Grotian has the credentials to become a big star: four Gold medals at the 2023 IBU YJWCH, 4th place in the Women’s 15 km Individual in her first-ever IBU WCH, later winning WCH Women’s Relay Bronze before closing the season with four top 15 finishes in the North American World Cups.
During a break between training sessions at a recent camp, the bubbly Grotian chatted about how she starts her week.
Biathlonworld: What time do you wake up on Mondays and what is the first thing you do after waking up?
Selina Grotian: 6:15 and then breakfast. That is the most important part of the day.
BW: What is the first app you look at in the morning?
SG: My wellness app to check my sleep, pulse etc.
BW: What makes your breakfast routine perfect?
SG: I always eat porridge. I really like to cook so there is always a different flavor. I like a lot of variations, but my favorite is normal porridge with protein powder like stracciatella with blueberries, and chocolate pieces on top. I really love chocolate!
BW: Does your early morning regime include, yoga, stretching, a jog or some form of mental preparation?
SG: No. I do not like to do this in the morning. I do this in the afternoon or evening but not in the morning. In the morning, I have to just be with myself.
BW: Is your backpack packed and ready every day or do you throw everything in at the last minute?
SG: I am really a planning person, so it is always packed.
BW: What is the biggest thing that you arrived at training and realized you forgot?
SG: (Laughing) My weapon, but I have also forgot to load all four magazines for a summer training race, a pursuit, then started a second too early so everything happened that day! It was my worst day, but it will never happen again.
BW: Do you have a mental checklist that you go through every morning?
SG: Not really, I am very calm in my mind, so everything is tidied up, very organized. I think if I was thinking so much about it, there would be more pressure.
BW: Do you consider yourself a perfectionist when it comes to training?
SG: Not really; when I try to make everything go perfectly, it always gets worse. So, I just go with the flow. But in competition, I am really in my zone and do not think too much.
BW: Beyond your training log, do you keep a journal or meditate to keep your world in order?
SG: I have a book where I write everything down and in my training log. As for today which was not my best, I have not written anything yet, but it will not be good! That is good because normally there are not so many days like this one.
BW: What piece of advice guides you in how you approach training every day?
SG: Stay focused on myself: what feels good, my goal for the day, and doing what makes this fun. Without fun, this does not work.
BW: At the end of the day, what do you do to calm down?
SG: I do some yoga, put on my recovery boots and enjoy the time at home with my family and with my dog.
BW: What is the biggest thing you cannot live without?
SG: My family and my dog.
BW: Are you a picky eater or do you eat everything?
SG: I eat everything, well not everything, but everything on my plate. I hate it when people leave food, because it is a waste of food. So, I try to eat everything.
BW: What is the hardest part of being a professional biathlete?
SG: Making every day fun, because not every day is good. Just stay focused and keep your goals in mind. The mental thing is the hardest part of being a professional biathlete.
BW: What is something very few people know about you?
SG: That I am a really calm person that does not talk so much. But with the right people I can be really funny and do a lot of fun things.
BW: What project is on your “to do” list when you get home from this camp?
SG: It is a lot…I have to reorganize my training after this camp, a lot of appointments (with sponsors,)a photo shoot and I have to go to the dentist!
Photos: IBU/ Christian Manzoni, Vianney Thibaut, Jerry Kokesh