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Canadian fans 'can be your army': Browning

Source: Abbotsford News
Date: December 3, 2009
Author: Dan Kinvig
When it comes to the Olympics, home-ice advantage will either make you or break you.

That's the opinion of Canadian figure skating legend Kurt Browning, who is in Abbotsford for a Friday performance of Holiday Festival on Ice at the Abbotsford Entertainment and Sports Centre.

Browning has tasted the hype of Winter Olympics both at home (Calgary, 1988) and abroad (Albertville in 1992; Lillehammer in 1994). With B.C. just two months away from hosting its own Olympiad, Browning gave some insight into the challenges that Canadian athletes will face.

"The pressure of 16,000 people freaking out and wearing red and white might just cave you in," said Browning, who never medaled at the Olympics but won four world championships. "Or, it can be your army.

"For Patrick (Chan) and Joannie (Rochette) and those guys, when they step on the ice in Vancouver, it's going to be one of those two things. It's either going to help or it's going to hinder – it's not going to be both."

Browning is just one of the skating luminaries in Abbotsford for the Holiday Festival on Ice. He's joined by past Olympic and world champions as Ekaterina Gordeeva, Jeffrey Buttle, and Jamie Sale and David Pelletier.

Sale and Pelletier authored one of the most famous moments in Canadian Olympic history in 2002 in Salt Lake City. The Canadian duo were initially awarded the silver medal in the pairs event, but were upgraded to gold in the wake of a judging scandal that rocked the sport.

Sale, who recently won CBC's Battle of the Blades reality skating show with former hockey star Craig Simpson, offered her own advice for Canadian athletes who are gearing up for the Vancouver Games.

"For a lot of athletes, I know that right now is when it's really hard, because (the Olympics) are thrown in your face a lot," she said. "When you go grocery shopping, everyone's like, 'Bring home that gold medal!'

"There are some figure skaters right now who are feeling pressure, because their faces are on Cheerios boxes and the media is hyping them up. It really adds a lot of pressure, but I think it's important as an athlete to embrace it and not to be scared of that.

"People want the best for you and they're so excited for you, and I'd tell myself that was good."

The ex-Olympians agreed that touring professionally is a far cry from the pressure-cooker of amateur competition. Browning pointed out that in an Olympic year, the goal of his training was to peak for a single mega-event. While participating in pro events like Holiday Festival on Ice doesn't generate the same amount of stress, it doesn't offer the same thrill as Olympic competition.

"It's a completely different mental ballgame," Browning said. "This is easier, of course, but there's not as much excitement and not as much comes back to you. Winning the Worlds is a real high. It's a wow."

Sale said that the whole point of succeeding at the amateur level is to pave the way for a solid pro career.

"This, for us, is so enjoyable," she said. "There's not a lot of pressure on us, because it's about entertaining and not about executing perfectly.

"There's no pressure here except that we want to be good for an audience every night."

The Abbotsford stop on the Holiday Festival on Ice tour will be taped for broadcast on CBC on Dec. 16, and will air internationally in the United States, China, Japan, South Africa and the UK later in the Christmas season.