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Home not always sweet

Browning knows the pressure atop the world stage on Canadian soil

Source: Calgary Herald
Date: March 20, 2006
Author: George Johnson
There is, warns Kurt Browning, no halfway here. No middle ground.

The sky. Or the abyss.

"It can be your best friend,'' says the four-time World men's figure skating champion. "Or it can be a real . . ."

Skating at home. Sounds homey, soothing. Ennobling, even. Very 'Goodnight John Boy'-ish. Well, think again. Reigning world champ Elvis Stojko couldn't crack the top three in Edmonton 10 years ago. Brian Orser finished second to Scott Hamilton in 1984 in Ottawa and Don Jackson found himself runner-up to Frenchman Alain Giletti in Ottawa in '60.

Home-ice 'advantage'? Maybe Game 7 of a Stanley Cup Final. But in figure skating, in Canada, it can morph into a monster, into the Amityville Horror house.

"It all depends,'' says a voice of experience, "on your mindset.''

Browning won in Halifax in 1990, the middle jewel in his triple crown of World golds, sandwiched between the more exotic locales of Paris and Munich. Which makes him the last. The only, actually.

In seven Worlds held in Canada over the past century, he's the one local-boy-makes-good story in a library of disappointing literature.

Then in '96, after retiring from amateur skating and turning professional, Browning returned to skate an exhibition at the Edmonton Worlds.

Home. Or as damn close to it as he could get, an hour's drive from Caroline. And, well, it was just an exhibition, right?

"Honestly, flying into Edmonton from Toronto, I didn't think it'd be that big a deal. Boy, was I wrong.

"I'm standing there on the ice, waiting for the music, trying to calm myself down, and they're standing. A standing ovation, before the program! It must've blown a micro-chip in my brain. I just kind of short-circuited.

"Because 30 seconds later, after completely messing up a triple axel in the air, I'm on my butt.

"See, skating isn't a reactionary sport. It's a pro-actionary sport -- look, I actually made up a word. It's not like hockey, where you watch video on how to handle another team's powerplay or the pressure they put on the puck. It's just you. Alone. Thanks for coming. With waaay too much time to think. And that's why it's hard. The old paralysis-by-analysis theory.''

At the Pengrowth Saddledome this week, Jeff Buttle will be endeavouring to become the first Canadian to match Browning's feat of 16 years ago. Even eliminating Olympic kingpin Evgeni Plushenko from the mix, that's guaranteed to be a grind.

"I don't know Jeff real well,'' says Browning, in the middle of a skating tour, in Val D'Or, Quebec, this day. "But he seems like a good kid. Kid . . . Kid?! I've got to stop using that word. Makes him sound like an infant and me like some old man.

"Anyway, he seems like a kid who, if he showed up at your door, you'd invite inside and . . . feed.''

Buttle has admitted the requisite hunger is something he's found difficult to summon these past two weeks. Burnout has been always a problematical issue at a post-Olympic Worlds.

Being on home soil doesn't allow for much time to breathe.

"You've got to deal with so much more,'' says Browning. "Everybody knows you, everybody wants to talk to you, everybody's pulling you in this direction or that direction. It can all seem like too much. It can all get in your head.

"If you allow that to happen, you are screwed.

"There's such a crush of emotions. You add the fact that he's one of the favourites, and there's something else to deal with.''

In Halifax, Browning says he just relaxed and went about his business. Being injured heading into the event actually helped him zone in on the task at hand, and in his mind, at least, decompress the pressure.

The rewards were unlike any other he experienced in one of this country's authentically great skating careers.

"To stand on that podium, at the TOP of that podium, and have your mom, your dad, your family, your roommate, your best friend and 12,000 other people all singing O Canada! . . . it's awesome. Absolutely awesome.

"When asked about picking out a highlight of my amateur career, I always say I have four or five. But that one, Halifax, was special. No doubt about it.''

So, as the last, the only, if Kurt Browning could give one piece of advice to Jeff Buttle as this week of homestanding Worlds begins to unfold, it would be . . .?

"Allow it to happen. Sounds simple? It's not. Take what you've learned in the Grand Prixs and the Worlds and the Olympics and put it all to use.

"I mean, you go out and do the triple-axel, triple-toe hundreds of times in a week. So why can't you land it at 7:45 on a particular night?

"Jeff's worked hard to get where he is. This is a special moment for him. He deserves this.

"So if I could tell him something, for what it's worth, it'd be this: Don't stress. Don't overanalyze. Do your Baggar Vance -- just get out of the way and allow it happen.''