• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
The BarBend Logo in white.

BarBend

The Online Home for Strength Sports

  • News
    • CrossFit
    • Strongman
    • Bodybuilding
    • Top Athletes
    • Powerlifting
    • Weightlifting
    • HYROX
    • Competition Results
    • Latest Research
  • Reviews
    • Recovery
      • Best Cold Plunges
      • Best Saunas
      • Best Mini-Massage Guns
    • Supplements
      • Best Protein
        • Best Vegan Protein Powders
        • Best Whey Isolate Protein Powders
        • Best Mass Gainer
        • Best Protein Bars
      • Best Pre-Workouts
        • Best Pre-Workout for Women
        • Best Pre-Workouts for Men
        • Best Non-Stim Pre-Workouts
        • Strongest Pre-Workouts
      • Best Creatine
      • Best Electrolyte Supplements
      • Best Greens Powder
      • Best Meal Replacements
      • Best Nitric Oxide Supplements
      • Best Fat Burners
      • Individual Supplement Reviews
    • Cardio Equipment
      • Best Treadmills
      • Best Rowing Machines
      • Best Exercise Bikes
      • Best Ellipticals
      • Best Recumbent Bikes
      • Individual Cardio Equipment Reviews
    • Strength Equipment
      • Best Adjustable Dumbbells
      • Best Dumbbells
      • Best Kettlebells
      • Best Barbells
      • Best Squat Racks
      • Best Weight Benches
      • Best Resistance Bands
      • Best Leg Extension Machines
      • Individual Strength Equipment Reviews
    • Apparel
      • Best Weightlifting Shoes
      • Best Cross Training Shoes
      • Best Running Shoes
      • Best Gym Shorts
    • Fitness Tech
      • Best Running Apps
      • Best Fitness Trackers
      • Best Workout Apps
      • Best Smart Scales
    • Support Gear
      • Best Lifting Straps
      • Best Gym Bags
      • Best Lifting Gloves
      • Best Wrist Wraps
  • Nutrition
    • Diets
      • Carb Cycling
      • Vertical Diet
      • Reverse Dieting
      • Carnivore Diet
      • Ketogenic Diet
      • Intermittent Fasting
      • IIFYM Diet
    • Muscle Gain
      • How to Dirty Bulk
      • Go From Cutting to Bulking
      • Eat These Carbs
      • How to Eat for Muscle
    • Fat Loss
      • Macros for Fat Loss
      • Calorie Deficits
      • Natural Fat Burners
      • Cut 2 Pounds Weekly
    • Supplement Guides
      • Pre-Workout
      • Whey Protein
      • Mass Gainers
      • Greens Powders
      • Creatine
      • BCAAs
    • Daily Protein Needs
    • Pre- and Post-Workout Nutrition
    • Foods With Creatine
    • Bulking Tips
  • Training
    • Workouts
      • Back Workouts
      • At-Home Workouts
      • Chest & Back Workouts
      • Full-Body Workout
      • HIIT Workouts
    • Exercise Guides
      • Deadlift
      • Bench Press
      • Back Squat
      • Overhead Press
      • Bent-Over Row
      • Lat Pulldown
      • Crunches
      • Farmer’s Carry
    • Best Exercises
      • Shoulder Exercises
      • Back Exercises
      • Chest Exercises
      • Glute Exercises
      • Ab Exercises
      • Hamstring Exercises
      • Quad Exercises
      • Calf Exercises
      • Biceps Exercises
      • Triceps Exercises
    • Programs
      • Push-Up Program
      • Pull-Up Program
      • German Volume Training
      • 5/3/1 Program
      • Powerbuilding Program
      • The Cube Method
      • 5×5 Program
      • Bodybuilding Programs
      • Build Your Own Program
    • Fat Loss
      • How to Burn Fat
      • Spot Fat Reduction
      • How to Train on a Cut
      • Body Conditioning
      • Workouts
        • Kettlebell Circuits
        • Dumbbell Complexes
        • Farmer’s Carry Workouts
    • Muscle Gain
      • Muscle Hypertrophy Explained
      • How to Build Muscle
      • How to Maintain Muscle
      • What Researchers Say About Muscle Gain
        • Workouts
          • 20-Minute Workouts
          • Kettlebell Circuits
          • CrossFit Workouts for Muscle
          • Bodybuilding Workouts
  • Calculators
    • Protein Intake Calculator
    • Macros Calculator
    • BMR Calculator
    • Squat Calculator
    • Calorie Calculator
  • Community Forum
Home » Weightlifting News » Interview: 2024 Olympian Olivia Reeves on Being the Gold-Medal Favorite at the Olympics & More

Interview: 2024 Olympian Olivia Reeves on Being the Gold-Medal Favorite at the Olympics & More

At 20 years old, Olivia Reeves is poised to win a gold medal at the 2024 Olympics — here's why she's handling the pressure with a smile.

