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Moment of Truth
Source: |
Maclean's, v105 n8 p40(1). |
Date: |
February 24, 1992 |
Author: |
Andrew Phillips |
Abstract: |
Canadian figure skater Kurt Browning and the pairs team of Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler were disappointed by their performances in the Winter Olympics. Brasseur and Eisler won a bronze medal and men's favorite Browning finished sixth. |
Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter Ltd. (Canada) 1992
He arrived for the Olympics insisting that he was ready to compete, brushing
off questions about his injured back and enforced three-month absence from
competition. But moments after figure skater Kurt Browning took to the ice,
it was apparent that he could not back up his brave words. He slipped and
slid, missed jumps and ended up with disappointment painted plainly on his
face. Instead of the gold that he had hoped to take home to Canada, Browning
ended up with a humiliating sixth-place finish. And after it was over, he had
no doubt about the reason. Unable to compete since November because of a back
injury, he said, he simply was not prepared. "If I'd had two more weeks, I
would have been in this thing," he added ruefully.
The 25-year-old Browning had been Canada's biggest hope for gold--a three-time
world champion gunning for his greatest honor. His disastrous showing came in
a competition marred by controversy over the judges' scoring. Ukrainian
Victor Petrenko won gold despite a mediocre performance, while American skater
Paul Wylie skated flawlessly yet ended up second, ahead of Czechoslovakian
Petr Barna. But it was 19-year-old Canadian Elvis Stojko who was the prime
victim of what many experts described as bizarre judging. While higher-rated
skaters were taking pratfalls, Stojko skated cleanly and confidently, but
dropped to seventh place from sixth at the midpoint of the Games.
Hunting: For Browning, it was a long way to the Olympic Ice Hall in
Albertville from his skating origins in tiny Caroline, Alta. His father,
69-year-old Arnold (Dewey) Browning, a retired hunting guide who was in
Albertville last week with his wife, Neba, acknowledged that "if someone had
said you're training a world champion, we'd have looked at him like he'd
fallen out of a tree."
But despite all Kurt Browning's accomplishments, there were signs that his
injury-forced layoff and Canadians' intense expectations had taken their toll.
Just a few days before leaving Edmonton, Browning made a significant change to
his two-minute, 40-second short program, substituting a more difficult triple
Lutz jump for an easier triple flip to impress the judges. Many experts
second-guessed that gamble, and some wondered whether Browning was becoming
distracted by the glamor of the Olympics. After he showed up at a Canadian
hockey game on Monday, they questioned whether he was completely focused on
his event. And when Browning's moment of truth arrived on Thursday night, he
missed a triple Axel and fell heavily to the ice--problems that persisted on
the fateful Saturday.
The pressure of the Games also affected Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler,
gold-medal contenders in the pairs competition. Going into the event, they
were ranked second in the world, dazzling audiences with manoeuvres that only
they perform. In one move, their trademark triple lateral twist, the
28-year-old Eisler, from Seaforth, Ont., throws his tiny 95-lb. partner as
high as 12-feet in the air while she spins three times. Both skaters are
fiercely competitive: they even ended a personal relationship about two years
ago and agreed not to date other people in order to concentrate entirely on
skating.
Fall: But their troubles started early in their short program. Brasseur, 21,
of Boucherville, Que., failed to complete the side-by-side double Axel jumps
and fell to the ice. "The first thing that passed through my mind was, 'God,
what have I done?" she said later. "The second thing was, 'We've got to keep
going.' I said, 'I'm sorry,' and I remember Lloyd telling me, 'Smile, don't
quit.'" But the fall cost them heavily, and in the long program two days
later Brasseur stumbled three times. The quality of their athletic lifts,
however, was enough to win them the bronze--Canada's first medal in the pairs
event since 1964. Their archrivals, Artur Dmitriev and Natalia Mishkuteniok
of the Unified Team, captured the gold with a near-flawless performance.
The Canadians' disappointment was palpable. "It's hard for us to hold our
heads high the way we skated," Eisler said. "We did get a medal, but we
didn't skate well. It doesn't leave a good feeling." He added: "I wish I
could wake up. If it was a dream I could go out and skate again."
Unfortunately for Eisler and Brasseur, as well as for Browning, it was hard
reality--and their dreams of striking gold in Albertville had been dashed.
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