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In 1995, Tommy
Moe returned to the course in
Kvitfiel, Norway, on which he'd won
the gold a bit more than a year
earlier. On a stretch of the course
the Norwegians had taken to calling
the "Tommy Moe Channel," he hooked
an edge and crashed, badly tearing
his right anterior cruciate
ligament. Although he was back on
skis within a year, it wasn't until
late in the 1996-97 season that he
began to rediscover his feel for the
snow. Then, true to American
Alpinist form, he sustained another
injury, this time to his hand. He
missed seven weeks, including the
world championships. "I came back to
Jackson," he says, "and I was like
'What's going on?'"
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Still, much as Johnson did in 1988,
Tommy Moe refuses to count himself
out of the Olympic equation four
years down the road. And while
Johnson failed to make the '88 team,
Moe is a virtual lock for this
year's Alpine squad. "I'd be the
first skier ever to win back-to-back
Olympic downhills," he says
hopefully. "So the door is wide
open. I just have to get out there
and do it." Of course, that's
precisely what he hasn't done thus
far: His best finish heading into
1998 was a 15th place in a Super G
held at Beaver Creek, Colorado.
Oddly enough, Moe shares more than
skiing with Johnson. Like his
predecessor, he was something less
than an angel as a kid. A young Bill
Johnson boosted a car and narrowly
averted jail and was bounced from
the U.S. ski team for disciplinary
reasons. A young Tommy Moe was
bounced from the U.S. ski team for
drinking and smoking pot. A short
stint with his father, a
construction worker in Alaska,
convinced Moe that concentrating on
skiing would be in his own best self
interest.
Despite all
his similarities to Johnson, perhaps
past isn't prelude and Moe is indeed
the man to re-write Olympic history.
"From the day I met him, I knew it
was only a matter of time before he
got all his ducks in a row and
started sparking the world in
whatever discipline he chose," says
U.S. skier Picabo Street, herself a
two-time World Cup downhill
champion. "I wasn't surprised in any
way, shape or form with his results
at Lillehammer. I think even at this
late date, it would be unwise to
dismiss Tommy." He can only hope.
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