Amit Elor, Kara Kohler look to burnish area’s medal legacy at Paris Olympics

Amit Elor, Kara Kohler look to burnish area’s medal legacy at Paris Olympics
In the 21st Century local athletes have reached the Olympic medal stand on several occasions. Clockwise from left, Kara Kohler and Kristian Ipsen won bronze medals on the same day at the 2012 Summer Olympics, each Clayton athlete among the youngest in their sport in London; Melissa Seidemann, a College Park High grad, played a key role for the 2012, 2016 and 2020 gold medal-winning American water polo teams; Erin Dobratz and her Walnut Creek Aquanuts teammate Tammy Crow DeClerq (not pictured) helped the USA to bronze in synchronized swimming. (Photos courtesy Kohler family, USA Artistic Swimming and Dobratz family)

CONTRA COSTA COUNTY, CA (July 19, 2024) — Amit Elor, just five years removed from winning a high school state wrestling championship for College Park, will be competing in her first Summer Olympics Aug. 5-6 as a wrestling gold medal contender while Clayton’s Kara Kohler will be in her third Games in Paris starting July 27 as one of America’s rowing team medal hopefuls.

Each local woman is competing at the highest level of her sport and are now part of the Olympic legacy created by nearly two dozen athletes with connections to Concord, Pleasant Hill and Clayton.

Including Elor, a dozen athletes who live, went to school in the area or trained with local clubs have been on Summer or Winter Olympic teams and half of those, including Kohler, have reached the podium to receive a cherished Olympic medal.

Incredibly, Kohler earned her bronze medal in quad sculls at the London Olympics on Aug. 1, 2012, the same day her fellow Clayton resident Kristian Ipsen also won bronze in three-meter synchronized diving.

The chart on Page B1 has a list of the local athletes and their years competing along with medals won. All of them trained and/or went to school locally except for 1960 Olympic pole vault champion Don Bragg, who lived many of his retirement years with his wife Theresa in Clayton. In 2010 they went to Rome for the 50th reunion of those Olympics.

Unsurprisingly, 15 of the local Olympians were in water sports—swimming, diving, water polo, synchronized swimming and rowing. Skier Daron Rahlves, who grew up Clayton, would be the 16th if you count snow skiing as simply competing on frozen water.

All these Olympians represented the United States except swimmer Niko Lahanas, a De La Salle graduate, who swam for Greece in the 1988 Seoul Games.

Elor is wrestling sensation

Amit Elor’s meteoric rise in international women’s freestyle wrestling makes her a strong gold medal contender in Paris at 68 kg. The former College Park High and MDUSD student has amassed eight world championships since 2021. (Photo by Tony Rotundo courtesy USA Wrestling)

Elor missed her chance to take part in the 2020 United States Olympic Trials by a day. She was born Jan. 1, 2004, one day after the cutoff to meet the minimum age requirement to compete at the Tokyo Olympics, which were not held until 2021 due to the pandemic.

It was the winter of 2019 as a freshman at College Park High when she easily won the California state wrestling championship, winning all 36 of her matches. In the 150-pound weight class she pinned every North Coast Section and State Meet opponents with her two championship matches ending in 15 and 20 seconds, respectively.

Her older sister Ronny had won an unofficial state championship for College Park about a decade earlier before female high school wrestling was fully sanctioned and organized by CIF. When she was just three or four years old Amit loved to tag along to her teenage brother Orry’s wrestling matches. He competed for three years on the College Park wrestling team, placing eighth and third in the CIF State Meet as a heavyweight.

Any disappointment Elor felt on missing out on Tokyo has been taken out on her opponents as she won eight world championships from 2021-23 including senior worlds the last two years while she was still eligible to compete in U20 and U23 divisions. While winning those gold medals Elor had a 29-0 record with 17 technical falls, seven pins and outscored her 29 opponents 251-9.

Elor is competing at 68 kilograms in Paris, nearly nine pounds lighter than her regular weight class. Her punishing style utilizes a two-on-one and an underhook to win matches.

