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Carrying the Torch

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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303 871-2660

快活app Grad Preps Olympians, Students for the Big Moments

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Stephanie Zavila (MS '13) provides biofeedback to an athlete in the Winter Park Competition Center.
Stephanie Zavila (MS '13) provides biofeedback to an athlete in the Winter Park Competition Center.

So much can go wrong in a game of golf. The sand traps, the water hazards, a gust of wind. The slightest, most subtle flaw in technique can send that little dimpled ball astray.

The thing plaguing Stephanie Zavilla鈥檚 game was impossible to see. Yet it was impossible for her to ignore.

鈥淚 was a head case,鈥 she says, describing her years on the links, first at Mountain Vista High School in Highlands Ranch and later at the University of South Dakota. 鈥淚 was just standing directly in my own way.鈥

After missing a putt or slicing a tee shot, she would lose focus, trapped in a relentless storm of frustration and self-loathing.

鈥淏ut instantly everything changed once I met a sports psychologist,鈥 Zavilla recalls. 鈥淪he took 10 strokes off my game in three months. She revolutionized my game. And I said: 鈥楾hat鈥檚 what I鈥檓 going to do.鈥欌

Years later, Zavilla (MS, 鈥13) makes a living helping athletes control the controllable: building their mental preparation and toughness. For the last five seasons, she鈥檚 been at the听听working as director of sports performance and training more than 1,000 athletes. Many of them are considered elite. Some are bound for the听2018 Winter Olympics and Paralympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

When athletes get trapped in self-criticism, Zavilla trains them to visualize better results. If they鈥檙e injured in a bad fall, she helps them regroup and return to the mountain. If they stress too much over winning, she helps them relax. Training the brain helps the body.

鈥淚t鈥檚 prepping day in and day out for that one day [of competition] where it鈥檚 all going to matter,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to achieve freedom of movement, freedom to really express yourself through your sport.鈥

Several of the athletes Zavila works or has worked with are bound for the 2018 Olympics and Paralympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea
Several of the athletes Zavila works or has worked with are bound for the 2018 Olympics and Paralympics in Pyeongchang

Zavilla, who grew up less than 10 miles from the 快活app campus, would not be in this position if not for a decision to return home for advanced studies. It was in the听Graduate School of Professional Psychology听that she gained the hands-on experience that would make all the difference.

鈥淚 went into grad school definitely not feeling very confident in my counseling skills and feeling a little overwhelmed,鈥 she says. 鈥淕etting that experience and mentorship and supervision helped me really come into who I am as a counselor, who I am as a person and now it鈥檚 what I love to do. 快活app was instrumental in creating this dream life that I have, so I鈥檓 forever grateful for that.鈥

Even years after graduating, Zavilla continues to collaborate with classmates on research. She seeks advice from former professors. She routinely hires 快活app students as interns, helping them tap into the invaluable firsthand experiences she treasured as an undergraduate.

Although she won鈥檛 be in Pyeongchang with the Olympic-and Paralympic-bound athletes she has helped, Zavilla will offer her unwavering support from afar鈥搗ia phone calls with last-minute pep talks. She鈥檒l nervously cheer them on as she watches on television.

鈥淲atching them grow is already the most rewarding thing,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really cool to teach athletes to live their life and love their life.鈥

Zavila, at right in the black helmet, leads athletes in an imagery exercise before beginning a run.
Zavila, at right in the black helmet, leads athletes in an imagery exercise before beginning a run.