Written by Brian Oliver
Last updated on April 29th, 2025

Weightlifter Olivia Reeves is making waves. In Apr. 2024, Reeves — a 20-year-old and the United States’ most dominant female weightlifter of the year — deterred Team China, the world’s winningest country in weightlifting this century, from sending an athlete to compete against her at the upcoming 2024 Olympics in Paris, Frace.

Flash forward and Reeves has joined Team USA as one of its five weightlifters heading to represent the red, white, and blue in Paris. She’s the favorite for gold. If successful, Reeves would be the first American woman to receive a gold medal in weightlifting on the platform at the Olympic Games.

Olivia Reeves 2
Courtesy of USA Weightlifting

“Olivia has been a special lifter from the beginning, but no one could have predicted all this would happen,” says USA Weightlifting (USAW) Director of Sports Performance Mike Gattone. He’s right about that; Reeves came out of nowhere, but her success on the lifting platform is a long time coming.

BarBend caught up with Gattone, Reeves, and her coach Steve Fauer to unpack one of the most meteoric rises in American weightlifting history and how Reeves herself feels just two months before the biggest sporting event of her life.

Editor’s Note: The quotes in this article from the athlete and additional sources have been lightly edited for clarity.

Choosing Weightlifting 

Reeves’ weightlifting coach, Steve Fauer, has been with her from the beginning. “She’s always made the right choices,” he says.

Olivia has always made the right choices.

Coach Steve Fauer

Fauer continues: “Her parents raised her right. She has always been conscious of what she eats and would go to bed at nine when her friends might be up ’til 10 or 11 p.m.,” which is exactly the kind of diligence that bodes well for the career of a full-time strength athlete.

BB: How and why did you start weightlifting? 

OR: My parents own a CrossFit gym in Chattanooga. I wanted to be a better CrossFitter, so I began lifting at age 12.

I’m not a runner or cardio person. I liked weightlifting more than CrossFit. When I did my first Youth Nationals, it became much bigger. By age 15, I set my first Youth American record with a clean & jerk of 83 kilograms and had been to a camp at the Olympic training center.

A rule in our family required an extracurricular activity: A sport or something academic. We (Olivia and her sister, Haley, 19) couldn’t do sports without [good] grades. That helped me create a work-life balance.

BB: You were concerned about your work-life balance when you were a teenager?

OR: Yes. In high school, I worked at a fast-food restaurant for a couple of years. I haven’t had to work since I got a full-time stipend from USAW, but I still have to balance weightlifting and studying. I don’t have time to train more than I do.

That helps me maintain balance — weightlifting isn’t all that I have.

Olivia Reeves 1
Courtesy of USA Weightlifting
  • Reeves is a full-time sociology student at the University of Tennessee-Chattanooga. She expects to graduate in December of 2024.

From Fauer: “Olivia’s independent, maybe to a fault. She didn’t like being told what to do when she started, but that changed when she came second at USAW‘s National Youth Championships in 2016. Reeves was the stronger athlete, but the first-place finisher had better technique. That’s when things ‘clicked’ for Olivia.”

Getting More Out of Less

Director Gattone says Reeves trains “way, way less than other weightlifters.” Yet Reeves competes more often than most of her colleagues and is among the few athletes to have lifted in all seven Paris qualifiers. 

We’ve never let her stagnate. It suits her.

Coach Steve Fauer

[Related: The Best Pre-Workout Supplements for Weightlifting]

BB: Tell us a bit about your training schedule and how it differs from most young weightlifters with similar backgrounds.

OR: I train four times per week. Others train a lot longer, usually in six to nine sessions. I don’t have time for that. but there’s always something to work on. Sometimes, in a clean, one of my heels comes up, I need to improve my balance, stuff like that.

  • Reeves remarks that she enjoys her workouts and the camaraderie of lifting alongside people of all ages, from pre-teens to the older adults who frequent her gym.

My training before Paris and during the Olympic Games will be similar to the past couple of years. My coach and I know what works, and my goal is not to change anything.

BB: Why did you compete in all seven qualifiers for Paris when five would have been enough?

OR: Seven chances betters the odds. I’m 20. For someone aged 30, it’s different. I’m taking advantage of my youth and gaining experience. I wanted to do all seven. It doesn’t feel like, “Man, I have to. I want to.” It’s fun.

From Coach Fauer: “[Olivia] enjoys this sport, and I do everything to ensure it stays that way. When I first saw the qualifying calendar, one competition after another for 18 months, it looked quite the task. Olivia’s never had a chance to stagnate; that suits her. The day after she won gold at the Pan American Games, [Olivia] was in the gym doing front squats.”

Non-Stop Improvement and Zero Stress

Many athletes felt stress while qualifying for Paris, leading to many bomb-outs (failure to make a Total). Reeves has never looked stressed. She skips off the stage after a good lift, always smiling.

