href="http://www.london2012.com/athlete/johnson-carrie-1133421/" target="_hplink">200- and 500-meter events in London</a>.

    Her health problems may have actually <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2012/apr/29/sports/la-sp-oly-canoe-kayak-johnson-20120430" target="_hplink">given her a special perspective</a>, she told the <em>L.A. Times</em>. "Having to take time off made me realize how much I wanted to be doing it," she said. "Now, if I'm having a bad practice or a bad day, I have that extra appreciation."




  • Venus Williams


    In 2011, the elder Williams sister was <a href=" http://espn.go.com/olympics/summer/2012/tennis/story/_/id/8217492/2012-london-olympics-venus-williams-maria-sharapova-win-advance-third-round" target="_hplink">diagnosed with Sjögren's syndrome</a>, an autoimmune disorder that causes fatigue and aching muscles and joints, and took a break from tennis for a while.

    "<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/02/sports/tennis/2011-us-open-venus-williams-describes-fights-with-fatigue.html?ref=tennis" target="_hplink">The fatigue is hard to explain</a> unless you have it," she told <em>The New York Times</em> shortly after her diagnosis. "Some mornings I feel really sick, like when you don't get a lot of sleep or you have a flu or cold. I always have some level of tiredness. And the more I tried to push through it, the tougher it got."

    Appearing rejuvenated at the start of the London Games, Williams advanced to the third round before <a href="http://www.latimes.com/sports/olympics/olympicsnow/la-sp-on-serena-williams--federer-venus-20120801,0,1607963.story" target="_hplink">losing to Germany's Angelique Kerber</a> on Wednesday.




  • Phil Dalhausser


    In June, the American beach volleyball gold medalist spent three days in the hospital and a month on a blood thinning medication as part of <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/sports/olympics/london/volleyball/story/2012-07-30/todd-rogers-phil-dalhausser-beach-volleyball/56588660/1" target="_hplink">treatment for two blood clots</a>, he recently revealed to <em>USA Today</em>.

    <a href="http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/blood-clots/MY00109/DSECTION=causes" target="_hplink">Blood clots</a> that form in deep veins can block blood flow or break free and travel through the blood stream to the lungs or brain, the Mayo Clinic explains.

    Dalhausser and partner Todd Rogers continue to compete in London, set on repeating their gold-medal performance from Beijing, they told <em>USA Today</em>.




  • Paula Radcliffe


    She may be the female world record holder in the marathon, but Radcliffe hasn't won a single Olympic medal in four Games -- and she's now officially out for London, as well. The long-distance runner was <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/19035570" target="_hplink">declared unfit to compete</a> due to a foot injury, the BBC reported.

    But she's continued running despite another health concern since she was a teenager: asthma. "<a href="http://www.health.com/health/gallery/0,,20306639_5,00.html" target="_hplink">I always take my reliever inhaler before and after I run</a>, and am extra careful when I have a cold, as that can make the symptoms more severe," she has said, Health.com reported. And she told the BBC, "Asthma didn't stop me doing what I love."

    While it might seem like a condition that makes sports infinitely more difficult, around eight percent of Olympic athletes have asthma, making it the <a href="http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/07/120731094613.htm" target="_hplink">most common chronic disease</a> among these star athletes, a recent study found.




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