<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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<UID>
0202210429
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
020221
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Thursday, February 21, 2002
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo MIKE SEGAR/Reuters;Photo JOHN MacDOUGALL/AFP (above);KIMIMASA MAYAMA/Reuters (right)
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


American Apolo Anton Ohno cheers the official news: He is the gold medalist in
the 1,500 meters, after a Korean was disqualified for cross-tracking. Ohno
will race in two more events Saturday.

Korean Dong-Sung Kim has the lead on American Apolo Anton Ohno in the 1,500
meters, but the Korean was disqualified for cross-tracking. The Korean then
threw his flag in disgust, and Ohno celebrated his first gold medal.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM FREE PRESS COLUMNIST
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SALT LAKE 2002 WINTER OLYMPICS. SIDEBAR ATTACHED
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2002, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
OH, YES!: OHNO FINALLY GETS HIS GOLD -- ON A DISQUALIFICATION
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
SALT LAKE CITY -- Blame your parents. If they had named you Apolo when you
popped from the womb, then you, too, might have been out there Wednesday
night, with a yellow crash helmet, a tuft of hair on your chin, a glint of
teenaged cockiness in your eye, flying over an ice track with five other
skaters breathing on your speed suit and knowing something almost nobody else
watching knew.

That you'd won even when you'd lost.

You, too, if named Apolo, might be forgiven an adolescence of minor trouble
and low-life friends, underachieving at school and getting chunky on junk
food, generally aspiring to do little more than play Sean Penn's character in
"Fast Times at Ridgemont High."

You, too, might have found some heaven-sent purpose in speedskating just when
your life was going nowhere. You, too, might have survived being a national
champion at age 14 and an Olympic trials washout at age 15.

You, too, might be on the cover of Sports Illustrated, in a ripped speed suit
and a menacing look. You, too, might be at that enviable age when a nod or a
smirk brings the same adoring sigh from the girls.

You, too, might consider "whatever" a full sentence.

And yes, you, too, might have had that ultimate coolness at the conclusion of
the men's short-track speedskating 1,500-meter finals of the Salt Lake
Olympics, smack in the middle of a raucous arena full of booing fans who
thought you'd finished second behind a Korean skater who was waving his arms
and celebrating and acting for all intents and purposes like the gold
medalist.

But he wasn't.

And you knew it.

You knew what was coming. It was coming as surely as a boulder rolls down a
mountain.

"LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, WE HAVE A DISQUALIFICATION -- NO. 350, DONG-SUNG KIM,
FROM KOREA -- THAT MAKES THE WINNER AND GOLD MEDALIST . . ."

Well, what did you expect? If ever a name seemed destined for an Olympic
podium.

"APOLO OHNO!"

He grows up

"They can just go throw me in the desert and bury me," Apolo Anton Ohno said
after his first Olympic gold medal. "I've got a gold. I'm good now."

"Did you know the disqualification was coming?" he was asked.

"Oh, yeah," he said.

Oh, yeah. Where else but in short-track speedskating could something like this
happen? Last weekend, Ohno had been the victim of the sport's funny twists,
having led in the 1,000 meters just a turn from the finish, when a
chain-reaction crash sent him and others into the wall, and let the last-place
skater, Steven Bradbury from Australia, claim the gold.

In that race, Ohno slid across the line on his stomach to take the silver. He
accepted it gracefully, saying "that's the sport."

Now, Wednesday night, he seemed -- for about two minutes -- to be silver
again. But the Korean skater had crossed into Ohno's imaginary "lane" -- just
as Ohno was charging beautifully from fifth place toward the lead. Ohno lifted
and threw his hands up to indicate he'd been thwarted, then dropped into his
tuck and raced the rest of the way.

"I waited for the right move, took a chance, stayed in the back and saved some
energy," he said. "When he came over on me, I knew that something would be
called."

Eventually. And when the stunning announcement came, Ohno leaped in the air,
raised his arms, then fell to track, as the pro-American crowd erupted in
deafening cheers, even as the Korean skater threw his flag down in disgust,
stared in disbelief and kicked the ice in contempt.

Booing? Kicking? Cheering? Screaming?

Well, they said short track reminded you of roller derby.

Now it looked and sounded like it, too.

The weirdest races

"This is an unbelievable feeling," Ohno said afterward in the press room.
"There's really no words. No words."

Understandable. Ohno already had the strangest silver medal in these games.
Now he has the strangest gold.

Here, in a thrilling 13 1/2-lap race, in a rock 'n' roll atmosphere, in the
heart of prime-time NBC coverage, was the new pride of grunge city, the son of
a Japanese hairstylist father who raised his son by himself and once left him
eight days in a deserted cabin to think about what he wanted to be.

And you know what's funny? He seems to grow up at these Salt Lake Games. His
silver last weekend gave him all the opportunity he needed to complain, to act
like a petulant 19-year-old. But he didn't. He was good-natured. He was
gracious. He congratulated the winner.

And Wednesday night, standing on the podium, looking like a wintry Peter Pan,
the crowd congratulated him, and he looked, dare we say it, wholesome?

Throw him in the desert and bury him. Well. Not yet. He still has two races
left Saturday, and given his first two, he'll snag NBC's prime time for sure.

But nothing will ever match his first gold medal, the culmination of a long,
strange trip, with a short, strange announcement.

And one day, when he's all grown up with a son of his own, he'll show him the
tape of Wednesday night, when he held his medal high and the crowd exploded.

"Daddy, is that you?" the little boy will say.

"Yes, Hercules," he'll answer, "it is."

Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "Albom in
the Afternoon" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760).



THE RULES

The disqualification rules for short-track speedskating:

Intentionally pushing, obstructing or colliding with another racer calls for
the offender's disqualification. Improperly crossing the course --
cross-tracking -- is also prohibited.

Lead skater has the right of way and the passing skater must avoid body
contact.

Skaters also are disqualified for changing lanes or altering their course at
the finish. Competitors are required to skate in a straight line from the end
of the corner to the finish line. Veering inside or outside to maintain the
lead is grounds for disqualification.
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
APOLO ANTON OHNO;SPEED SKATING;OLYMPIC
</KEYWORDS>
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