Close Menu
Boston Sports News
    What's Hot

    USA Today High School Sports: The Premier Source for High School Sports News

    July 5, 2026

    Fox Sports Confirms World Cup Anchors And Analysts

    July 5, 2026

    Boston Dynamics To Invest $100M In Massachusetts Expansion 

    July 5, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • USA Today High School Sports: The Premier Source for High School Sports News
    • Fox Sports Confirms World Cup Anchors And Analysts
    • Boston Dynamics To Invest $100M In Massachusetts Expansion 
    • Four Eagles Named to Athlon Sports Preseason ACC All-Conference Team
    • Angels’ skid reaches 5 games with lopsided loss to Red Sox – Daily News
    • Legislation overhauling college sports faces major test in the Senate
    • Sports And Live Events Are The Tip Of The Spear For Travel Growth
    • Why not make looser drinking laws for World Cup permanent, observers ask
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Boston Sports News
    Sunday, July 5
    • Home
    • Boston Sports News
    • Boston Area Colleges News
    • Boston High School Sports
    • Massachusetts Charity Games
    • All Massachusetts News
    • US Sports News
    • World Sports News
    Boston Sports News
    Home»World Sports News»Sarah Hildebrandt, Olympic wrestling gold medalist, eschews fear to end retirement
    World Sports News

    Sarah Hildebrandt, Olympic wrestling gold medalist, eschews fear to end retirement

    BostonSportsNewsBy BostonSportsNewsMay 5, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Sarah Hildebrandt, Olympic wrestling gold medalist, eschews fear to end retirement
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    After taking gold in Paris, wrestler Sarah Hildebrandt jotted. She tracked every time she had an urge to keep competing and every time she felt ready to retire.

    Hildebrandt, one of four U.S. women to win an Olympic wrestling title, ultimately announced her retirement six months after the Games. She seized an opportunity to become a U.S. women’s national team assistant coach.

    Yet she kept updating that running log in her phone.

    “Every single day I was like, ‘Do I want to come back? I don’t know,’” she said. “I would sway back and forth.”

    Within two months of the retirement announcement, Hildebrandt re-entered the drug-testing pool, just in case she changed her mind.

    Olympic stars like Hildebrandt who unretire must make themselves available for drug testing for at least six months before they can return to top-level competition.

    As time went on, she estimated that 70% to 80% of her phone notes pointed to unretiring.

    There were more signs. Hildebrandt competed in the new Real American Freestyle league in August.

    “I already had this leaning, like I think I do want to return,” she said. “Then I did that, and I really enjoyed it. I think that kind of let me probe a little deeper.”

    Then in September, she went to the World Championships in Croatia in a coaching role. She helped fellow Olympic gold medalist Helen Maroulis prepare by wrestling daily with her in training. Maroulis, in a comeback of her own, won her fourth world title.

    “Just watching the girls, or coaching the girls, that would always flutter up in me, like, oh yes, I want to partake in that,” said Hildebrandt, a 32-year-old from Granger, Indiana. “I was surrounded by such awesome women who are pursuing their dream and their career. I think that also helped me be inspired.”

    Hildebrandt stepped away from coaching, spending the next two months deliberating whether to be a full-time athlete again.

    She had an epiphany a few days before Thanksgiving. She journaled about it.

    “I was trying to convince myself I was just being logical by not returning,” Hildebrandt said. “I really discovered I was afraid. I’m like, I don’t want to be controlled by fear. I’m just masking it as logic, or this just makes sense, or this is what people think you should do. When I really started to unpack that, I was like, oh my gosh, I am just a little afraid. I’m afraid of maybe what that would look like coming back.

    “That’s exactly what I should go do (is come back). I love this sport. I love what it demands of me and what I discover of myself within it. Why would I not extend that for as long as I could?”

    Image for USA's Sarah Hildebrandt wins 50kg wrestling gold in Paris

    At the 2024 Paris Olympics, the United States’ Sarah Hildebrandt wins 50kg freestyle wrestling gold.

    At the start of 2026, Hildebrandt began training full-time for a comeback at the U.S. Open from April 23-24.

    On the morning of April 23, she lay on the floor and felt awestruck.

    “I’m back doing this, and it just was blowing my mind,” she said. “I felt so overtaken with gratitude and amazement that this was even possible. I think that was validating in a sense of like, OK, this is where I want to be. But also, there’s still work to be done. I’m excited for that, and scared about that, and all of the emotions, really.”

