Kurtains
Browning's out, Elvis lives
Source: |
Vancouver Sun |
Date: |
February 18, 1994 |
Author: |
Cam Cole |
HAMAR - The hard part was over. That's what hurt. Hardly anyone
in high-performance athletics gets to choose the moment when his
career comes to an end; and in figure sating, like boxing, when it
comes it almost invariably hits like a Mack Truck.
But it shouldn't have been that way for Kurt Browning. He
shouldn't have had to go out like American speed skater Dan Jensen -
all those world records, no Olympic medal.
The hard part was over. Two years of painstaking preparation after
the disaster of Albertville; two years of psyching himself up for the
showdown with Brian Boitano and Viktor Petrenko, the last two Olympic
champions. And now he could reach out and almost touch the medal for
which he had remained a competitive skater.
Boitano and Petrenko had crashed and burned, eliminated by their
own mistakes early in the men's technical program of the Lillehammer
Olympics figure skating competition Thursday.
Browning knew it by the time he skated last in the program; knew it
was within his grasp when he landed the dreaded triple Axel which has
plagued him so often, finished the combination with a double-toe loop,
and suppressed a grin. The rest was going to be nothing but air. The
feeling lasted maybe 30 seconds.
"They put a lot of their lives on that one little blade, for a
split second," his coach, Louis Stong, would say later, "and you're
talking about extreme skill here. This is devastating stuff."
Browning fell on a triple flip.
"We looked at it from the end of the rink, and it looked fine, and
it looked fine. The landing was on the curve, and clean," Stong
said. "But somebody up there was saying, 'Not this time.'
"Once the triple Axel landed, I mean, he touched it. He could feel
it. It was that close. In Albertville, he was down on the triple
Axel, so it was gone in the first seconds. Tonight, I really think he
thought it was there, and then it was gone.
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