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There are many different roads to the Olympics, but few quite as unique as the one taken by cyclist, Kristin Faulkner.

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Other sports I was good at and I enjoy, but I didn't have that same deep passion that I do with cycling.

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How quickly did it happen for you? Or were you like, Oh, my God, I love this?

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Yeah, right away.

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Her unlikely journey began in Homer, Alaska. Is Homer, Alaska, really the Halibut capital of the world?

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It's self-proclaimed Halibut fishing capital of the world. When you drive in a town, there's a big sign.

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There actually is a sign.

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My parents went on a hotel restaurant in Alaska, and when we were kids, they had us work every single job at the hotel restaurant.

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No bike racing. Not yet.

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Both my parents are quite outdoorsy, and we did a lot of hiking outdoors.

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At Harvard, where she studied computer science, she rode crew. Still, no cycling. Then she moved to New York City, starting a job in venture capital.

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I still needed to have that outdoors fix that was such a big part of my life.

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And that's when she first started cycling, with a lot to learn.

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I couldn't clip in, and I was like, Why is this not working? And I was starting to get really embarrassed. And then finally, we realized I just had incompatible pleats and pedals.

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Once she got the right shoes, she was off.

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It was my outlet every day to get into Central Park and ride for 2 hours away from the bustle of the city. We'd wake up and start training at 05:00 AM.

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The passion for riding quickly turned into more than just a hobby.

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I came with this really big physical engine from rowing and other sports that really helped me in cycling, but I was also a very quick learner.

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She had a meteoric rise in the sport, quitting her job to race as a pro in Europe only a handful of years after cycling for the first time. Now she has a spot on Team USA. What would be the best adjectiv to describe your trajectory in this sport?

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I would honestly use the word resilience. I've had a concussion, I've been hit by a car, and every time, I've never lost my passion to keep going. It's never a matter of if I'll keep going. It's just a matter of how.

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The unusual pedigree aside, there is no doubt Faulkner is an Olympian. Stephanie Gosc, NBC News, Colorado Springs.

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