    She won her first four matches by mercy rule (10-0) to reach the 53kg final against Cristelle Rodriguez.

    In that championship match, Rodriguez scored a takedown on Hildebrandt, who sensed something wasn’t right inside. Hildebrandt took a step and “felt everything just go.” That was the end of her U.S. Open.

    She later learned she tore an adductor (in two places off the bone), groin and abdominal muscles on her left side. About a month before the event, she started noticing some pain in that area — enough to modify her training.

    Hildebrandt is talking with surgeons to map out the next weeks and months.

    “The injury that happened during my finals match at the US Open ain’t pretty and has put an end to the season I hardly even started,” she posted on social media.

    It’s her first long-term injury since dislocating an elbow at the 2017 U.S. Open. Hildebrandt said that pain ended up catapulting her. She won her first world championships medal the next year, starting a run of six medals between the Olympics and worlds over a seven-year span.

    “I’m taking (the muscle tears) kind of as a blessing that it’s happening this far out from (the 2028) Games still,” she said. “We have plenty of time to recover and plenty of time to come back into it all.”

    Hildebrandt is committed to the comeback. She yearns to return to competition as soon as late 2026, health dictating.

    It could be at her U.S. Open weight of 53kg or at her Olympic gold medal weight of 50kg.

    She has wrestled in Argentina, Kazakhstan, Japan, Nicaragua and Norway, but never in a U.S.-hosted international tournament.

    She called the LA28 Games, the first home Summer Olympics since 1996, “the external goal.”

    “But of course, it’s gonna be moment to moment,” she said. “I think I’m just gonna keep gathering more information — physically, mentally, spiritually, all of the things. I came back because I like discovering myself in this sport. It really has been such an amazing teacher and mirror for me. So that’s what I’m going to continue doing. However that results, and whatever that looks like, or whatever the expiration date on that is, I’m kind of just purely coming humble to it all. I’m open and just gonna go see. It’s very terrifying.”

    Olympics: Wrestling

    Elor is the youngest Olympic wrestling gold medalist in American history.

    eschews fear Gold Hildebrandt medalist Olympic retirement Sarah Wrestling
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleMassachusetts Business Exodus Raises Economic Concerns
    Next Article Truist Championship odds, picks and PGA Tour predictions
    BostonSportsNews
    • Website

    Related Posts

    World Sports News

    Fox Sports Confirms World Cup Anchors And Analysts

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 5, 2026
    World Sports News

    Sports And Live Events Are The Tip Of The Spear For Travel Growth

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 4, 2026
    World Sports News

    NBC SPORTS ANNOUNCES EARLY CELEBRITY COMMITMENTS FOR THE 2026 AMERICAN CENTURY CHAMPIONSHIP, JULY 10-12

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 4, 2026
    World Sports News

    Australia Vs Egypt LIVE Score, FIFA World Cup 2026: Mohamed Salah Named In Starting XI

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 3, 2026
    World Sports News

    World Pool Association Partners with International School Sport Federation to Enhance Cue Sports Opportunities

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 3, 2026
    World Sports News

    The 2026 World Cup: Sports and Conflict

    By BostonSportsNewsJune 16, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    USA Today High School Sports: The Premier Source for High School Sports News

    By BostonSportsNewsJuly 5, 2026

    Follow high school sports with news, rankings, and in-depth coverage from USA Today High School…

    Fox Sports Confirms World Cup Anchors And Analysts

    July 5, 2026

    Boston Dynamics To Invest $100M In Massachusetts Expansion 

    July 5, 2026

    Four Eagles Named to Athlon Sports Preseason ACC All-Conference Team

    July 5, 2026
    Top Posts

    Little League Baseball World Series 2025: Bracket, results, scores, schedule, teams and more

    August 14, 202592 Views

    Hopkinton girls named soccer All-Americans – Boston Herald

    August 12, 202568 Views

    Kyle Dugger, Javon Baker among six Patriots training camp surprises – NBC Sports Boston

    August 13, 202565 Views

    Why Bruins Top Prospect Is Returning To BC

    August 14, 202563 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us

    bostonsportsnews brings fast, focused updates from Boston’s sports scene. From pro teams to local leagues, college matchups to high school games, it covers everything that matters to Boston fans.
    Stay connected with real-time scores, game previews, fan reactions, historic moments, and events across the city.

    Our Gallery
    useful links
    • Donate Now
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    All Rights Reserved By BostonSportsNews

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.