Let the Games begin
Source: |
Vancouver Sun |
Date: |
February 1994 |
Author: |
Cam Cole |
LILLEHAMMER - Kurt Browning had just been saying how nice it was,
in a way, not to be The Great Canadian Hope at these Olympic Games the
way he was in 1992.
People had come up to him since his arrival in Norway, comforting
him over his loss to Elvis Stojko at the Canadian figure skating
championships, trying to put a happy face on it by saying "you've
carried the torch for Canada for four or five years now; you don't
have to do that here. You can just relax and skate."
A couple of hours later, they were handing him the flag. So much
for relaxation.
"I guess you just never know when one of those quotes is going to
come back to haunt you," said Browning, 27, grinning from ear to ear
and clutching the flagpole after Canadian chef de mission Bill Warren
chose the four-time world men's champion from Caroline, Alta., to lead
his nation's Olympians into today's opening ceremonies of the
Lillehammer Games.
"I don't get choked up on a podium - I've been a world champion
four times - but I've never felt so Canadian."
He didn't seem to mind the flag's ominous overtones. The Canadian
flag hasn't exactly been a magic wand to its carrier the past few
years.
In Barcelona, decathlete Michael Smith was bestowed with the
honor. He blew out a hamstring and had to withdraw after five
events. In Albertville, the assignment went to short-track speed
skater Sylvie Daigle. She crashed in her individual specialty. In
Calgary six years ago, it was Brian Orser, Browning's predecessor.
Orser skated well but was beaten by Brian Boitano, who's now back
challenging Browning and Stojko and 1992 gold medallist Viktor
Petrenko of Ukraine.
Asked if the flag-bearing responsibility added pressure to his
task, Browning said: "Not to drop it, maybe. That's the only
pressure."
But he understood where the question was coming from. This is hi
third Olympics, but Calgary was his first, and Orser was his
competitive role model. He saw the strain his teammate was under.
"But in his case, (all) of Canada really was waiting for him to
skate. He was our potential Golden Boy," said Browning. "That's not
the case here. There's so many Canadians who have great chances. In
this event alone, we've got two chances at a medal, so that tells you
something."
They are, indeed, two of many Canadian medal hopes here. Two years
after the nation's largest Olympic medal haul in 60 years - going back
to 1932 in Lake Placid, N.Y. - Canada's athletes appear poised to
decimate the Albertville record of seven.
If the Canadian Olympic Association's own three-star ratings of our
1994 representatives mean anything, CAnada has a serious shot at as
many as 18 medals in Lillehammer - and even if that's an awfully
optimistic figure, it makes for a convincing argument that a nation of
23 million people, a nation renowned for nine months of hockey and
three months of bad ice, is finally ready to fulfill its promise as a
legitimate winter-sports country.
Nor are the Canadian chances all in fringe sports - a criticism
heard after Albertville, where athletes in the then-brand new Olympic
sport of short track accounted for four of our seven medals.
This time, we have men's prospects in figure skating, bobsled,
women's alpine skiing, and both short- and long-track speed skating,
in addition to biathlon and freestyle skiing - and if you believe
deeply enough in Canadian ingenuity at ice hockey, you migt even
convince yourself the hockey squad has a shot.
"I think it's exciting," said Edmonton's Pierre Lueders, the 1993
World Cup champion in the two-man bobsled with partner Dave MacEarern
(?) of Charlottetown. "When there's a lot more diversity and chances
of people doing well in more than one sport, it takes some of the
individual pressure off."
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