Against all odds: Five world champions share stories of resilience and triumph

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SINGAPORE - In elite sports, the stakes are brutally high, and the pressure is relentless. Every move, every split-second decision, can spell the difference between glory and heartbreak.

But when luxury watchmaker Richard Mille brought five of their athlete ambassadors together for a fireside chat in Singapore recently, the conversation was not about their victories but the struggles that defined them.

At St Martin, Richard Mille’s flagship boutique near the Botanic Gardens, Brazilian racing driver Felipe Massa, South African sprinter Wayde van Niekerk, American fencer Miles Chamley-Watson, Qatari high jumper Mutaz Essa Barshim, and British cyclist Mark Cavendish shared raw, personal stories of overcoming life’s toughest challenges.

Hosted by the watch brand’s commercial director Alexandre Mille and marketing director Tim Malachard, the event revealed how these athletes turned setbacks into triumphs.

For Cavendish, one of cycling’s greatest sprinters, the stigma surrounding mental health once felt insurmountable. Diagnosed with clinical depression in 2018, the 35-time Tour de France stage winner opened up about his struggles.

“Ten years ago, admitting you had mental health issues felt like making excuses,” said the 39-year-old.

But talking about his challenges helped him heal and gave him a new purpose.

“When you share your story, you never know whose life you might change.”

Sprinter van Niekerk, 32, who shattered Michael Johnson’s long-standing 400m world at the 2016 Olympics, agreed.

His world turned upside down in late 2017 when a freak injury during a charity tag rugby match brought his sprinting career to an abrupt halt. He tore both his anterior cruciate ligament  (ACL) and meniscus in his right leg - a devastating blow for the record-breaking athlete.

It was not just his career at stake; his identity was on the line too. However, it did not stop him from making a comeback.

“You learn a lot through adversity. You got to understand it, take it head on and realise that you’re doing the best job that you can. Talking helps me get through whatever I am going through,” he said, adding that rebuilding from scratch taught him patience and to celebrate small wins.

The pain of starting over is something Barshim, 33, knows only too well. In 2018, while attempting to break Cuban high jumper Javier Sotomayor’s 2.45m world record in Hung...

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