I’m lucky in that I don’t have to push myself.

Olivia Reeves

“Olivia has been so lucky,” says coach Fauer. “She has had no setbacks and no injuries.”

BB: You’ve made consistent progress throughout the qualification period. How do you maintain your trajectory while limiting stress?

OR: My coach and I are on the same page when we decide on confident openers. There’s a solid chance that if I have three tries, I’ll make this weight, so if it’s an opener, it’s never an issue. I’m lucky I don’t have to push myself.

  • “Openers” refer to the athlete’s first of three attempts in both the snatch and clean & jerk portions of a weightlifting competition. It’s the first time the athlete appears on stage after being introduced to the audience.
Olivia Reeves 3
Courtesy of USA Weightlifting

You build confidence within training and warm-ups. In the back room (where weightlifters prepare to appear for their attempts), I have complete trust in Steve, Mike (Gattone), and Pyrros (Dimas, USAW‘s technical director and four-time Olympic medalist) that they won’t put a weight on the bar that I can’t do.

I went six-for-six three times (in qualifying and a fourth time at the Pan Am Games). People would say I couldn’t keep doing that forever, but I ask, “Why not?” I can hit the weights I declare.

  • A six-for-six performance is the gold standard for a competitive weightlifter, indicating that the athlete successfully lifted all three snatches and all three clean & jerks in a single competition.

[Related: The Beginner’s Guide to Olympic Weightlifting]

BB: What’s your relationship like with your coach?

OR: Steve is the only coach I’ve ever had. Some of my older teammates have been through multiple coaches, and it makes me realize how lucky I am. Changing coaches sounds stressful.

Steve is old school. He doesn’t want to have too many athletes and the drama it can bring. I’m not dramatic; I haven’t had to worry about my weight much over the years. I like the 71-kilogram category.

But I’ve had my fair share of tears. I missed a jerk at 140 kilograms in my last workout before the European Weightlifting Championships in February, which I consider bad because I haven’t missed a jerk at 140, well, ever. If missing a jerk at 140 is what I see as bad, things are going pretty well overall.

In Context: Two of Reeves’ primary competitors in Paris are Angie Palacios-Dajomes of Ecuador and Filipino weightlifter Vanessa Sarno. Both have jerked 140 kilograms during the qualifying period.

Best In Class

Despite Team China’s dominance over the sport of weightlifting in the international circuit, Chinese weightlifter and 71-kilogram world-record holder Liao Guifang, who finished the qualification period ranked number-one in the world, wasn’t selected as one of China’s three women representatives in Paris’ weightlifting event.

I’m hoping to lead by example.

Olivia Reeves

Reeves suspects she had a lot to do with that call. At the IWF World Cup this spring, Guifang placed second to Reeves. She’s heading to Paris seven kilograms up in the Total on runner-up Palacios-Dajomes, and 12 above third-placer Loredana Toma of Romania.

BB: What was your reaction to hearing China wasn’t sending [Guifang]?

OR: I wouldn’t say I had much of a reaction. It’s pretty simple; China wants gold medals, and they will take the athletes who have the best chance at that. It just wasn’t the case for them in my weight class.

BB: Are you aware you are a role model for young girls?

OR: I’m realizing how influential my platform is to a younger generation of lifters. While that responsibility feels intimidating, it was not the goal from the beginning. I hope to lead by example.

BB: Besides the actual competition, what are you looking forward to at the Olympics?

OR: My parents try to come to all my national competitions, but they haven’t seen me compete internationally. They booked a vacation in Paris so they can watch me perform.

I want to watch Team USA have the most sublime Olympic Games experience. I enjoyed the Pan American Games; I wonder what the real deal’s like.

Olivia Reeves 5
Courtesy of USA Weightlifting
  • Reeves plans on qualifying for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles, California, citing the novelty of competing in the Olympics on her home turf rather than abroad.

BB: Is it scary for you to acknowledge that you’re the gold-medal favorite in the 2024 Olympics?

OR: No. It’s another weightlifting competition with 12 competitors; let’s see who does well on the day.

  • In 2000 at the Sydney Games — the first Olympics to host women’s weightlifting — American Tara Nott won a silver medal. She was bumped up to gold shortly after, when the original winner failed a drug test, making history for the States in the process. Reeves is expected to make history as well; let’s see how she does on the day.

How Olivia Reeves Made It to the 2024 Olympics

Twenty-year-old Reeves’ first international competition was in 2019 at the IWF’s Youth World Weightlifting Championships. She placed second there with a 194-kilogram Total. Five years later, she’s heading to Paris as the favorite to win it all. Here are the seven international weightlifting meets that helped Reeves book her Olympic ticket:

2022 World Weightlifting Championships

  • Total: 245KG
  • Rank: 5th

The 2022 World Weightlifting Championships was Reeves’ first Senior international event. She ranked ninth in the snatches but fifth overall, behind Paris contemporaries Palacios-Dajomes and Toma, plus two athletes from China.

