After breaking the national record in the women’s 100-meter butterfly and earning a spot in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics on Monday, American swimming phenom T. Huske hailed her “inspiring” Chinese mother.

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T. Huske Olympic Games Tokyo 2020: National Record in the Women’s 100-Meter Butterfly

At wave II of the US Olympic trials, the future Stanford University student of 18 years old clocked in at 55.66 seconds, bettering her personal record from the previous day by 0.04 seconds and coming in just 0.18 seconds shy of the world record.

 

Until she moved to the United States in 1991, T. Huske’s mother lived in Guangzhou, where she was born and raised. Arlington, Virginia is home for the family.

They didn’t want people to be too educated, so they shut down the universities for a long period after Mao Zedong died. When they finally reopened when [my] mom was 16, she had to take this exam to get in.

Because the doors had been shut for so long, T. Huske found herself competing with women 30 years her senior. The admissions process was extremely competitive. T. Huske is quite bright, and she attended a Chinese university at the age of 16.

Years later, T. Huske uprooted and headed stateside. She started out studying architecture in China but quickly realised that it wasn’t for her. She attended Virginia Tech, although she never felt particularly drawn to the field of engineering. She later entered the field of information technology.

Michael Andrew (age 22) and T. Huske (age 18) will be two of the first-time Olympians to qualify for Tokyo 2020. They are at the forefront of a new generation of young American athletes that are rapidly rising to the top of their sport in the United States.

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T. Huske, who just graduated from high school, began swimming lessons when she was just two years old and continued them at a family friend’s pool even as the pandemic spread. She compensated them with treats from the oven.

Although many were disadvantaged by the Olympic Games being postponed by a year due to the pandemic, T. Huske believes that the additional year provided her the opportunity to focus on dry-land training and improve her strength for the butterfly stroke. Thanks f0or reading our article T. Huske Olympic Games Tokyo 2020.