Kohler’s 3rd Olympics masks Rio disappointment

Kara Kohler was the youngest rower at the 2012 London Olympics and now 12 years later the 33-year-old from Clayton is in her third Summer Games representing the USA in single sculls which she has dominated in America through two Olympic cycles. (Photo courtesy USRowing)

After being the youngest rower in the London Games at 21, Kohler, a four-time All-America and NCAA champion at Cal, was bitterly disappointed when she was not selected to any American boat for the 2016 Rio Games.

Her fellow Clayton bronze medalist Ipsen did represent the USA in Rio, taking fifth in the three-meter springboard and then retiring from the sport that he competed in since he was six years old as a record-setting diver at De La Salle High and Stanford.

Kohler took a short hiatus from rowing after being passed over in 2016 and decided the only way to ensure her participation in rowing events for the USA was to become a single sculler where all such decisions were determined on the water by racing.

She quickly established herself as the preeminent American single sculler, winning bronze at the 2019 World Championships and was named USRowing’s female Rower of the Year.

The Clayton Valley High grad qualified for Tokyo where she was ninth after a bad start in the semi-finals cost her qualifying for the medal finals by less than one second.

She has continued her domination of single sculls in our country through the Olympic Trials and will begin her Paris racing July 27, the official opening day of the Games with the finals set for Aug. 3. To reach the medal stand the 33-year-old will compete in four 2000-meter races over eight days.

The Pioneer in Paris will have reports and photos from Sports Editor Jay in Paris starting July 30 on our website.

Concord, Clayton and Pleasant Hill Olympians

Name Sport Olympics Medals Local Connection
Natalie Schneider Bartleson Synchronized Swimming 1996 Gold Concord resident
Walnut Creek Aquanuts
Chuck Berkeley Bobsled 2010 Concord resident
Matt Biondi Swimming 1984
1988
1992
8 Gold
2 Silver
1 Bronze
Concord Swim Club
Don Bragg Pole Vault 1960 Gold Clayton resident
Natalie Coughlin Swimming 2004
2008
2012
3 Gold
4 Silver
5 Bronze
Carondelet High School, Terrapin Swim Team
Tammy Crow DeClerq Synchronized Swimming 2004 Bronze Concord resident
Walnut Creek Aquanuts
Erin Dobratz Synchronized Swimming 2004 Bronze Grew up in Concord-Clayton, Dana Hills Swim Team,
Walnut Creek Aquanuts,
Clayton Valley High School
Amit Elor Wrestling 2024 College Park High School, Community Youth Center, Pleasant Hill resident
Nancy Hogshead Swimming 1984 3 Gold
1 Silver
Concord Swim Club
Kristian Ipsen Diving 2012
2016
Bronze Clayton native,
De La Salle High School
Kara Kohler Rowing 2012
2020
2024
Bronze Clayton resident, Dana Hills Swim Team, Clayton Valley High School
Mariya Koroleva Synchronized Swimming 2012
2016
Concord resident
Walnut Creek Aquanuts
Niko Lahanas* Swimming 1988 De La Salle High School,
Concord and Clayton resident
Tammy McGregor Synchronized Swimming 1996 Gold Concord resident
Walnut Creek Aquanuts
Daron Rahlves Skiing 1998
2002
2006
2010
Grew up in Clayton
Tiffany Roberts Soccer 1996 Gold Carondelet High School
Peter Rocca Swimming 1976
1980
1 Gold
2 Silver
Concord Swim Club
Jill Savery Synchronized Swimming 1996 Gold Concord resident
Walnut Creek Aquanuts
Peter Schnugg Water Polo 1980   Concord Swim Club
Melissa Seidemann Water Polo 2012
2016
2020
3 Gold College Park High School, Diablo Valley Soccer Club, Pleasant Hill resident
Robby Smith Wrestling 2020 Grew up in Concord, Community Youth Center

Read more stories about Kara Kohler and Amit Elor.

Jay Bedecarré
Jay Bedecarré
Sports and Schools Editor at The Concord Clayton Pioneer | sports@pioneerpublishers.com | Website

Jay Bedecarré is a long-time resident and writer in Concord and Clayton. He began his newspaper writing career while still a senior at Mt. Diablo High School and he has been part of The Pioneer since its inception in 2003. Jay also operates Bay Area Festivals, presenting events around the San Francisco Bay Area including Bay Area KidFest annually in Downtown Concord.

[USM_plus_form]