“This is how I meld the two skills that I love, the cerebral aspect of golf and the physical aspect of skiing,” she realized.
By eighth grade, Levins was training with a biathlon development group at the Ethan Allen Firing Range in Jericho, Vermont — just under two hours north of Rutland. Her golf skill immediately paid off.
“Shooting and putting are interchangeable in instruction,” explains Mary Anne.
The only real difference? Shooting has fewer variables than putting because it’s the same distance (50 meters) every time. Putting distances and the topography of golf’s greens vary infinitely. But the mentality needed for accuracy in both sports is similar.
When Levins was confused about shooting instruction, she looked to her mom, who explained it in golf terms.
“You're going to think I'm crazy, but golf and biathlon are literally the same thing in my brain,” says Levins. “Precision marksmanship in biathlon and golf have the same cerebral aspect, like having to make a putt on 18 to win a match is the same sensation as trying to get your last target to win a biathlon race or get on the podium.”
While Levins cross-country skied and played golf for Rutland High School, winning two state golf titles on the links, she also competed with the U.S. biathlon team. Junior year, she qualified for her first junior world championships, scoring a top 20 result in her second international start (18th in the sprint).
Senior year in high school, Levins traveled to Lillehammer, Norway, for the 2016 Youth Olympic Games. Coming from behind, she finished fourth in the pursuit race, just 17.1 seconds from a medal. She was the only biathlete in the top four to shoot clean, and her future looked bright.
With no college biathlon programs at the time, Levins was recruited to play golf. But she chose an NCAA Division III school — Middlebury — so she could do both golf and biathlon. As a collegiate golfer, she thrived, winning several collegiate tournaments, as well as the Vermont State Amateur Championship. In biathlon, she competed at more world junior championships and ranked as high as 36th in the world among juniors.
In the classroom, Levins followed a pre-med path. Along the way, she discovered Buddhism.
“I fell into my first class randomly and fell in love with it, just the philosophies and the pillars of Buddhism, no self,” she says.
It helped her find inner peace.