Adding Color to the U.S. Winter Olympic Team

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<font size="5"><center>Adding Color to the U.S. Winter Olympic Team</font size>
<font size="4">For '06 Winter Games, United States Fields Its Most Diverse Team</font size></center>


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Shani Davis is a star on the United States' long-track speedskating team


Washington Post
By Amy Shipley
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 9, 2006; Page A01

TURIN, Italy, Feb. 8 -- Back when figure skater Dorothy Hamill, hockey player Mike Eruzione and speedskaters Eric Heiden and Bonnie Blair were winning medals for the United States, the joke was that the snow wasn't the only thing that was white when it came to the Winter Olympics.

The joke may be getting a little old. Once composed almost exclusively of white athletes from small communities in the Northeast and Midwest, the U.S. team that will march into the Olympic Stadium on Friday night for Opening Ceremonies will be the most racially and ethnically diverse in the history of the Winter Games.

It will include a Cuban American from Miami, a Puerto Rican American from Chicago, a Japanese American from Seattle and African Americans from Chicago, Alabama and North Carolina, all among the country's strongest medal hopes. At least 23 of the 211-member U.S. team have Hispanic or non-white backgrounds, and the team includes natives of Florida, Georgia and Texas, as well as South Korea, Russia and Japan.

Though the U.S. Olympic Committee does not keep official records on race or ethnicity, the number of black, Asian American or Hispanic athletes on the U.S. team is more than double that at Salt Lake City in 2002, which included at least 12 minorities. It is nearly four times the number on the U.S. teams that competed in 1998 in Nagano and 1994 in Lillehammer.

"I've definitely seen the winter sport side of it evolve," said men's bobsledder Randy Jones, an African American who has competed in two previous Olympics and won a silver medal in 2002. "There's more color getting involved in all sports."

The evolution of the U.S. team has major implications for the U.S. Olympic Committee, whose congressionally defined mission includes increasing the number of minorities in athletics, and its various winter-sport national governing bodies, which for years have fought what was often a losing battle to attract more of the country's top minority athletes. Sports officials say there is no greater recruitment tool than a more diverse lineup of American Olympians.

NBC, which paid $1.5 billion for the broadcast rights for Turin and the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, sees a benefit as well. As NBC expands its coverage of the Olympics beyond network prime time to its cable channel lineup, it is banking on appealing to a younger and diverse viewing audience.

"The Winter Olympics used to present a promotional challenge," said Mike McCarley, the vice president of communications and marketing for NBC Universal Sports & Olympics. "Now there's speed, danger and an Olympic team that is more identifiable to a more diverse cross-section of America."

U.S. officials say there are several reasons for the evolution. Athletes who grew up roller skating and inline skating far from the ice, snow and mountains of the North and West have been switching to Olympic sports such as speedskating and hockey. In addition, recruiting efforts by winter sport governing bodies have begun to pay off. They've been helped by the success of black and Hispanic athletes at recent Olympics.

"What you're seeing -- and we're very proud of it -- some of it has been very fortuitous and some of it has been by design," U.S. Olympic Committee CEO Jim Scherr said.

Though some winter sports such as skiing and curling remain predominantly white and non-Hispanic, figure skating and bobsled have become increasingly diverse. Speedskating is at the leading edge of the transformation, with a diversity that is on par with, or exceeds, that of most U.S. summer Olympic teams.

Speedskating's long-track team includes Shani Davis, an African American from Chicago; Derek Parra of Carson, Calif., who was the first athlete of Mexican descent to win a Winter Olympic medal when he claimed a gold in 2002; Ryan Leveille, who is part Native American; and Jennifer Rodriguez, who is of Cuban descent and in 1998 became the first Hispanic American to compete in the Winter Games.

Among short track speedskaters, Apolo Anton Ohno is of Japanese descent; Hyo-Jung Kim was born in Pusan, South Korea; Allison Baver is part Native American; and Maria Garcia is Mexican American.

"I noticed it traveling with our team," Baver said. "We're the only team that has coaches from three other countries and athletes that are all different in terms of our diversity. Look at our team as a whole. It is the United States. . . . It's a melting pot."

Despite the evolving composition of the U.S. team, the Winter Games remain a largely exclusive club.

Unlike the Summer Olympics, in which 10,000 athletes from more than 200 nations participate, the Turin Games will include about 2,500 athletes from 87 countries. At the last Winter Olympics, 24 European, North American and Asian countries, and Australia, won all of the medals. At the 2004 Summer Games in Athens, 75 nations from all over the globe earned medals.

