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Carlsbad Bobsledder Going to 2022 Olympics in Beijing After Winning US Citizenship

Kaillie Humphries — a two-time Olympic champion and three-time Olympic medalist, all won for Canada — lives in Carlsbad, has held a green card and is married to an American, former bobsledder Travis Armbruster.

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Kaillie Humphries is now, officially, an American.

And just like that, the U.S. medal hopes in bobsledding at the Beijing Olympics just got much stronger.

The reigning world champion in both monobob and women’s bobsledding was sworn in as a citizen in San Diego on Thursday, ending her long saga to become an American and have the right to compete for the U.S. at the Olympics.

NBC 7's Steven Luke is months away from heading to the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. First, he's catching up with San Diego County Olympians prepping for the Games, like bobsledder Kaillie Humphries.

She does not yet have her passport, but that is likely to be little more than a formality. Without the passport, there was almost no chance the Canadian-born Humphries would have been allowed to slide at the Olympics.

“Most stressful morning ever, but it’s done,” Humphries told The Associated Press from the plane as she was leaving San Diego.

It was a whirlwind finale to the process. Humphries raced in a World Cup stop at Austria this past weekend. She got to Altenberg, Germany, for this week's race on Monday, did the two necessary training runs Tuesday that she needed to qualify for World Cup races this weekend, then made the five-hour drive to Frankfurt for a Wednesday morning flight to San Diego.

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"I know the rule was put into place to try and prevent poaching, but that's not my scenario," Humphries told NBC 7 in October. "It wasn't like I came over 'cause they asked me to. If that was the case, I could have had Chinese citizenship by now, I could've had multiple citizenships. Trust me: These people have asked."

Her citizenship meeting was Thursday, and not long afterward she was on a plane headed back to Europe.

“I think she’s super excited,” U.S. bobsled coach Mike Kohn said in a telephone interview from Germany. “She’s had a great couple of years with us. I think she’s going to just really shine now. I think, the uncertainty, it’s held her back a little bit. I think it’s held us all back.”

Humphries — a two-time Olympic champion and three-time Olympic medalist, all won for Canada — lives in Carlsbad, has held a green card and is married to an American, former bobsledder Travis Armbruster.

She won the right to slide for the U.S. in September 2019 after a lengthy and ongoing dispute with Canadian bobsled officials over claims of verbal abuse, mental abuse and harassment. Humphries left the Canadian team, she said, to seek a safer work environment.

"I wasn't safe," Humphries told NBC 7. "My environment, with where I was at, mentally, physically, I feared for my safety and mental health on a huge scale, and I made that very known."

Joining the U.S. team was not an easy decision, especially since she knew it did not come with a guarantee of being able to slide for the Americans at the Beijing Games — but was still a move she deemed necessary for her mental and physical safety.

She could have pursued the chance to slide for another country at these Olympics, but made the decision long ago that if she was going to Beijing she was going as an American.

Which, as of Thursday, she is.

“It was a long journey, this has been a team effort and feels amazing to have the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow," Humphries said.

Humphries had a legal team guiding her, plus got support from the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and no fewer than five members of Congress — Rep. Mike Levin (D-Calif.) and Sens. Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Mitt Romney (R-Utah), Mike Lee (R-Utah) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.).

“Kaillie did everything she was supposed to do to earn her citizenship, and my staff and I were very proud to assist her throughout that process, “ said Levin, who represents Humphries' home district.

Humphries' resume is one of the best in the sport's history: five world championships, 54 World Cup medals — 27 of them gold — and she's the only women's pilot to win two Olympic golds and drive to three medals at the games.

Humphries won the world titles last season for the U.S. and has been allowed to compete in World Cup and world championship events for the Americans because different rules apply in those situations. Canada's federation released her in 2019, clearing the path for her to slide for another country. But the Olympic rules are tighter and mandate that, in nearly every instance, an athlete have a passport of the country they are representing.

The International Olympic Committee could have waived that rule, but gave no indication it would do anything on Humphries' behalf.

Now, the U.S. is likely heading to the Olympics with two drivers that can win medals — Humphries and Elana Meyers Taylor. The addition of monobob to the women's Olympic program means female bobsledders have two chances for medals now at the games, like the men have had for decades.

The U.S. has won at least one medal in bobsledding in each of the last five Olympics.

“It's going to inject some enthusiasm into the team," Kohn said. “It's going to let Kaillie be herself again. She's had this on her mind all year. And now such a weight is off her shoulders."

When she isn't traveling the globe during the winter, you'll find her training in her quiet Carlsbad cul-de-sac on a custom-built "frame sled" with wheels.

The sled resembles a Costco flat cart and was specially built to give her extra reps for practicing technique in a land of sunshine.

"It definitely causes some weird looks," Humphries said. "One of my little neighbors has come out before and sat on the front as extra weight and I push her around."

The warm weather also gives her a chance to show off all of her tattoos -- everything from family members' faces to Olympic rings inked on her body -- which are normally hidden under winter clothing.

"Everyone is always, 'You're running out of space'," Humphries said. "I'm like, 'I have a lot of space.' It has taken 36 years to get to this point. There's a lot of space left — trust me."

"The word 'strength' on my leg is the most recent one back here."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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