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Williamsburg's Jill Holub goes for gold in sports career
University of Iowa, Special to The Journal Tribune
Aug. 10, 2022 11:24 am
IOWA CITY -- Gold is the color of choice for Team USA. But for a week this summer at the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado, black and gold was the dominant color combination.
Jill Holub, Williamsburg, recently traveled to Colorado with a group of 14 University of Iowa students from the sport and recreation management program for a unique practicum that allowed her to learn from and network with a broad range of people involved with the Olympic movement, the organizations and actions carried out under the authority of the International Olympic Committee.
They also lived alongside the country's elite athletes and coaches at the training center for a week.
"It was cool to get a sort of 'week in the life of an athlete,'" says Holub, a fourth-year sport and recreation management student. "We lived in the same dorms as them and would see them at breakfast, lunch, dinner, see them going to practice and coming back from practice. It was just a great experience."
Jeremy Parrish, lecturer in the sport and recreation management program, created the field experience-which was planned to start in 2020 but was canceled due to COVID-19 and was conducted virtually in 2021-to take a deeper look at this unique part of the sports industry.
"This practicum provides a different angle from a business perspective than other traditional sports," Parrish says. "The Olympic movement is its own unique corner in the industry; although it shares some qualities of intercollegiate athletics and nonprofits, our textbooks don't always do a good job of making it clear that the Olympics are a viable place to have a career."
Before heading to Colorado, the Team USA practicum experience began with intensive teaching about the Olympic movement, which armed students with the baseline Olympic knowledge they needed. They then applied those lessons to a project with the Iowa City Area Sports Commission and USA Team Handball, in which the students developed a potential multiday tournament that could have positive local impact while helping to grow interest in a developing sport. The group then packed their bags and headed west to Colorado Springs.
The group had a full itinerary while in Olympic City USA, getting exclusive tours of the Olympic and Paralympic Training Center facilities; trying Paralympic sports such as wheelchair basketball, sitting volleyball, and goalball; and taking in area attractions, including Pikes Peak, Garden of the Gods, the Air Force Academy, and a Rocky Mountain Vibes minor league baseball game. The students broke into groups to work on projects-such as cultivating more youth engagement with the Olympic movement, recommending pricing for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Museum, and quantifying the cost of an Olympic medal-that they then presented at the end of the week.
They also met and spoke with CEOs, vice presidents, and senior directors from several national governing bodies of sports, the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), and the United States Anti-Doping Agency.
Along with learning from the speakers, the networking the students were able to engage in was invaluable, Parrish says.
"They were speaking in a lot of cases to the people at the top," Parrish says. "And the connection they make is not only with that one person, but their network beyond them. It's hard to quantify how powerful that can be, especially for a young person looking to go into the industry."
The students agree.
A few of the guest speakers also went an extra mile for the Iowa students. Charlie Huebner, vice president of Paralympic development for the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Foundation, offered to review the students' resumes and make suggestions-an offer some students accepted before they even left Colorado.
"It was just a really great experience with lots of great people who were all welcoming and friendly and really wanted us to learn," Holub says. "They really took time out of their day to make sure that we got the most out of it."
The slate of guest speakers included two University of Iowa alumnae: Morgan Rabine Benham, manager of corporate partnerships for USA Wrestling, and Sarah Wilhelmi, senior director of collegiate partnerships for USOPC.
Holub says talking to former Hawkeyes is especially significant.
"It's comforting knowing that someone who went to the same school as me and has a similar background now works for the Olympics," Holub says. "It helps to hear how they got to their position and know that that's a possible route I could take."
Several students say that while a career working with the Olympic movement was not on their radar before the trip to Colorado Springs, it is now.
"There are more jobs than you think in the sports industry, and I want to see what they are and what people do to see if it's something I would like," Holub says.
Wilhelmi knows firsthand how important hands-on experience can be to a student's life.
"These experiences are life-changing. They can set your trajectory," Wilhelmi says. "I had the privilege during an internship to work with the Paralympics. Now, I'm helping launch the Para-College Inclusion Project to grow adaptive sport opportunities in universities and colleges, and those were seeds that were planted during my time at Iowa."
Williamsburg's Jill Holub traveled to Colorado for a University of Iowa sports and recreation management program practicum that allowed her to network with a broad range of people involved with the Olympic movement. (Courtesy photo)
Jill Holub