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Libertyville and Wilmette athletes run, leap their way to ‘American Ninja Warrior' semi-finals

Libertyville and Wilmette athletes run, leap their way to ‘American Ninja Warrior' semi-finals

Chicago Tribune10 hours ago
With calculated leaps, displays of strength, and races up a 14.5-foot curved wall, both a Wilmette doctor and a Libertyville High School student have advanced to the semi-finals of the NBC-TV American Ninja Warrior competition show by making it through the athletically demanding obstacle course.
The semifinals for the show, where the ninja course tests participants' strength, agility and balance, will air this month. The segment featuring Steven Bachta, 44, of Wilmette, a pediatric doctor at NorthShore Evanston and Highland Park hospitals who also teaches medical students and residents, is set to air Monday, July 14, and that of his fellow ninja contestant Kenzie Hughes, 16, who will be entering her senior year of high school and hopes to go into physical therapy, will air July 28, according to NBC spokespersons.
Bachta and Hughes know each other from training at ninja gyms in the area, he said.
'It's kind of a small world,' he said. 'She's an amazing ninja, and she's been doing it since she was very young.'
'The ninja community has been amazing, and it's kind of a tight-knit and smaller community,' Bachta said, describing how many ninja athletes train together at local facilities. 'It's always fun to talk to the kids about what it's like to be on the TV show, because a lot of them want to eventually do that.'
Both Bachta and Hughes learned about the NBC show by watching it on television — or, in Bachta's case, by his young daughters watching American Ninja Warrior Junior and then wanting to compete.
Hughes started watching the show about eight years ago and her family supported her interest, taking her to an ANW-inspired gym in Chicago where a younger Hughes 'fell in love' with the sport. And during COVID, her father Chris Hughes even built a mini course in the backyard.
Bachta, whose moniker on the show is 'Docta Bachta,' took his first real leap into the sport after the pandemic ended.
'It just so happens, Chicago has like, five or six really good ninja gyms,' he said. 'And so once the lockdown was lifted, we kind of ventured out to these gyms.'
He trains at the Ultimate Ninjas North Shore facility in Glenview, along with his two daughters. Sydney, 10, was ranked third at the World Ninja League Championships in Greensboro, North Carolina in June, and Logan, 7, ranked 10th at the same championships, he said.
That makes both of them around the same age Hughes was when she got interested in ninja.
'Like a dream come true'
Hughes started gymnastics at 2 years old, and had also done flag football, figure skating, softball, soccer and a 'bunch of random sports.'
Hughes' mother Mia Hughes said her daughter had previously applied to be on American Ninja Warrior Junior, but was ultimately not selected. When the age to enter the American Ninja Warrior was lowered to 15, the teen jumped at the opportunity.
Mia Hughes talked about the moment they got the call, at eight o'clock on a Wednesday evening.
'I ran the phone up to her, I filmed the call … it was like a dream come true,' Mia Hughes said.
The outpouring of support the teen saw from friends and family was 'overwhelming,' Kenzie Hughes said, and going to Las Vegas to be in front of tv cameras was 'nerve-wracking.' But while she struggled with all the cameras watching her, when she got to the starting line, it all dropped away, she said.
Hughes said she also got to meet numerous other ninja competitors while in Vegas and that they shared advice and tips.
'Everyone's there to support each other, and it doesn't matter how you do or they do, it's just, all together we want to be the best we can.'
Despite the physicality of the sport, it's 'way more mental than physical,' Hughes said.
She had to change her mentality, she said, after she became too focused on perfection.
'It was really helpful to be on the show, because then that's where I realized — I really do love the sport and I want to keep going and try to be the best I can,' Hughes said.
For her parents, their daughter's skill and passion for ninja came as a surprise.
'It's great to see her shine, and when she took that starting line … I was just really proud of her,' Mia Hughes said, wiping her eyes.
But the lessons she wants her daughter to take away from the experience aren't about success. Instead, they're about failure. Her daughter used to be 'really, really hard on herself,' Mia Hughes said, so it was heartening to hear her talk about rediscovering the love of the sport.
'Everyone fails, no matter what…Failure, it happens, and that's a thing in life,' Mia Hughes said.
After high school, Hughes plans to pursue physical therapy studies in college, drawing from her own experiences handling injuries and pains. She hopes to attend school in Florida to be close to her older sister Kylie.
She doesn't plan on giving up on ninja, however, saying she will be applying for next season as well.
Encouraging blood donations
Bachta, who has competed twice before on American Ninja Warrior, teaches in addition to his role as a pediatric doctor. As director of pediatric education at NorthShore, he's a clinical assistant professor at the University of Chicago's Pritzker School of Medicine.
He works 24-hour shifts at the Evanston and Highland Park hospitals, likening the shifts to those of firefighters, he said, because it involves being on call even when he's sleeping.
'You always have to be ready to go. You can lay down and rest, but at any moment, you could have to rush to a delivery or the emergency room, and you have to be sharp,' Bachta said of the lifestyle. 'It's not really sleep when you're there. It's more just like resting until you're needed.'
Because of his schedule, Bachta said he is able to have more flexibility when it comes to ninja training and also competing on NBC. This season's shows taped last September in Las Vegas, requiring the contestants to keep their lips sealed about the results for the past 10 months.
'It makes it a little challenging,' Bachta said of the travel requirements to appear on the show. 'But it works. My colleagues have been great and understanding.'
His group of fellow ninjas trains at other ninja facilities besides the Glenview one to get a feel for different obstacles, Bachta said. The group also trains at night, largely because the NBC show films at night, sometimes all through the night, he explained, and he wants to be conditioned to get into athletic mode in the late hours.
Bachta is competing to encourage people to donate blood. He's been donating since he was a student at Maine East High School in Park Ridge, and said now that he's a doctor, he sees firsthand how critical blood transfusions are for trauma and ER patients, cancer patients, and mothers who hemorrhage.
'In high school, I donated because I thought, 'I can do this and help people,' but now as a doctor, I can see this full circle,' he said. He still donates on a regular basis.
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Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova. There will be a first-time winner
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Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova. There will be a first-time winner
Emma Navarro beats defending Wimbledon champ Barbora Krejcikova. There will be a first-time winner

