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What elite sport prepared me for in the lab — and what it didn’t

Source: NatureView Original
scienceApril 23, 2026

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Javier Nion Fieira found that his experiences in elite sport were easier to analyse and process than those in the laboratory.Credit: Diego Blanco & Jonathan Gurr

At 2 a.m. on a frosty February morning, I started what I hoped would be the first big experiment of my PhD-dissertation project: collecting eight lung samples from mice and preparing them for flow cytometry. I’d spent months practising the workflow — washing, then tissue processing, staining and finally analysis — rehearsing it until it felt automatic.

By the time I got home at 8.30 p.m., I felt dizzy from my long day of sustained focus. I hadn’t even stopped to eat. Still, I went to sleep convinced that the effort would translate into clean data to provide the clear phenotype we had been looking for. It would drive my project forwards and ensure that I would graduate on time with a PhD from Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in Shreveport.

We need to talk about failure in science

What elite sport prepared me for in the lab — and what it didn’t | TrendPulse