2023 Pan-American Championships

  • Total: 247KG
  • Rank: 3rd

Reeves slipped onto the podium at the 2023 Pan American Weightlifting Championships in Bariloche, Argentina. Ahead of her were Palacios-Dajomes in second and Tokyo Olympics silver medalist Kate Vibert-Davis in first.

2023 IWF Grand Prix I

  • Total: 241KG
  • Rank: 3rd

At the 2023 IWF Grand Prix I in Havana, Cuba, Reeves experienced a rare sequence of missed lifts. She failed her final two clean & jerks at 141 kilograms.

2023 World Weightlifting Championships

  • Total: 253KG
  • Rank: 3rd

At the 2023 IWF World Weightlifting Championships in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, China’s Guifang beat Reeves by a 20-kilogram margin. However, Reeves also set a Junior world record in the clean & jerk of 142 kilograms.

2023 Pan American Games

  • Total: 258KG
  • Rank: 1st

The Pan American Games are a multi-sport athletic event in the Pan American region. Reeves competed without cutting weight and placed first in the 81-kilogram category.

2023 IWF Grand Prix II

  • Total: 262KG
  • Rank: 3rd

Despite setting a massive personal record Total at the 2023 IWF Grand Prix II in Doha, Qatar, Reeves once again placed third overall behind North Korea’s Song Kuk-Hyang and Guifang — but the margin separating Guifang and Reeves’ strength had closed to only two kilograms in the Total.

2024 European Weightlifting Championships

  • Total: 255KG
  • Rank: 1st

Citing travel concerns, Team USA was allowed to compete in Sofia, Bulgaria, at the 2024 European Weightlifting Championships. American athletes’ results were counted toward Paris qualification, but they did not receive medals. Reeves beat the gold medalist’s Total by 14 kilograms.

2024 IWF World Cup

  • Total: 268KG
  • Rank: 1st

Reeves had the performance of her career at the 2024 IWF World Cup in Phuket, Thailand, setting three Junior world records and finally beating China’s Guifang (and Kuk-Hyang of North Korea) to the top of the podium — a historic first for an American woman weightlifter.

More Weightlifting News

  • The “Must Have” Item 2020 Olympian Mattie Rogers Keeps in Her Gym Bag
  • Report: 18 Weightlifters Caught Violating Doping Policy in 2023
  • Is Lasha Talakhadze Strong Enough to Win the 2024 Olympics?

Disclaimer: Brian Oliver is an independent correspondent for BarBend. The views and opinions expressed on this site do not necessarily reflect his own. Oliver is not directly affiliated with any of BarBend’s existing media partnerships.

Editor’s Note: BarBend is the Official Media Partner of USA Weightlifting. The two organizations maintain editorial independence unless otherwise specified.

Featured Image courtesy of USA Weightlifting

About Brian Oliver

Brian Oliver was a national newspaper sports editor in the UK before he was appointed media manager for weightlifting at the London 2012 Olympic Games. Since then, he has specialized in weightlifting as a freelance writer. Oliver was also a regular contributor of weightlifting news to Inside the Games. He is also the author of "The Commonwealth Games: Extraordinary Stories Behind the Medals". 

View All Articles

Primary Sidebar

Latest Reviews

Featured image for the Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review

Ironmaster Super Bench Pro V2 Review (2025): Our Expert’s New Favorite FID Bench

Titan T3 Power Rack Review

Titan T3 Power Rack Review (2025): An Expert-Approved Rig Beckoning to Budget-Minded Athletes

Our tester works out at the beach in preparation for the Rogue Resistance Bands Review

Rogue Resistance Bands Review (2025): Tested by a Certified Personal Trainer

Barbend tester Jake Herod works out on a Force USA Trainer

Force USA G3 Review (2025): Our Experts Tested This Compact All-In-One Rack for Small Home Gyms

BarBend

BarBend is an independent website. The views expressed on this site may come from individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the view of BarBend or any other organization. BarBend is the Official Media Partner of USA Weightlifting.

  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest

Sections

  • CrossFit
  • Strongman
  • Bodybuilding
  • Powerlifting
  • Weightlifting
  • Reviews
  • Nutrition
  • Training

More

  • BarBend Newsletter
  • BarBend Podcast
  • The Ripped Report
  • 1RM Calculator
  • BMR Calculator
  • Macros Calculator
  • Protein Calculator
  • Squat Calculator

Policies

  • Accessibility
  • Advice Disclaimer
  • Cookies Policy
  • Disclaimers
  • Disclosures
  • Editorial Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Copyright © 2025 · BarBend Inc · Sitemap