When American Vonetta Flowers finished first along with Jill Bakken in the two-man bobsled four years ago in Salt Lake City, she became the first black athlete from any nation to win a gold medal in the 82-year history of the Winter Games.

"It's a great contribution to all minorities of the country," Davis said of Flowers's achievement. "It just opens the eyes of everyone, because somebody is doing something different, something you don't see every day. . . . You don't see someone of color out on the track."

In the late 1980s and early 1990s, inline skates -- those with wheels in line rather than two in front and two in back -- became the rage in roller skating. Many of the country's top inline skaters were drawn to ice sports because they wanted the chance to compete in the Olympics, which inline sports did not offer. Rodriguez, Parra, Chad Hedrick, Baver and many others in elite speedskating programs followed this path.

"I'd love to say this is something we planned, but that wouldn't be the case," U.S. Speedskating President Andy Gabel said. "Now we have people from different parts of the country who normally wouldn't be part of the sport."

Bobsledding, which benefited from the publicity it received after football players Herschel Walker and Willie Gault tried the sport and Walker finished seventh at the '92 Games, began recruiting at U.S. track and field championships and football camps. That's what lured Flowers, Jones and perhaps a dozen other athletes whose primary sports once were track and field or football.

Luge drafted sliders by traveling around the country in the summer and putting wheel-equipped sleds on asphalt for kids to ride. Ninety percent of the sport's top athletes came into the program that way, USA Luge spokesman Jon Lundin said, including Dan Joye, an Olympian who was born in Venezuela and says he is a descendant of South American independence leader Simon Bolivar.

Figure skating, which recruits far less actively than the more obscure winter sports, has nonetheless managed to expand its talent base; five of this year's 14 Olympians have non-white or Hispanic backgrounds. The change is perhaps a reflection on the success of athletes such as Debi Thomas, who became the first black person to win an Olympic medal when she took the bronze in Calgary in 1988; Kristi Yamaguchi, a Japanese American who won gold in '92; and Michelle Kwan, a Chinese American who won a silver in '98 and a bronze in '02. Kwan is on this year's team.

Dave Ogrean, executive director for USA Hockey, and other officials said they will never succeed in making their sports fully accessible given the necessity of ice or snow for training. Though this year's Olympic team has roots all over the country, nearly all of the athletes have moved to one of a handful of training towns that cater to their pursuits. "Forget the barrier of somebody buying skates and a helmet," Ogrean said. "It's a proximity issue because they are such venue-specific sports."

Jones said that issue can be overcome with exposure. "When one person does it from the South, and another person does it from there, from wherever, they can go home and tell their story," Jones said. "It's just introducing those sports to different cultures or different areas."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/08/AR2006020802302.html
 
Yup I just caught ESPN's piece on him and am proud of the man's success in the midst of all the bs...
 
<font size="5"><center>Shani Davis Does It His Way, Wins Gold Medal</font size></center>

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United States Shani Davis, from Chicago, Ill., waves to
the crowds after finishing the Winter Olympics men's 1,000
meter speedskating competition at the Oval Lingotto in
Turin, Italy, Saturday, Feb. 18, 2006. Davis won the gold
medal in the event. (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara)


Feb 18, 6:34 PM (ET)
Associated Press
By PAUL NEWBERRY

TURIN, Italy (AP) - Say what you want about Shani Davis. Call him a trailblazer. Accuse him of selfishness. Snicker at him for being a momma's boy.

Just don't forget this: He's also an Olympic champion.

Davis became the first black athlete to claim an individual gold medal in Winter Olympic history Saturday, winning the 1,000-meter speedskating race and justifying his decision to focus on himself first, his team second.

Joey Cheek made it a 1-2 American finish, adding a silver to his victory in the 500.

"I'm one of a kind," Davis said, fully aware of how much he stands out in the mostly white sport. "I'm a different type of person. I have a different charisma. A lot of people don't understand me."

That much was clear from the racially charged messages to his personal Web site - "people saying they hoped I would fall, break my leg, using the n-word," he said. Even the great Eric Heiden had some choice words for America's newest gold medalist, regarding his decision to skip the team pursuit.

"He is going his own way," said Heiden, who won five gold medals at the 1980 Lake Placid Games. "He's very different to a lot of speedskaters, and we have to respect that, but he is not a team player."

