Of course, Browning was a great competitor at worlds, but he was never very good at handling the Olympic pressure... Sure he was injured in 92, but in 94?
Kurt said having to withdraw from Divisionals and Canadians because of his back injury prior to the 1992 Olympics actually hurt his Olympic chances more than the injury itself. He just wasn't as prepared as he usually was before a big competition.
As for 1994, there might have been another factor for Kurt other than not being able to handle the Olympic pressure.
I remember a CTV fluff piece which aired, ironically enough, before Kurt's 1994 Olympics SP where Kurt said something along the lines of he didn't need an Olympic medal to be happy. Not that Kurt didn't want to win one, mind you, but if it didn't happen, it wouldn't be the end of the world for him. He also said he didn't think he had the right to feel he needed or deserved anything else on top of everything else he accomplished throughout his career and everyone else he'd met who'd experienced much worse things (losing a child, serious health issues, etc.)
I also remember another interview Kurt did after the 1994 Olympics where he said he considered turning pro after winning 1993 Worlds because in his mind, that's when Kurt felt he'd accomplished everything he wanted to do in his eligible career.
Kurt said he didn't regret competing in the 1994 Olympics, but wondered whether he was 100% in the right competitive frame of mind he needed to be in to win Olympic gold since in his mind, he mentally quit after 1993 Worlds.
I'm not saying Kurt didn't
want to win an Olympic medal or he deliberately sabotaged himself in Lillehammer. I'm just saying there might have been other factors involved other than simply not being able to handle the Olympic pressure.
I guess what I'm trying to say is as devastated as Kurt was over not winning an Olympic medal, he knew, even
before the 1994 Olympics, that it wouldn't be the end of the world for him if he never won one, and the next phase of Kurt's career and the things that
really mattered to him would still be there regardless of whether he won or lost.
A few days ago, I rewatched another Kurt interview from 1997 where he said although a part of him would always wonder "What if..." in regards to the Olympics, he also said he wouldn't trade any of the things he
did accomplish (landing the first quad, his four world titles, his wonderful pro career) for an Olympic medal.
I've seen interviews with other skaters who were still quite upset about their Olympic disappointments several years afterwards, and I think athletes in general tend to be a lot less forgiving over their disappointing competitive experiences than their fans. I know the vast majority of Kurt, Todd, and Michelle's fans don't think any less of them after they didn't win the Olympic medals they wanted!
And as devastated as I was for Kurt when he lost his chance for Olympic gold, the way he handled himself afterwards and the way he was able to put the Olympics in perspective even
before his Lillehammer SP is one of the things I admire most about him...and it's an example I try to follow during my own disappointing experiences in life. I think more athletes and fans in general should try and do the same.
