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Pressure increases if Chan wins worlds

Source: Canada.com
Date: March 25, 2009
Author: Cam Cole
LOS ANGELES ­ In his athletic adolescence, Kurt Browning had a front-row seat for the Brian Orser experience at the 1988 Calgary Olympics.

It was an eye-opener of the kind he wouldn't wish on 18-year-old Patrick Chan, should the precocious Canadian happen to win the world figure skating title this week, and be the reigning champ heading into a home-country Olympics.

"Statistically, absolutely it's better if he's not," said Browning, the four-time world champion from Caroline, Alta., who twice carried the title into an Olympics and didn't get a medal. "It's spooky what's happened twice to me and once to Brian and once to Elvis (Stojko). If you want to go by the numbers, he'd better not win.

"But there's no logic in that. If you have a chance to win a world title, you should win it. There's people who say, but he's too young, and it's all happening so fast. But if you get a chance to be world champion, what do you do, go: oh, there'll be another chance? You don't know that. Injury, someone else comes up, rules change and it doesn't favour you any more . . . you don't know."

Orser, the only Canadian skater ever to face that Olympic heat on home ice ­ he won silver (or lost gold, as history would have it) in a memorable battle with American Brian Boitano ­ still thinks Chan should go for it, and worry about the consequences later.

"You take it any time you can get it," said Orser. "You don't play strategy like that, you don't hold back."

Browning, though, remembers how the pressure wore on Orser.

"Now that I'm older, I think it was like some actors who do movies for six or eight months, and the character consumes them. I think that's maybe what happened to Brian," he said.

"I remember walking past Brian's room after the Olympics and saw it was empty, so I went in and sat down and I saw something under the bed. It was a tape recorder. And I rewound it and turned it on, and listened to about 20 seconds and just dropped it like a hot rock. It was Brian's thoughts, something he was doing, like a diary. And the last words I heard on the tape were: ‘Well, I guess the next time we talk, I'll be Olympic champion.'

"And the chill I got from listening to that . . . it summed up the power of the whole thing for me, as a kid, going: 'God, I'm next.'"

"I just started to sweat, actually," Orser joked Wednesday, hearing the story again.

"It's true. I was trying to record moments and thoughts through the Olympics for a book I was writing with Steve Milton. I do remember just before I left the room saying that. But I felt good about it. What should I have said? 'You know, we'll see what happens? Keep your fingers crossed, if you have any in there . . .?'"

"The magnitude of it, I think, affected everyone, not just Brian," said Browning. "And I don't know, a year out from Vancouver, with more Canadian medal hopes in other disciplines, if it's going to be the same for Patrick. Brian was older, he was already world champion, already an Olympic silver medallist, he was a grown man. This is still a kid, and somehow in my gut of guts, I don't think the pressure's going to be the same as it was for Brian.

"I also think I'm factoring in that Patrick's a different breed of kid. He wants to be a star. He wants to take this as far as he can."