Current:Home > ScamsKyle Dake gains Olympic berth after father's recent death: 'I just really miss him' -Horizon Finance School
Kyle Dake gains Olympic berth after father's recent death: 'I just really miss him'
View
Date:2025-04-15 13:02:40
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The first question in the mixed zone Saturday night was about wrestling, about whether or how this Olympic trials victory felt different from his last. But Kyle Dake didn't want to talk about wrestling. At least not yet.
Nine days earlier, on an otherwise routine Thursday, the 2021 Olympic bronze medalist had been preparing for practice when his phone rang, and he learned that his father, Doug, had died. He was 62 years old.
"This is the first time I had to do this without him," the 33-year-old said Saturday night, through tears. "I just really miss him and wish he was here."
Dake booked his ticket to the 2024 Paris Olympics on Saturday with a pair of narrow victories in the best-of-three final match against Jason Nolf, his teammate with the Nittany Lion Wrestling Club. It's the latest chapter in a storied career, the attainment of the goal he had been chasing for three years. But it wasn't just his goal, he said. It was theirs − his and his father's.
WRESTLING TRIALS: Gold medalist David Taylor fails to make Olympic team
"We wanted to get to Big Tens, then to NCAAs, then try to get to... here," Dake said, pausing to collect himself. "I'd be with him a lot. He's just say 'How's practice going? Who'd you wrestle with today?' He was just a big part of this whole journey for me. It's just really hard having him not here."
An obituary published in The Ithaca Voice said Doug Dake died peacefully at the family's home in Lansing, New York but did not specify the cause of death. Kyle said his father had been fighting an illness.
"Went through a lot, trying to help him. Seeing him suffer," the 33-year-old said. "It gives you a lot of perspective on how much of a game this is. You just go out, do your best, be grateful for the opportunity. Yeah, it's just hard. It's just hard."
Dake said his father got "really sick" at the beginning of 2024. He recalled coming home on Feb. 26 at 3 a.m., after the winning the Pan-American Wrestling Championships, and hearing from his mother, Jodi, that his dad wasn't doig well. So he and his wife, Megan, packed up their children and went to be with him.
"I'd take care of him," Dake said. "Doctors told us he had a day, a day to live. And he just was like 'what are you guys talking about? I'm not dying.'
"(He wanted) more time. He just wanted to be home, with his family. And every single day that I saw him, we'd just hug each other, tell one another we love each other and that he's proud of me."
Dake said he's grateful for the support he has received over the past 10 days from coaches and teammates, all of whom reached out to him to offer their condolences or help in whatever small way they could.
One of those teammates, David Taylor, said in a news conference earlier this week that he's probably known Dake as long as he's known any other competitor he's faced in the sport. And as long as he's known Dake, he said, he's known Dake's father − a former all-American wrestler at Kent State who went on to coach wrestling for more than two decades in upstate New York.
"Doug loved Kyle. And Doug loved wrestling," Taylor said. "... There's nothing more that Doug would want than for Kyle to go out and compete at his best."
While wrestling strengthened their bond and brought them so much joy, Dake said his favorite memories of his father will not be as a coach but as "Grampy" to his three children. And he said his father regularly told him "that he really loved watching me be a dad."
When asked what he thought his father would say to him in this moment, with his second Olympic berth secured, Dake said it's simple.
"He'd say he loves me," he said.
"... I know he's watching me. He's with me the whole way."
Contact Tom Schad at tschad@usatoday.com or on social media @Tom_Schad.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Spidermen narcos use ropes in Ecuador's biggest port to hide drugs on ships bound for the U.S. and Europe
- Margot Robbie, Jacob Elordi and More Score 2024 BAFTA Nominations: See the Complete List
- Reviewers Say These 21 Genius Products Actually Helped Them Solve Gross Problems
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Kate Beckinsale Slams BAFTA's Horribly Cold Snub of Late Stepfather
- 'Law & Order,' 'SVU' season premieres: release date, how to watch, cast
- GOP lawmakers, Democratic governor in Kansas fighting again over income tax cuts
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Nintendo and Ubisoft revive overlooked franchises in their first games of the year
Ranking
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Kentucky lawmaker says proposal to remove first cousins from incest law was 'inadvertent change'
- AI is the buzz, the big opportunity and the risk to watch among the Davos glitterati
- Monty Python meets George Santos in revitalized 'Spamalot' Broadway musical
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- How Golden Bachelor’s Gerry Turner and Theresa Nist Are Already Recreating Their Rosy Journey
- Michigan man won $1 million thanks to having to return a wrong item
- Donkey cart loaded with explosives kills a police officer and critically injures 4 others in Kenya
Recommendation
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Chiefs vs. Bills playoff game weather forecast: Is any snow expected in Buffalo?
Senegal presidential candidate renounces French nationality to run for office
Samsung debuts Galaxy S24 smartphones with built-in AI tools
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Indiana bill defining antisemitism advances to state Senate
Rare coins and part of ancient aqueduct built by Roman emperor unearthed in Greece
Maryland Black Caucus’s legislative agenda includes criminal justice reform and health