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Meet the New York & New Jersey star athletes going for gold at the Paris 2024 Olympics

Au revoir, New York – these local athletes are taking their talents to Paris.

From a Queens breakdancing champ to a Montclair rock climber with a heart of gold, New York and New Jersey have a talented home team heading to the Olympics. They’re excited to show their stuff on an international stage.

“I’m so grateful to show the world what we’re so passionate about as breakers,” said 34-year-old dancer Sunny Choi.

Sunny Choi, 35, is the first female Team USA breakdancer to qualify for the new Olympic event. Getty Images

“Breaking was born in the streets of New York, in the Bronx … It’s such an honor to carry that legacy forward.”

With the 2024 games less than 100 days away, here’s a closer look at Choi and four other hometown heroes.

Sunny Choi, 35, breaking

The Bayside, Queens resident ditched her demanding job as director of global creative operations for Estee Lauder last year to focus fully on breakdancing — known simply as “breaking” in the Olympics, where it’s an event for the first time ever this year.

It paid off.

This past November, she won gold at Chile’s Pan American Games, securing her place in Paris.

“My entire journey as a breaker has been about discovering myself, uncovering layer by layer by layer to really get to the core of who I am,” she said.

Choi won gold at Chile’s Pan American Games in November, securing her spot on Team USA ahead of Paris, where the sport takes center stage for the first time this summer. Getty Images

Choi, who was raised in Kentucky by first-generation Korean Americans, wanted to become an Olympic gymnast as a child, but ultimately opted for a business degree instead of the balance beam.

She didn’t start breaking until she was in college at the University of Pennsylvania and joined the “Freaks of the Beat” club.

She credits her three brothers — who sometimes wouldn’t let her wrestle and play with them because she was a girl — for her grit and perseverance.

“When you’re told when you’re young that you can’t do something, you go do it,” she said. “So when I got into breaking, which is a heavily male-dominated sport, I was like, ‘I’m going to do something nobody else does.’ So here I am.”

Jimmer Fredette, 35, 3×3 basketball

Jimmer Fredette joined Team USA in 2022, seeing immediate success at the FIBA 3×3 Men’s AmeriCup, where he won gold alongside teammates Canyon Barry, Kareem Maddox and Dylan Travis. Getty Images

Three-on-three basketball made its Olympic debut in Tokyo in 2021, but the US men didn’t qualify.

Not so this year. Fredette, a sharpshooting guard from upstate New York, leads a promising squad that secured a spot in Paris last November.

His road to the Olympics has been a winding one. Fredette was a college star at Brigham Young University, but his seven years in the NBA were spotty. In 2016, he joined the Chinese Basketball Association’s Shanghai Sharks and returned to his collegiate prowess, winning the International MVP award a year later.

Team USA’s Canyon Barry, Dylan Travis, Jimmer Fredette and Kareem Maddox after winning gold in men’s 3×3 basketball at the 2023 Pan Am Games in Santiago, Chile on Oct. 23. Getty Images
Team USA’s Jimmer Fredette, who captivated basketball fans nationwide as a high-scoring college phenom, hopes to cap his lengthy hardcourt career – including multiple seasons in international leagues – with gold in Paris. Getty Images

Then, in 2022, he started focusing on the 3×3 game, which is played on a half court with one hoop. He found near immediate success.

“He’s the best 3×3 player to ever play the game, in my opinion,” USA 3×3 men’s national team coach Joe Lewandowski said in December. “He is that good.”

Amy Wang, 21, table tennis

Amy Wang started playing table tennis when she was just 4-years-old at home in Sewell, New Jersey. Getty Images

When she was just 4-years-old, her father, Xiaota Wang, set up three tennis tables in the basement – one for her and one for each of her two older brothers.

By age 7, she competed in her first table tennis tournament in Westfield, New Jersey and made it to the finals, where she lost to her brother, Eddie.

The loss only made her practice more.