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Associated Press LONDON (AP) — Emma Navarro describes herself as 'stubborn' and her tennis as 'scrappy.' The American's attitude and game both were in just the right places at Wimbledon on Saturday, when she pulled off another Grand Slam victory over a defending champion by eliminating Barbora Krejcikova 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Sending an ill and dizzy Krejcikova home in the third round, the 10th-seeded Navarro extended a recent run of one-and-done winners at the All England Club and assured the grass-court major of yet another first-time women's champion. 'Something I take a lot of pride in is being tough and fighting till the last point, no matter what the circumstances are. It's something I always try to do,' said Navarro, who was born in New York, grew up in South Carolina and won the 2021 NCAA championship for the University of Virginia. 'I could never live with myself if I ever gave up. It's just not in my nature. I don't think it's in any of my family members' nature to ever give up on anything. I guess we're a stubborn bunch.' Krejcikova faded in the third set, getting her blood pressure checked at the changeover after Navarro broke her to lead 3-2 at No. 1 Court. Krejcikova ate a banana and drank liquids during the medical timeout, while Navarro walked to her guest box and spoke to her coach during the break in action. When play resumed, Krejcikova showed clear signs of being in distress, often leaning over and placing her hands on her knees between points. 'I was actually feeling worse and worse,' said Krejcikova, who was seeded 17th but now will tumble out of the top 70 in the WTA rankings. 'It's very sad for me and very unfortunate.' This is hardly Navarro's first big win on a big stage. Last year, she eliminated Coco Gauff at Wimbledon to reach her first major quarterfinal. Then, in a rematch a couple of months later, Navarro won again at the U.S. Open — where Gauff was the 2023 champion — en route to her debut in a Slam semifinal. Whoever ends up winning the Wimbledon women's title on July 12 will be the ninth champion in the past nine editions of the grass-court Grand Slam tournament. Serena Williams was the last repeat champ in 2016. The trophy-takers since then have been Garbine Muguruza in 2017, Angelique Kerber in 2018, Simona Halep in 2019, Ash Barty in 2021 — all of whom are now retired — Elena Rybakina in 2022, Marketa Vondrousova in 2023 and then Krejcikova (the tournament was canceled in 2020 because of COVID-19). Rybakina lost Saturday; Vondrousova exited in the second round. Against Krejcikova, Navarro was down a set and a break at 2-1 in the second before turning things around. 'I kind of regrouped a little, tried to slow things down a bit from my side and make her look at some different shots,' said Navarro, 24, who will meet No. 7 Mirra Andreeva, an 18-year-old Russian, on Monday for a quarterfinal berth. 'Kind of just try to make her as uncomfortable as I could.' Most points were decided by what Krejcikova did. That's how she ended up with 34 winners — 21 more than Navarro — and 53 unforced errors. Remarkably, Navarro finished with just 11 unforced errors. Last year's triumph was the second at a major tournament for Krejcikova, who also won the 2021 French Open. It has been a fortnight filled with surprises, and Navarro is one of four top-10 seeds left in the women's bracket. The others are No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka, who won her third-round match Friday against Emma Raducanu, Andreeva and No. 8 Iga Swiatek, a 6-2, 6-3 winner against Danielle Collins on Saturday. 'My slice is coming along pretty nicely. I'm able to use that to my advantage,' Navarro said. 'Played scrappy at times. Played tough. Hit some good groundstrokes, as well. I feel pretty good about where I'm at.' ___ More AP tennis:

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