Skylar Park ©Getty Images

After winning the Pan American Championships title in 2021, Canada's Skylar Park had every reason to contest the postponed Tokyo 2020 Olympics in good heart, albeit that she was beaten in her preceding event, the Mexico Open, by Anastasija Zolotic of the United States.

Park had started to achieve at senior level in 2019 following her impressive victory in her home 2016 World Junior Championships in Burnaby.

At the 2019 World Championships in Manchester she won bronze in the women's under-57 kilograms featherweight class, being beaten in the semi-final by double Olympic champion Jade Jones, who went on to win gold.

Park went on to win silver at the Pan American Games in Lima, losing out to Zolotic.

Seeded third at Tokyo 2020, she won her opening match 25-15 against Stacey Hymer of Australia but then went out in the round-of-16 after an 18-7 defeat by Lo Chia-ling of Chinese Taipei. Zolotic, meanwhile, went on to take gold.

Park's build-up for the 2022 World Championships was exemplary, as she won the Pan American title again before taking silver at the Paris Open, losing there to China's Luo Zongshi.

But at the World Championships she encountered her nemesis, Lo, once again in her quarter-final match, which she lost 2-1.

When the Tokyo 2020 Olympics were postponed it had come as a huge relief to Park, due to her country's unilateral decision not to send a team because of concerns over the growing coronavirus pandemic.

"Canada was the first country that said it would not send a team," Park told World Taekwondo. "I thought I would have to watch it from home, it was heartbreaking - I'd just never imagined."

Her father and coach, Jae Park, added: "The gut-wrenching part was that Canada would not participate, it felt like somebody had kicked me in the stomach. I tried to put on a good face, but I have never felt those emotions before."

Skylar added: "It was a change in mindset - from a few months to a year. After speaking with my dad and coach, we were able to see it as an opportunity."

That chance to re-trench was especially welcome for a fighter who has been on a whirlwind journey since winning at Burnaby in 2016.

While lockdowns confined athletes across the world, Park was fortunate to have a full, en-suite training system outside her bedroom door. Not only does she live with dad-coach, but the Parks maintain a fully equipped basement dojang at home.

She even has two sparring partners in the form of her brothers.

"For the whole of corona, I have been training with dad and my two brothers," she said in 2020. "I was able to kick them around when they were younger but they have gotten stronger - now I am being kicked around!"

But while Park thrived within the lockdown, the pandemic was a huge strain for her father.

Skylar Park won a world junior title and is now a force in the senior ranks ©Getty Images
Skylar Park won a world junior title and is now a force in the senior ranks ©Getty Images

COVID-19 was calamitous for gym owners around the world, and teaching taekwondo is the Park family’s business and income source.

"It has been quite tough," Jae said. "When corona started in mid-February, we were shut down for three months; summer was better, but then we were in lockdown again."

Early in the crisis, the school pivoted swiftly to online classes and retained its student base, "but nobody was signing on".

The fact that the Parks were able to keep their heads above water is due to the solid heritage of their Winnipeg-based dojang.

The Tae Ryong Park Taekwondo and Hapkido Academy was established in 1993 by Jae and his father, Grand Master Deuk H. Park; the two have almost 100 years of experience in the martial arts.

The dojang has been widely featured in media and even appeared in a martial arts documentary hosted by Hollywood heroes Arnold Schwarzenegger and Chuck Norris. 

"We are lucky, we do have a very established business," Jae said. "This is hurting us financially, but we are not in any danger of closing; I think all the hard work we put in for years and years and years has been really important to get through these times.

Meanwhile Skylar's technical approach underwent changes as she took on the highly technical, point-scoring kicks, tactics and tricks of the Olympic-level elite.

"Over the past four years I have been adapting to the kicks, and to using the knees in different ways," Skylar said.

"The mental game has been really big in the last few years. The tactical aspect - the mental toughness of the game."

Speaking in the aftermath of her world junior win, Skylar's father reflected for World Taekwondo on her mental strengths.

"Her mental game is weaker than more than 50 per cent of the athletes - and that is part of the plan! Athletes that have a strong mental game at the beginning do not emphasise the physical so much, as they get away with using strategy.

"In my opinion, strategy can come later on, but if you don’t develop a physical base it is too late - the body only gives you a certain amount of time to develop; the mind can always develop."