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Susanne Mitchell invited to Olympic camp in Aguascalientes, Mexico

Most people know that competing at the Olympics is the main goal for any amateur athlete no matter what their sport may be.
Susanne Mitchell
Yorkton resident Susanne Mitchell recently attended an Olympic training camp for referees in Mexico.

Most people know that competing at the Olympics is the main goal for any amateur athlete no matter what their sport may be.

In fact, the mere chance to represent their country is something that drives many people to work tirelessly through pain, determined to finally have the opportunity to fly their flag high.

What鈥檚 not known, however, is that it鈥檚 not only the athletes that have to go through rigorous testing and training in order to participate in the Olympics.

Referees and officials also have to undergo Olympic training, often in order to prove that they are indeed worthy of a spot on the world鈥檚 biggest sporting stage.

One such referee that has been invited to the Olympic Training Camp in Aguascalientes, Mexico, was Yorkton鈥檚 Susanne Mitchell - a taekwondo referee that also trains at Kee鈥檚 Taekwondo in Yorkton 鈥 who began reffing on the international stage in 2005 as a way to continue to watch her son compete. 鈥淥riginally when I decided to become a referee it was because my son was competing and I always loved to watch him,鈥 offered Mitchell, adding that she then fell in love with reffing and began to look at it as somewhat of a career path. 鈥淚 got my certificate in 2005 and from then on I went to as many tournaments as I could to develop myself and make sure that I鈥檓 up to date with all of the rules and how to apply them.

鈥淭hen from there I went to different tournaments and people begin to recognize my skills and when they did then I had the opportunity to be put on a list from Canada that says that I qualify and can go to the Olympic training camp.鈥

However the different tournaments that Mitchell had to attend weren鈥檛 simply limited to events in her home country.

Sure, Mitchell has refereed at tournaments in Vancouver and Montreal as well as other Canadian cities, but she also said that to be truly considered as a top flight international referee one must also officiate taekwondo tournaments in some fairly obscure places in order to prove to the World Taekwondo Federation that they are indeed worthy to be considered Olympic calibre. 鈥淪ome of the bigger events I did were the Junior World Cadets in Baku, Azerbaijan, and I did the Junior Worlds in Egypt in 2012,鈥 said Mitchell. 鈥淎nd I鈥檝e done many, many Opens, like the U.S. Open and I just came back from the Swiss Open in Montreux, Switzerland, but I鈥檝e also done events in Africa in the Ivory Coast and Senegal.鈥

But first before anything, a prospective referee must acquire at the very least a second Dan black belt. 鈥淔irst you have to become a black belt and in order to become a referee you have to either be a second Dan or a fourth Dan depending on what country you鈥檙e from, with refs from undeveloped countries being recognized at second Dan and others fourth Dan,鈥 mentioned Mitchell, adding that female referees, because they are so few and far between, are also eligible for Olympic consideration at second Dan. 鈥淭here are a small amount of women becoming referees so they allow us to take it when you鈥檙e a second Dan.鈥

Once invited to the Olympic training camp, Mitchell says that prospective referees then have to go thru many different kinds of tests throughout the four day camp. 鈥淭he first day you鈥檙e studying the rules, the new rules or any changes to the rules. They discuss them and they present them so you get all the rules down and then review all the other ones that are already in place,鈥 said Mitchell, continuing, 鈥淭hen there are exercises in scoring. It鈥檚 now electronic hogu鈥檚 and headgear but you still have to score the technical points or punches. There is training for the scoring and you have to pass an English test because it鈥檚 a universal language.

鈥淎nd then you go through a physical test and a written test.鈥

After all of that is finished the selection committee then reviews the 60 referees selected from that particular region - Mitchell is competing for a spot as a Pan-Am representative - and narrows the group down to 10 prospective referees that will go on to the next round of testing and examination; a round that Mitchell hopes will be attended by a referee from a small town in the middle of Canada. 鈥淭o be asked to come to the first Olympic camp is a huge honour and I鈥檓 just so proud that I come from this small place in Canada and that I am representing it,鈥 beamed Mitchell, adding that although she鈥檚 happy, she鈥檚 not just satisfied with making it to the first camp. 鈥淚 hope to be invited back to the next round because I鈥檝e worked very hard and sometimes it was a hard road but I鈥檓 excited.

鈥淲hoever beats me they鈥檒l have a hard time because I鈥檓 going to give them a run for their money. I鈥檓 going to make sure that if I don鈥檛 get it, they鈥檒l still have to work very hard to get there because that鈥檚 where I want to be.鈥

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