‘Complicated dynamic’ with dad as coach works – O’Connor

By admin — In News — July 14, 2026

   ​”It’s a really complicated dynamic, I don’t know how we make it work, but we do. He fits into all the different roles.”Heptathlete Kate O’Connor has been coached by her father Michael from the age of 10.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementHe has been there through the highs and the lows of his daughter’s fledgling career to date, although the former have definitely outweighed the latter recently.The 25-year-old truly announced herself on the world stage in 2025, winning four medals including gold at the World University Games, silver in both the World Indoor and Outdoor Championships and bronze in the European Indoor Championships.Given it is all she has ever known and she has enjoyed so much success, O’Connor says that having her father as her coach “works so well for me” and shared an insight into the different hats he has to wear as he takes on the roles of her agent, coach and dad above all else.”He’s the middle man that organises things and decides when I have days off to do sponsors stuff. I know he’s fully on my side and understands both sides of being an athlete; of earning a living and turning up to training. That’s really helpful,” she explained.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement”When I’m actually competing, it’s athlete-coach unless something goes wrong like in Tokyo at the World Championships. I hurt my knee and those moments can be really tough when I’m really upset, I can see he is really upset for me too.”When something is slightly derailing me he does his best to give me pep talks and I do believe him, but it’s difficult, you can see how much it means to him too and you can see it in real life, you’re not letting someone down but you can see someone willing you to do well.”It’s class to have someone 100% in your corner and he sets the standard really high for the rest of the guys that work for me.”O’Connor set a new Irish record in the pentathlon at the World Indoor Championships in March [Getty Images]After a stellar 2025, O’Connor claimed bronze at the World Indoors in March and said after the event in Poland that she was disappointed with the colour of medal, despite setting a new Irish record score of 4,839 points.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementReflecting now, the Newry-born athlete believes it was a good reality check as she prepares for a big summer with the Commonwealth Games and European Championships to come in quick succession.”Last year I maybe started to take the medals for granted and this year going to World Indoors and winning the bronze, I went in to go and win and it was a check in my brain that these medals don’t come by that easy and you have to work really hard, so I’m not going to take anything for granted I know I have to turn up and show up to secure anything,” she explained.Pressure on O’Connor to at least win a medal or even win the heptathlon in Glasgow has increased because of her recent performances.While she admits she is not going to the Commonwealth Games “for the craic”, she is tryin  

Content Source: Yahoo News

Image Credit: Getty Images

All rights to the news content and images belong to their respective copyright owners.