<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9201290217
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
920803
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, August 03, 1992
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
BARCELONA '92
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1992, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
DIMAS LAST BUT NOT LEAST AMONG OLYMPIC HEROES
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BARCELONA, Spain --  Now the flashbulbs were snapping like crazy. He had
to laugh at that. Last summer, someone shot a flash as he ran toward the
vault, right in his eyes, and, blinded, he missed  the vault completely and
landed on his head. He was knocked unconscious. The medics had to help him
out.

  You could have seen that on every blooper show from here to Albuquerque.
It was the most  famous thing Trent Dimas had ever done.

  Until Sunday night.
  You wait for greatness. You wait for heroes. And you wait for the perfect
Olympic moment. So here was Dimas, a 21-year- old gymnast  with a full
flashing smile and dark, wavy hair that had Spanish girls cooing when he
walked past, and here he was, just sitting around, no one paying attention. He
was like an extra in a "Batman" movie.  The setting was big, but who was he?
Just another American gymnast.
  And American gymnasts -- especially the men -- had done a pretty big belly
flop at these Games.
  So he waited. He stood up.  He sat down. He had qualified for only one
event in the apparatus finals, and wouldn't you know it? It was the last one.
The high bar. Dimas had come to the arena at 5 p.m. and now it was almost
midnight,  and he still hadn't gone.
  "Guy could have gone out for a hamburger and had time to digest it,"
someone joked.
  Trent Dimas was the last American on the last event on the last night of
gymnastics.  All across Barcelona, there seemed to be more important things to
see. Jackie Joyner-Kersee was winning her heptathlon gold medal at Estadi
Olimpic. The U.S. boxers were grumbling over a rob job out  in Badalona. The
Dream Team was busy slicing up the Spaniards in front of the hometown crowd.
Gymnastics? Who needed it? If there were a handful of U.S. reporters there, it
was a lot.
  Now it was  after midnight. The escalators had stopped their climb up
Montjuic. People were hailing cabs outside. The arena was half-empty. A group
of Americans stuck around, waving a flag.
  Dimas ran through  his routine in his mind, the back flips, the release
moves. Finally, the last American gymnast in the last event on the last night
heard his name called over the loudspeakers.
  "TRENT DIMAS, USA."
  And somewhere, the sky began to open.
 Unbelievable performance 
  "I can't believe it!" he kept saying over and over, when it was done, when
he had pulled off the impossible and won a gold medal,  the first American
gymnastics gold in a non-boycotted Games since 1932. "I can't believe it! I
can't believe it!"
  He hugged his coach, Ed Burch, who has been with him since he was kid. He
grabbed  his head in disbelief. He looked to the stands. He hugged his coach
again. "Numb!" he said. "I am totally numb!"
  What had he done, this New Mexico kid who skipped college to concentrate
on the Olympics?  Just the most mesmerizing high-bar routine of the Games,
complete with three release moves, including one where he lets go, does a back
flip and somehow finds the bar between his legs. Don't ask me how.  He owned
that bar. His body was wooden when he needed it straight, and a rubber pretzel
when he needed it bent. He swung with such force, it seemed he would lift off
into space. He scissor- kicked. He  slid through his own arms.
  And when he finally let go for good, he tumbled backward twice in mid-air
and landed smack in the middle of history. The place erupted, like an opera
house when the diva  hits her last magnificent note.
  Golden.
  "It all came together when I needed it," Dimas gushed. "After I stuck my
dismount, I was afraid to move. I wanted the judges to see how I stuck it."
  They saw. They were impressed. They gave him a 9.875, the winning mark. An
American? Yes. Although the night belonged to another star from another
country -- the Unified Team's Vitaly Scherbo set  a record for gold medals,
winning the rings, pommel horse, vault and parallel bars -- this one thing,
this last event on the last night of gymnastics, could not be taken away.
  Call it a parting  snapshot.
 From blooper to super 
  These Games, so far, have been a disappointment to some U.S. fans. They
say we're lacking Olympic heroes. They sigh because there are no feel-good
faces to take  into the night, no Mary Lou Rettons or Greg Louganises as there
were in Olympics past.
  Here is a feel-good face, America. Take a look at the kid who barely made
this team, the kid who was blooper  material last summer, who wasn't supposed
to have a chance against the former Soviets and the Chinese.
  Take a look at that smile, that wavy hair -- the whole package looks like
a cross between gymnast  Mitch Gaylord and actor Vincent Spano -- and then
look a little deeper. Look at the eyes moistening on the victory stand. Look
at the lungful of air he exhales. Look at those lips singing along.
  "And the rocket's red glare. . . ."
  That's the Olympics you're seeing there, folks. Last American on the last
event on the last night of his competition. They were flashing the bulbs now,
taking  his picture and capturing the moment. But this time, under all that
hot light, he didn't fall, he didn't blooper and land on his head. He was
standing there, like destiny, and he didn't even blink.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
