The above photo of Michal Navratil plummeting from a height of 27 meters (88.6 feet) at the High Diving World Championships in Barcelona in his Superman suit went viral a few days ago (I saw it on SportsCenter, for example). The 28-year-old Czech did an interview with Esquire about his lofty profession of cliff diver.
ESQUIRE: How did you get started with cliff diving? When did you do it for the first time?Michael Navratil: I started with my first twenty meter when I was 18 years old in the European Championships, in Switzerland, and there I did my first somersault from that height. Afterwards I kept progressing in height and quality of the diving, and five years later I went for the first competition from 28 meters, Marmeeting in Amalfi coast (Italy).
ESQUIRE: How do you build up to such intense heights? Is there a learning curve as you go higher and higher?
MN: Definitely, your body needs to get used to the pressure of the impact progressively. Every meter that you go higher, the impact is stronger and harder, so I had to prepare myself physically and mentally. The higher you go, the more every meter makes a difference.
ESQUIRE: Have you ever been hurt?
MN: Yes a few times! Five years ago I went to work on a show in China, and I was doing it three times a day. My mind was strong but my body was tired and in one of the high dives from 26 meters I twisted my ankle under water and for ten days I couldn’t step on it… But in two weeks I was diving again, landing head first for a while. Every impact is a lesson on how to protect yourself from the water. Another bad injury was learning to do a handstand from 15 meters, also in China. I was short on my landing and was coughing blood for a week! Still two days after this crash I dived from 20 meters and in another three days I went up to 26 meters, even though my body was injured I was learning a new competition dive and my mind was ready for it. Last bad injury was last year in Boston Red Bull Series stop, I tried a new dive ending in a blind entry three times, and I injured my lower back and my heels badly; I was in pain for the next three months and it really affected my results towards the end of the season.
Read the rest of the interview here.
Reblogged this on Sykose Extreme Sports News.