Why Evy Leibfarth is a name to know before 2028 Olympics in Oklahoma City

Why Evy Leibfarth is a name to know before 2028 Olympics in Oklahoma City

Evy Leibfarth is a proud North Carolinian.

Her home state is where her parents, river guides and paddling instructors on the Nantahala River in the western part of the state, first took her out on the water. It’s where she fell in love with being on the rapids. Where she got really good at it, too.

Still, she wouldn’t mind becoming an adopted Oklahoman.

“I will be spending a lot of time here,” she said with a laugh.

That’s because the Olympic events in Leibfarth’s specialty, canoe slalom, are coming to Oklahoma City in 2028.

The Los Angeles City Council made everything official for the 2028 Olympics in Oklahoma City late last week, unanimously approving a request by LA28, the 2028 Olympics organizing committee. It approved the canoe slalom competition being held at Riversport Rapids along the Oklahoma River as well as the softball competition at Devon Park.

Evy Leibfarth competes in the women's canoe during 2024 Olympic Team Trials for Canoe/Kayak Slalom and Kayak Cross at the RIVERSPORT Whitewater Center in Oklahoma City, Saturday, April 27, 2024.

Needless to say, with our rabid softball culture, there will be no shortage of fans at Devon Park.

But even as OKC has grown into a white-water hotbed — we hosted the 2024 U.S. Olympic trials, don'tcha know? — our passion has remained tepid. Google images from those Olympic trials, and you’ll see plenty of prime seating available.

And hey, that’s not a knock on OKC. Canoe slalom isn’t a huge draw anywhere in the United States. 

In Europe? Absolutely.

In Australia? Sure. 

Here? Not so much.

But I can assure you — you’re going to want to know about Evy Leibfarth.

Last year in Paris, she became the first American woman in more than two decades to win an Olympic medal in canoe slalom. Leibfarth (pronounced EV-ee LEEB-farth) took bronze in the women’s canoe singles, and she did it at the ripe old age of 20.

“Honestly, it’s just been so surreal,” she said last week when she was in town for the ICF Spring World Ranking Series. “Racing in Paris was the craziest experience. In a beautiful city. A really difficult but fun course. And then to be there with a lot of my best friends that I grew up racing with was just so special.

“I guess I just still can’t wrap my head around it.”

Jul 31, 2024; Vaires-sur-Marne, France; Elena Lilik of Team Germany, Jessica Fox of Team Australia and Evy Leibfarth of Team United States during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sarah Phipps-USA TODAY Sports

As she talks, her blue eyes wide, you can tell Leibfarth is genuine. The whole idea that she’s an Olympic medalist blows her mind a bit because, hey, she came home and had to go back to real life.

“I’m training a bunch. I’m in school,” she said. “I feel like I’ve just kind of been doing my stuff.”

And yet, every once in a while, she flashes back to the moment she realized she was going to medal. 

As is tradition, paddlers with the best times sit together throughout the finals, and whenever someone beats their time, they either move down a seat or give up the third-place seat altogether. Because Leibfarth had the slowest qualifying time, she raced first and took the top seat.

She was a long shot to medal heading into the Olympics and barely qualified for the finals, so it seemed likely that she’d eventually have to vacate her top-three chair.

And she did have to give up the top seat.

But it wasn’t until the next-to-last run that she had to give up the second seat. That meant she was in the bronze chair with just one run remaining — she’d either medal or finish fourth, arguably the worst place at the Olympics.

The last competitor hit a gate during her run, meaning she’d be assessed a two-second penalty. That increased Leibfarth’s chance of a medal, but it wasn’t until the final time posted that she knew for sure.

She was mobbed almost instantly.

“Just all of my friends and my dad,” she said of her father, Lee, who is also her coach. “And just running to my mom … it’s all just such a blur because it was so crazy to me.”

But it was real, just like her tears as she stood on the podium during the medal ceremony with a bronze around her neck.

Leibfarth has been a bit of a child prodigy in the sport, racing internationally for the first time when she was only 12. As a 17-year-old, she qualified for the Tokyo Olympics, becoming not only the youngest American to qualify in canoe slalom but also the youngest female paddler to compete in both the kayak slalom and canoe slalom events.

The thing is, she’s still super young.

If (though “when” is likely more accurate) she qualifies for the 2028 Olympic team, she still won’t be old enough to rent a car. 

“I don’t think anyone reaches the ceiling in the sport,” she said. “I think that everyone always is growing and getting better, and I think it’s really interesting because there’s so many different facets that come together to create the perfect run.”

She believes mentality, physicality, strength and technique all play a part.

And she believes she’s getting better in all of those areas.

What about experience?

That includes not only the litany of international events that she’s done but also the knowledge she has of OKC’s white-water course. She first raced on it in 2016 when she was only 14.

But she intends to get even better acquainted with it.

Jul 28, 2024; Vaires-sur-Marne, France; Evy Leibfarth of Team United States during the Paris 2024 Olympic Summer Games at Vaires-sur-Marne Nautical Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sarah Phipps-USA TODAY Sports

“You want to be able to picture it in your mind,” she said. “But you also want to know everything that’s around it. You want to know your food options, the grocery stores that you like, places to stay, all that because you want that feeling like home. You don’t want to be stressed about the race and stressed about where you are.

“That’s why before Paris, I ended up spending a lot of time there, months and months, so it felt familiar to me.”

It felt like a second home.

She suspects Oklahoma City will, too.

You know what this means, OKC: we have a chance to make Leibfarth feel like she’s an adopted Oklahoman.

Be on the lookout for her. She has long blond hair often under a Red Bull cap, and she might be studying (she’s working on public health and biomedical sciences degrees from Arizona) or drawing (she often sits and draws before she competes). She’s quick to smile and laugh, and she’ll look you straight in the eye.

She’s a North Carolinian, but she’s a lot like a lot of Oklahomans. 

We should be pulling for her.

She’s already hoping for the best for us and our Olympic experience.

“It’ll be exciting for the people of Oklahoma to get out here and and come watch and maybe say, ‘I want to try that’ or ‘I want my kids to try that,’” she said. 

“It’s a unique opportunity.”

Evy Leibfarth competes in the women's canoe during 2024 Olympic Team Trials for Canoe/Kayak Slalom and Kayak Cross at the RIVERSPORT Whitewater Center in Oklahoma City, Saturday, April 27, 2024.

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: 2028 Olympics in OKC: Why Evy Leibfarth is canoe slalom fan favorite