kurtfiles

 
Home
Profile
Record
Articles
News
Photo
Stars on Ice
Music
References
Miscellaneous
 
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2017
2018
2019
2020
2022
2023



Browning reminisces after induction into Hall

Source: Slam! Skating
Date: March 23, 2006
Author: Neil Stevens
CALGARY (CP) - Kurt Browning wasn't given an opportunity to address the crowd when he was honoured during a ceremony at the world figure skating championships Thursday as a new member of the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame.

So, in an interview afterwards, he was asked what words he might have chosen.

"I would have quoted my dad who said, 'You're the luckiest kid in the world because you're doing for a living what you did as a kid. You make in a year what I made in my life and, if you let it go to your head I'll kick you with my cowboy boots on,"' Browning said.

He's never been on the receiving end of Dewey Browning's leather. Although he quit competitive skating in 1994, he remains an ultimate entertainer in show tours.

"I hope that it looks like I appreciate my life, and the best way to show that is to skate my ass off every time I perform," he said. "I love figure skating."

Browning sat in with the ABC television crew covering the men's final Thursday night.

The native of nearby Caroline, Alta., learned his craft at Edmonton's Royal Glenora Club with coach Michael Jiranek. He was the first skater to land a four-revolution jump in competition, which he did at the world championships in 1988 in Budapest, and he won world titles in 1989 in Paris, 1990 in Halifax, 1991 in Munich and 1993 in Prague.

A plaque bearing his image will be placed in the sport's Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs, Colo.

"I've stuck around long enough and now they're asking me politely to leave, I think," he said, in his usual self-effacing manner, of the honour.

He thought he might never be selected because he never won an Olympic medal.

"I guessed it was the Olympic thing, that there was none of this hardware around my neck," he said, holding the medal he was presented with Thursday. "But I've had a great professional career . . . with memorable programs and funny programs and things that people like to hold onto. I think that's why I'm here, I think."

It's possible the four world titles had something to do with it.

"I think it helped but it seems so long ago that I think I've forgotten about them," he said. "The last 10 or 15 years, for me it's been about entertaining. I feel that's why I'm (in the Hall).

"But being at these worlds has sort of made me feel better about those titles again, seeing how hard these kids are working and how much pressure there is. Your memory changes things and it becomes just a line under your picture, but today it's not a line under my picture. It's real, and I feel very proud."

He waved to his dad, his brother and his sister-in-law as he left the ice.

"I was born two hours from here," he said. "This is where (the ceremony) should be, and it's a medal. I love that it's just not a plaque. I love that it's a medal."

He turns 40 on June 18, and another tour is soon to begin.

"What I didn't expect was to be 40 and still doing it," he said. "To be a part of this sport, still, is a huge gift, then to be acknowledged by your peers is everything."

Skating at the world-class level at first in teammate Brian Orser's shadow was of great benefit to him, he said.

"I just assumed the judges and everyone else was going to show me respect because I was Brian Orser's teammate," he explained. "That mentality was huge.

"In Budapest, I knew I was going to land that quad. I hung out with Brian that afternoon on purpose. He was shopping for vases. Who wants to do that? But I hung out with Brian Orser because I just wanted that energy."

A video showing him skating to world titles was shown, and the balding champ giggled over his hairstyles.

"I would like the worst haircut I had back again," he said. "That on in '91, that was a terrible haircut, but today I wanted it back."

In the same arena in 1988, he competed in the first of his three Olympics.

"I expected the Olympic Games to be something exotic, something far off," he recalled. "To get in my 1973 70-foot long Buick LeSabre and drive two hours and be at the Olympics was a disappointing to me - until I got here. All that changed 180 degrees."

The previous autumn, he'd competed in the annual Skate Canada International meet in the Saddledome.

"That was a huge step in my career. I almost landed the quad right out there," he said, pointing towards the ice. "Calgary has been really good to me."

During the closing ceremonies of the 1988 Games, Donald Jackson - Canada's first men's world champion in 1962 - hopped out of the sled in which he was riding to rush over to say something to Browning in the McMahon Stadium infield.

"He said, 'Go to Budapest and land the quad and it'll change your life.' He stopped the parade to tell me that. It took two seconds and he ran back over to his sled."

The rest is history. Two of his greatest rivals were Viktor Petrenko internationally and Elvis Stojko nationally.

"I loved competing," said Browning. "I loved the fact Viktor Petrenko was an easy guy to compete against.

"I had so much respect for him. We had kind of an honour code thing. He made me so much better than I would have been.

"Elvis was intimidating, and it wasn't as much fun to compete against Elvis. Elvis was like, you didn't sleep the night before."

The Canadian skater who most impresses him today is Joannie Rochette, he said. She has a physicality in her style, and has such great jumps, and something else now, he said.

"It has melded so nicely with this new maturity. I'm becoming a bigger fan every day."

Any regrets?

"I wish I'd done a triple toe instead of a triple flip (in the short at the 1994 Olympics) in Lillehammer," he said, adding he also wished he hadn't fallen on his double Axel in Albertville, France, at the 1992 Olympics.

Doesn't matter now.

He talked about stopping at a frozen pond in Ontario while driving home alone to Toronto two years ago.

"I saw a lake and stopped and skated for 2 1-2 hours. As I was skating backwards I was gouging the ice out, and the ice would come up and make rainbows because the sun was shining.

"It sounds like a romance novel, but skating is going to be with me always. After all this stuff is done and you guys don't want to talk to me anymore and nobody cares, I can still - if I'm able - get on ice and skate.

"It's a gift. I hope my kid learns to skate - not great - but I really hope he can learn to appreciate how great skating is. I just love it. I still love it."