3 Rhode Island Athletes Chase Olympic Dreams

Stu McNay, Emily Kallfelz and Emily Sisson traveled to Paris to compete against the world’s best

Stu McNay is competing in his fifth Olympics.
Stu McNay is competing in his fifth Olympics.
SAILING ENERGY
Share
Stu McNay is competing in his fifth Olympics.
Stu McNay is competing in his fifth Olympics.
SAILING ENERGY
3 Rhode Island Athletes Chase Olympic Dreams
Copy

The Paris Olympics have athletes in 32 sports chasing the thrill of victory and gold, silver and bronze medals. Three Rhode Islanders — sailor Stu McNay, of Barrington; rower Emily Kallfelz, of Jamestown; and marathoner Emily Sisson, a part-time Providence resident — are among them. So is URI women’s basketball coach Tammi Reiss, an assistant coach with the USA Women’s 3×3 basketball team.

Stu McNay

Stu McNay, a veteran of the U.S. Sailing team celebrated his 43rd birthday on Aug. 1. He is sailing in his fifth Olympics, tying a record among U.S. sailors.

On Aug. 2, McNay began a new Olympics experience: mixed crew. Olympic organizers adopted mixed crew to promote equality on the water. Gender parity is among their goals.McNay’s partner is Lara Dallman-Weiss, of Shoreview, Minnesota. She raced at Tokyo three years ago and contacted him after those Games about forming a team. They raced together last year and qualified for the Olympics in January.

McNay and Dallman-Weiss are among 330 sailors from 65 nations racing in 250 boats beginning Aug. 2 and finishing with medal races Aug. 7.

Emily Kallfelz

Emily Kallfelz, 27, has prepared for her Olympic debut for a long time, it seems.

Kallfelz and her mates finished fourth in their heat on July 28 but won their repechage — second chance — race two days later. In the final on Aug. 1, the Americans — Kallfelz, Daisy Mazzio-Manson, Kelsey Reelick and Kate Knifton — finished in fifth place.

Emily Kallfelz and her teammates finished fifth in the women's four at the Paris Olympics.
Emily Kallfelz and her teammates finished fifth in the women’s four at the Paris Olympics.
row2k.com

Emily Sisson

Marathoner Emily Sisson should make a serious bid for a medal when she competes on Aug. 11.

The 32-year-old, a former star a Providence College, is in the prime of her athletic life. She finished second in 2:22:42 at the Olympic Trials in Orlando, Florida, on Feb. 22, 30 seconds behind Fiona O’Keefe. She holds the North American record of 2:18:29, set in 2022 while finishing second at the Chicago Marathon.

Emily Sisson, left, qualified for the marathon with U.S. teammates Fiona O’Keefe, center, and Dakotah Lindwurm
Emily Sisson, left, qualified for the marathon with U.S. teammates Fiona O’Keefe, center, and Dakotah Lindwurm
USATF

Tammi Reiss

University of Rhode Island women’s basketball coach Tammi Reiss is also at the Olympics, serving as an assistant to head coach Jen Rizzotti for the U.S. women’s 3x3 basketball squad.

The U.S. women’s 3x3 team has had a rough Olympics so far this year, losing its first three games before finally edging France on Aug. 1.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Field hockey won the Division II championship. Soccer won 16 games and reached the Division IV final. Tennis reached the Division II semifinals
With state spending up sharply since the pandemic and a major deficit on the horizon, new figures reveal the biggest drivers of Rhode Island’s budget and the revenue sources keeping it afloat
Alex Houston’s residency at the New Bedford Whaling National Historical Park and the government shutdown both began October 1
The Republican from Tiverton served three terms in the Rhode Island House of Representatives
The use of a former federal prosecutor raised fresh insights on the Washington Bridge saga. Plus, is Rhode Island doing enough to promote tourism?

After questioning RIDOT Director Peter Alviti, Rep. June Speakman says she’s troubled by what she sees as little internal accountability or in-house expertise guiding the state’s major infrastructure projects