Bronzed, for now
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Danette Goulet
It seems as unusual as a surfer from Ohio or a snowboarder from
Florida.
Rusty Smith was born and raised in sunny Southern California, but he’s
spent the past 10 years in the bitter cold of ice rinks perfecting his
skills.
Now, at 22 Smith has realized a dream: He came home from Salt Lake
City with an Olympic bronze medal for 500-meter short-track speed
skating.
“My initial reaction was ‘Wow, I almost won’ -- then I realized I did
win,” he said. “I went there to win a medal and I have one.”
But Smith’s first thoughts of this year’s Winter Olympic games are not
of his performance.
“It’s an awesome feeling to walk into the Olympic ceremonies wearing
U.S. stuff, with the American Flag in front of you,” he said, a note of
awe still in his voice weeks after the fact. “Being able to skate with my
country’s name on my leg in front of 15,000 people, it’s amazing, and to
be able to share it with millions of people in the U.S.”
The rush doesn’t stop there for Smith, who said he heard that his
Olympic performance inspired people who had never even seen ice to try
the sport.
Growing up in Sunset Beach, the small beach community nestled between
Huntington and Seal Beach, Smith didn’t see ice larger than the cube
variety until he was 12 years old.
That was when his mother took him to the ice rink.
“Two days later I tried speed skating,” he said.
Once he started, it never occurred to him to stop.
He skated in clubs and kept moving up through the sport. At the age of
15 he moved part-time to Lake Placid, N.Y., where he lived and trained
with other young Olympic hopefuls. When he was in California he attended
Ocean View High School.
“It’s pretty much consumed my whole life,” he said.
After the time in New York, it was back home before getting into the
Olympic training program in Colorado Springs, Colo., where he lived and
trained with 15 other Olympic skaters.
In the 1998 Olympics Smith placed 13th in the 1000-meter race and 22nd
in the 500-meter event.
He was not considered a top contender heading into Salt Lake, but
during the last 500-meter race, he led the skaters for the first four
laps of the four-and-half-lap run.
“I got beat. Some look at that as failure, but I’m one of the best in
the world,” he said of his bronze medal victory.
Despite the travel and extended stays in New York and Colorado, Smith
considers Southern California home.
When here he lives in Sunset Beach with his mom, or with friends in
Newport Beach and works at Home Depot on Warner Avenue in Huntington
Beach, next door to his alma mater.
His friends from Home Depot were excited about his win, but are even
more thrilled to have him back, said Noel Tran, who said she screamed and
hugged him upon his return.
“He’s really a great guy,” Tran said. “We got to know each other off
the clock and he became like a brother to me.”
Although skating consumed much of his life, Tran said he kept it
separate, like most people try to separate their work and personal life.
“It’s like he has three lives,” she said. “I don’t know how he
manages, but he manages.”
Home Depot’s Olympic athlete work program, which allows Smith to work
20 hours while getting paid for 40, helped him to juggle all three. It
gave him much-needed time for his training, which starts with 18 hours of
pure skating a week and also includes strength and weight-training.
“It’s strange to think of him as an Olympian, he’s just Rusty,” Tran
said with a shrug.
Now back in Southern California for good, Smith said he plans to
reassess his future and his goals, but future Olympic medals -- gold
medals -- definitely have a place in it.
“My goal is still is an Olympic gold medal -- multiple,” he said.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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