Kurt the king enshrined: Alberta great revolutionized figure skating
Source: |
Calgary Herald |
Date: |
January 31, 2000 |
Author: |
Paul Magrini |
Copyright 2000 Southam Inc.
Chris Relke, Calgary Herald
Kurt Browning waves to the crowd Sunday
after his induction into the Canadian
Figure Skating Hall of Fame.
After thundering on to the scene in men's figure skating 12 years
ago, Kurt Browning was immortalized Sunday on the same ice surface that
once introduced him to a nation.
The Alberta-born skater, who revolutionized the sport as the
first-ever to complete a quadruple jump, was officially inducted into
the Canadian Figure Skating Hall of Fame during an on-ice ceremony at
the Canadian Airlines Saddledome.
The Caroline product joined five-time Canadian pairs champions
Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler and builder Tom Collins as this
year's Hall inductees on the final day of the 2000 Bank of Montreal
Canadian championships.
''In our era, we didn't get into (skating) because we were going to
be in a hall, or on a wall, or famous,'' said Browning, who now resides
in Toronto.
''Really, it was because it was fun to be at the rink and great to
skate. And that's going to be a challenge for the kids now to take on to
the ice.''
Browning, a four-time world champion who essentially started his
incredible career with an eight-place finish at the 1988 Olympic Games
in Calgary, joins 28 other athletes in the Hall -- including greats such
as Brian Orser, Karen Magnussen and Toller Cranston.
''It's an aging process; and it's a wonderful way to age,'' said
Browning during a sometimes comical address to the media after the
ceremony. ''Some of those names are really important to me. And now
we're all on the same wall.''
Collins is the 10th person to be inducted in the builder's
category. He continues his involvement in the sport as a promoter of ice
shows, most of which Browning takes part in.
''This is possibly the biggest thrill I've ever had in my life,''
said the Kirkland Lake, Ont., native who lives in Minneapolis. ''To get
this type of recognition is beyond my wildest dreams.''
After an extremely successful amateur career which produced five
national pairs championships and two Olympic medals, Brasseur and Eisler
also continue to skate together on Collins' international tour.
''It feels very good to have given our part to the CFSA, the skating
world and Canada and for them to acknowledge us after all of the things
that we've done,'' said Eisler.
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