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The Refugee Team is for athletes who have run away from their homelands because they actually lose it,
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and they want to continue as athletes,
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but they didn't have the materials, they didn’t have the support,
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but the Olympic Committee now is supporting this team.
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Actually, when I arrived they were all speaking German, and I was like…the side girl, you know.
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But actually a girl knows how to speak English, and there were a lot who know a little bit of English.
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And sometimes I try to speak German, which is not working but I’m still trying.
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And yeah, we have a connection.
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I can speak 2 words in German and then 5 words in English, and they'll understand me.
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Now I have 10 training (sessions) in the water and 5 on dry lands.
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And I do 2 training (sessions) with the group and 3 alone.
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Actually sometimes I have to wake up at like 5 a.m. to have extra training.
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But we are moving really fast, and this is good.
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She’s really good, she’s mentally really good; she’s in her high-performance level for the race.
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I think talent is just a small part. It could make the way easier,
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but it’s more important to be mentally in good shape and to understand what you want to do
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and what you want to achieve.
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In the pool she has to get better in the aerobic foundation and in the power foundation we have to work for
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but the technical foundation is really good we just have to stabilise it.
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And outside the pool, she just has to be like she is.
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I think anything is possible for me because we are working hard; we know what our plan is.
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And we know what we miss and what we don't.
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And here is not like my country, because my country can't offer all of that,
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but here they are offering a lot of things and they can support you the right way.
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And yeah, I think I could do whatever I want to.
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You're an athlete; you don't think if you're Syrian or from London or from Germany.
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You will just think about your race, and you have your lane, your swimming cap, your swimming lesson, that’s it.