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Dick Button described
Peggy Fleming as "a unique
combination of athletic ability,
technical control, great style, and
immense musicality."
Fleming started
skating competitively when she was
eleven. Two years later, her coach
was among those killed when a plane
carrying the U. S. figure skating
team crashed in Belgium. She said
later, "For a long time, I didn't
feel like going out there to skate."
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But she kept skating,
and her parents did everything they
could to advance her career. The
family moved to Colorado Springs in
1965 so she could train with Carlo
Fassi and prepare for the high
altitude of Davos, Switzerland,
where the next world championships
were to be held. Her mother designed
and sewed the dresses she wore in
competition.
The 5-foot-3,
109-pound Fleming won five
consecutive U. S. championships,
from 1964 through 1968, and she was
the world champion three years in a
row, from 1966 through 1968. She won
the only gold medal for the U. S.
team at the 1968 Winter Olympics.
Named the Associated
Press female athlete of the year for
her 1968 triumphs, Fleming signed a
long-term $500,000 contract shortly
after the Olympics. She appeared in
her own television specials and also
performed with the Ice Follies and
Holiday
on Ice. Fleming later did figure
skating commentary for ABC
television.
International Women's
Sports Hall of Fame; Olympic Hall of
Fame
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