Maybe not, but the 23-year-old from Chicago's South Side is building a heck of a rivalry with Texan Chad Hedrick.

Hedrick won the first speedskating gold with a dominating performance in the 5,000. Davis got him back in the 1,000, the weakest of Hedrick's individual events. They'll face off again Tuesday in the 1,500 - an event Davis ruled until Hedrick snatched away the world record.

"I'm not trying to beat Chad," Davis insisted. "I'm trying to beat everyone."

Hedrick, who had only skated the 1,000 a half-dozen times in his career, put up an early time that stood until Davis bested it in the 19th of 21 pairs with a clocking of 1 minute, 8.89 seconds. Four other skaters passed Hedrick as well, leaving him in sixth place.

Erben Wennemars of the Netherlands claimed the bronze, which was fine with Hedrick.

"Once Shani beat me, I didn't care if I got a bronze," he said. "I'm here to win. It's all or nothing."

The testy relationship between the two U.S. stars was apparent after the race. Hedrick didn't even bother congratulating Davis.

"Shani skated fast today," Hedrick said. "That's about all I have to say about that."

Davis came under fire for skipping the team pursuit - especially when a Hedrick-led squad was knocked out by Italy in the quarterfinals, doomed by a slow skater who might not have been on the ice if Davis was available. The loss denied Hedrick a chance to go after Heiden's record of records, those five golds at Lake Placid.

But Davis, world record holder in the 1,000, wanted to focus on his signature event. And his victory - a third straight individual triumph for the U.S. men at the Olympic oval - means that Hedrick's quest would have come up short, even with a gold in the team pursuit.

After Davis became the first guy to break 1:09 on the slow Turin ice, there were still two more pairs to go - four skaters capable of knocking him out.

Cheek went in the next group and came the closest, fading a bit at the end for a time of 1:09.16. Five days earlier, he dominated the shortest race on the schedule and donated his $25,000 bonus to a charity run by speedskating icon Johann Olav Koss.

This time, he'll hand over a $15,000 check to Koss. Dutch stars Wennemars and Jan Bos went in the final pair, but neither caught the Americans. Wennemars grabbed the bronze in 1:09.32.

"I'm just very happy about my race," Davis said. "More than anything, the things I trained for, I was right about."

Davis showed no immediate emotion after the last two skaters failed to beat his time. He was cooling down in the warmup lane, skating slowly with his arms behind his back.

Finally, he smiled and waved to the crowd, picking up a stuffed bear that a fan tossed on the ice. As he came to the other end of the rink, Davis found Wennemars waiting. The friendly rivals gave each other a big hug in front of the orange-clad, predominantly Dutch crowd, prompting the biggest cheer of the night.

"I like him as a person, I like him as a speedskater," Wennemars said. "What the United States thinks about him doesn't matter because Shani is the Olympic champion, so he is right."

Davis, wearing a Chicago White Sox cap afterward, grew up wanting to skate. He shrugged off friends who wondered why a black kid from the city of Michael Jordan and Da Bears would want to don a tight-fitting suit and compete with a bunch of white dudes in a fringe sport.

"Maybe I can be the Michael Jordan of speedskating," he said.

His choice of sports wouldn't be the last time he bucked the norm.

Davis' mother, Cherie, has a long-running feud with the folks at U.S. Speedskating, believing they worked against her only child when he was younger because of the color of his skin. The organization says that's not so, but Davis doesn't train with the national program, frequently complains about a lack of marketing opportunities and gladly lets his mother fight his battles.

He's not even sure that being the first black to win an individual winter gold is that big a deal because of speedskating's obscurity outside of the Olympics.

"It's a breakthrough," Davis said, "but it's what people make of it."

He seemed to be doing his own thing in Turin, avoiding the media and the rest of the team. There was even talk he would skip the medalist news conference, though he showed up and stayed long past the allotted time.

"If he feels it's him against the rest of the world, then it's him who pitted himself against the world," American teammate Casey FitzRandolph said.

Vonetta Flowers became the first black to capture winter gold at the Salt Lake City Games four years ago. She was a pusher on the two-woman bobsled team, someone who helps get the machine going and hops along for the ride.

Davis won this gold entirely on his own.

"If you put your mind to it and you believe it, you can achieve it," he said. "You cannot give up - even if the road is a tough road."

http://sports.iwon.com/news/02182006/v2130.html?PG=home&SEC=news
 
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