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- <text id=94TT0258>
- <title>
- Feb. 28, 1994: SchuuuUSss!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 28, 1994 Ministry of Rage:Louis Farrakhan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPORT, Page 58
- SchuuuUSss!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In Lillehammer, Alpine skiing kicks off with an unexpected but
- refreshing American accent
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Kvitfjell
- </p>
- <p> More than a century ago, the Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen
- hiked down the mountain range at Kvitfjell. It was, he recalled
- in his play Peer Gynt, akin to riding a wild buck through "the
- wide and dizzy void."
- </p>
- <p> Last week Diann Roffe-Steinrotter could identify with that.
- Clad in skintight purple spandex at the starting gate of the
- Olympic course, the diminutive (5 ft. 4 in.) racer from Potsdam,
- New York, gazed down the ice-glazed slope to the distant valley
- below. In the Arctic chill, a kaleidoscopic blur of 40,000 snowsuits
- gazed back through a vast video screen. "I was sick-to-my-stomach
- nervous," she said. "I tried to drink water. My insides felt
- like California during the earthquake." But somehow as she zipped
- past red barns and sailed over moose and lynx paths down a sun-striped
- highway of snow, Roffe-Steinrotter summoned Olympian reserves.
- First in line among 56 skiers in the super-G, a cross between
- a downhill and a giant-slalom course, she had no one else's
- mistakes to guide her. "It's one day, one hill, 1 1/2 minutes,"
- she told herself, "and whoever shakes and bakes the best is
- going to get the gold."
- </p>
- <p> Ibsen she's not, but Roffe-Steinrotter was poetry in motion
- as the first American woman to win an Olympic Alpine ski race
- in a decade. It was the second surprise victory of the week
- for the U.S. Her countryman Tommy Moe had blasted off with a
- gilded glide in the downhill and followed with a silver medal
- in the men's super-G. "I've skied my butt off," said Moe, a
- square-jawed, square-talking Alaskan. "Now it's paying off."
- On Saturday Americans struck ore again with a silver in the
- women's downhill for the irrepressible Idaho daredevil Picabo
- Street. "I skied like a dirtbag," she said, "but I was charging
- down the mountain."
- </p>
- <p> Not bad for a bunch only recently dubbed "Uncle Sam's lead-footed
- snowplow brigade," by Sports Illustrated magazine. Yet even
- U.S. ski officials seemed stunned by the team's sudden resurrection.
- "It's the most unbelievable thing I've seen in sports," said
- American coach Paul Major of Roffe-Steinrotter's win. The 26-year-old
- veteran's career was in a slump, and she had failed to place
- higher than eighth in any World Cup race since capturing a silver
- medal in the 1992 Albertville Olympics. As for Moe, he had not
- won a major downhill contest in five years--and no American
- man had claimed an Olympic Alpine medal since 1984. None in
- history had won two in the same Games. But criticism galvanized
- the team. "I was really stoked," said Moe, who attributes the
- success to hard training. "We don't deserve to be ridiculed."
- </p>
- <p> The unexpected U.S. triumphs left Austrian and Swiss favorites
- floundering in the powder. The two powerhouse Alpine nations,
- where World Cup races are routinely televised and schuss stars
- are celebrities, had dominated Olympic skiing for decades. Yet
- last week a Norwegian (the dynamic Kjetil Andre Aamodt) and
- a Canadian (the surprising Ed Podivinsky) won silver and bronze
- medals in downhill after Moe, while a Russian, Svetlana Gladischeva,
- edged Italian Isolde Kostner for silver in the women's super-G.
- In the men's super-G, Markus Wasmeier, a Bavarian who likes
- to play Mozart on his zither, won the gold, beating Moe and
- Aamodt, who captured the bronze. The French were despondent
- when their favorites failed to garner medals, and L'Equipe,
- the national sports daily, struck back by calling Moe--who
- had been expelled from teams as an adolescent for smoking marijuana--a "little truant" and describing Roffe-Steinrotter as looking
- like "an insomniac squirrel." But French skier Florence Masnada
- was more gracious. "The Americans have no complexes," she said
- admiringly. "They just throw themselves down the slope without
- asking any questions."
- </p>
- <p> Few fans are likely to hold youthful sins against Moe. "I was
- not the smartest or the best student," he said of his marijuana-smoking
- days. "I was out having a good time, being a normal American
- kid." But when the ski team suspended him at 16, his father,
- a contractor, hauled him up to the Aleutian Islands for a summer
- of 16-hour workdays. "He shoveled gravel," recalled Tom Sr.
- "He crawled on all fours." Moe Jr. straightened out. Since then
- he has put in six grueling years on the World Cup circuit, racing
- from one mountain to another.
- </p>
- <p> The mood at the Alpine races was exuberant. The frigid temperature--down to 1 degree F--seemed only to stimulate flag-waving,
- cowbell-clanking Norwegians. Before the race they bounced up
- and down to keep warm--and to keep time with the weirdly appropriate
- golden oldies blasting from loudspeakers. One tune, Achy Breaky
- Heart, seemed a dirge for the brilliant career of Swiss veteran
- Franz Heinzer, whose bindings snapped as he leaped out of the
- downhill's starting gate. Heinzer whacked the snow with his
- poles in fury and three days later announced his retirement
- at 31.
- </p>
- <p> Another heartbreaking moment was the failure of former Olympic
- champion Donna Weinbrecht, the 28-year-old New Jerseyan, who
- has dominated freestyle mogul skiing since it became a medal
- sport in Albertville. Weinbrecht had fought her way back from
- a crippling knee injury. But she finished seventh out of 16
- in the competition last week. "I started getting this numb feeling
- and a real bad vision thing," Weinbrecht told reporters at the
- finish line. "It's one of those things where you're off. This
- course, I think I could have shredded it, as we say in freestyle.
- But when it counted, it was like an out-of-body experience."
- It was a sad parenthesis in the wacky competition that combines
- hotdogging exhibitionism with athletic zeal. American Liz McIntyre,
- a Dartmouth graduate, captured a silver medal by executing a
- Daffy Twister jump, while winner Stine Lise Hattestad of Norway
- performed a Cossack--an aerial ballet split on skis, as did
- the men's mogul winner, Canadian Jean-Luc Brassard. Each race
- was introduced by a recorded rooster's loud "cock-a-doodle-doo."
- </p>
- <p> Only Alberto Tomba, the madcap Italian slalomer, is a household
- name beyond the Alps. But Moe, 24, and Aamodt, 23, seem poised
- to become the Jean-Claude Killys of the '90s: glamorous derring-doers
- capable of focusing world attention on the Alpine sport. Moe,
- so easygoing that he was yawning at the starting gate of both
- races, has an outdoorsy charm that could earn him as much as
- $1 million a year in corporate-endorsement contracts, according
- to industry insiders. "He is already capturing the hearts and
- minds of the American public," says Jon Franklin, a vice president
- of the International Management Group, which handles Tomba and
- other skiers.
- </p>
- <p> As for Aamodt, whose ski-coach father used to blindfold him
- on skis to teach him the feel of the snow, he is fast succeeding
- the Austrian Marc Girardelli, who competes for Luxembourg, as
- the world's best all-around skier. Leading in World Cup points,
- the charismatic Norwegian skis both downhill and slalom and
- could well rack up more medals this week. "In Norway we used
- to have the attitude that you should not do something special--or at least you should not think you are special," Aamodt
- said. "But now we are developing a winner's attitude. In the
- U.S. you like to be No. 1. With the Olympics, the American Dream
- has come to Norway."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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