Wang, who grew up in Sewell, New Jersey, made the national U.S. team when she was just 12. Here, Wang (back right) competes in the Quarter Finals Women doubles in February, 2018 during the World Cup match. NurPhoto via Getty Images

“After school I would take a nap, wake up and practice with my dad for one to two hours, and do homework after,” Wang told The Post. 

At age 12, she made the U.S. National Team, and she and her dad started taking the sport even more seriously. But, at age 17, she missed qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics by just one game.

“I had one match left, and I lost. It really killed me,” Wang told The Post. “I thought I was going to quit table tennis after that.”

In March, Wang, and her doubles partner and college roommate, Rachel Sung, 19, earned spots to compete in the Olympic Games in Paris. AFP via Getty Images

She took a year off to focus on her mental health and her studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, where’s she majoring in pre-med and minoring in accounting.

Then, she returned to the sport stronger than ever, winning the U.S. Open Women’s Singles Championships in 2022 and 2023.

In March, she earned her spot in Paris.

“I’m really happy,” said Wang, who wants to be a pediatrician. “Making the Olympic team is a dream come true.”

Molly Reckford, 31, rowing

Molly Reckford, who placed fifth in women’s lightweight double sculls at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, said she has extreme “pride and excitement” to represent New Jersey and the United States once again. United States Rowing Association

The Short Hills, New Jersey, native has Olympic greatness in her blood.

Her grandfather, Bill Spencer, competed in the 1964 and 1968 Winter Olympics in the biathlon and later served as a coach at five olympiads.

“He’s been a huge inspiration for me,” she said.

Reckford, of Short Hills, New Jersey, with her pet cockatiel, Pippin. Courtesy of Molly Reckford

The Dartmouth alum practices up to five hours per day while consuming as many as 4,000 calories to fuel her body during rigorous training sessions in Princeton.

At the Tokyo Olympics, she and her partner finished fifth in women’s lightweight double sculls. This year, she’s intent on making the podium.

“I think a lot about how my grandfather was a two-time Olympian, so going back really felt like something I wanted to do to honor him,” she said. “Going to Paris and having the race of our lives and feeling like I left it all out there and found my maximum speed is my goal.”

Jesse Grupper, 27, sport climbing

By age 11, Grupper won gold at the USA Climbing Youth Bouldering Nationals in 2008. He graduated from Tufts University in 2019 with a degree in mechanical engineering. Stephen Yang

He’s tackled some of the world’s hardest sport climbs — short, highly intensive routes with pre-placed bolts — including La Rambla in Catalonia.

But, Grupper insists he isn’t a thrill seeker.

“I’m honestly afraid of roller coasters,” he told The Post. “A lot of people have this perception of climbing – that you’re getting a rush from that fear, but it’s one of the safest sports if you do it correctly.”

He started the sport as a very energetic 6-year-old at the New Jersey Rock Gym in Fairfield, near the family’s home in Montclair.

Jesse Grupper began climbing when he was 6-years-old at a climbing gym in New Jersey near his home in Montclair. Stephen Yang

Regular trips to the Shawangunks Mountains, near New Paltz, New York, followed.

“That was a go-to spot for me throughout my childhood, and I still enjoy getting to climb there today,” he told The Post.

At age 11, he won gold at the USA Climbing Youth Bouldering Nationals and went on to compete on the international rock climbing circuit.

Grupper won gold at the Pan American Games in Santiago, Chile in 2023, qualifying him for the 2024 Olympics. Getty Images

But, he has plenty of interests beyond belays and boulder. He meditates daily, makes his own granola, is learning to play the banjo and loves yoga and listening to Mumford & Sons and the Abbot Brothers.

At Tufts University, he majored in mechanical engineering and ran the school’s biomechanics club, finding purpose in creating devices that help people with disabilities. 

“One of the best things we can do as people is pushing our limits to reach our full potential,” he said. “But I’ve always wanted to do that for others as well.”

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