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Success under pressure is the
measure of a true champion. There
are numerous winners in the world of
sports but the celebrated athletes
are the few who meet the challenge
of pressure time after time. Bonnie
Blair is undoubtedly celebrated as
the speed skater who produces her
best performances when it counts the
most.
Bonnie Blair began her race in the
500 meter event of the 1988 Calgary
Olympics immediately after her rival
Christa Rothenburger of East Germany
set a world record. Not to be
outdone, Bonnie proceeded to skate
the 500 meters faster than any woman
had before or has since, capturing
the gold medal in a world record
time of 39.1. This record stood for
5 years until March 1994, when at
the age of 30, Blair met her
ultimate goal of shattering the 39
second mark with a time of 38.99...>>> Book
Bonnie Blair for Your Event
Four years later at the 1992
Albertville Olympics, with the world
watching and a nation counting on
her, Blair came through again. She
blew away the field in the 500
meters, defeating her nearest
competitor, Ye Qiaobo of China, by
18 hundredths of a second. The
victory made Blair the first woman
in Olympic history to win
consecutive gold medals in the
event, and the first American woman
to win consecutive Winter Olympic
gold medals. She made history again
in the 1,000 meters, edging out Ye
by just two hundredths of a second
to win her second gold of the Games,
and her fourth Olympic medal
overall.
In 1994, Blair skated in her final
Winter Olympics in Lillehammer,
Norway. Supported by 60 plus members
of “The Blair Bunch”, Bonnie once
again swept the sprint races winning
gold medals in both the 500 and
1,000 meter events. By capturing her
sixth career Olympic medal, Bonnie
emerged as U.S. history’s most
decorated Winter athlete, as well as
the record holder for the most gold
medals (5) won by an American woman
in any sport.
The United States Olympic
Committee’s Woman Speed skater of
the Year from 1985 to 1992, Bonnie
also captured the world record for
overall points in the World Sprint
Speed Skating Championships in 1989
by defeating defending champion and
former Olympic opponent Christa
Rothenburger of East Germany. She
eclipsed that mark at a World Cup
event in Davos in January 1992,
shortly thereafter, in Calgary in
April 1992, and finally again in
Calgary in January, 1994.
As if competitive skating wasn’t
enough to fill her agenda, Bonnie
was a member of the 1989 Sundance
Fruit Juicer Cycling Tour, on a team
with 1988 Olympic bronze medalist
cyclist Connie Paraskevin Young. In
the spotlight as a novice, Bonnie
displayed the potential to reach
world-class level, placing high in
several sprint competitions, and
attracting media attention wherever
she pedaled.
>>> Book Bonnie Blair for Your Event
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