With Ian Thorpe admitted to rehab this week, the spotlight is on what happens to sporting heroes when they fall to earth. With all we now know, is ‘sporting superhero’ still a dream worth aspiring to?
Ian Thorpe is a legend. He dedicated (some might say sacrificed) his young life to being the very best in the world at one thing. And he was.
He won 46 medals for Australia. He made mountains of money, for himself, for the businesses who rode in his wake, and for the charities that he chose to support.
At the height of his success and fame, The Thorpedo could do no wrong. No-one shone brighter. He was all that was great and good about that glorious, golden time that was the Sydney Olympics.
But then, of course, it had to come to an end. It’s impossible for anyone, no matter how talented, how dedicated, how determined, to stay at the top of their game when the top of their game requires a physical strength and stamina that is, quite simply, super-human.
And what happens when it’s over is often brutal. The media turns. They begin to pick on an athlete’s personal life, their social circle, how they spend their money, where they choose to live. They begin to hunt for bad news rather than good, and for someone who has spent their life cultivating the necessary ego to slay competition in the pool, this must be a fall to earth that is especially bruising.
The past week has been particularly dreadful for Ian Thorpe. The press reported he was in rehab for alcohol and depression. His rep denied it. Then, yesterday police were called to a Sydney street where Thorpe was allegedly acting strangely, trying to get into a car that wasn’t his. The story went out that he was ‘dazed’ at the scene, and he was taken to hospital. Now his rep says he is, indeed, in rehab.
“He’s battling with his health issues at the moment, he’s having a tough time, but hopefully in six months time he’ll be out the other side,” his dad Ken said today.