Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,794,322 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

KILDOW WINS SIMPLY BY SHOWING UP.


Byline: STEVE DILBECK

SAN SICARIO FRAITEVE, Italy - Maybe it didn't make a lot of sense unless you knew her. Always the aggressor AGGRESSOR, crim. law. He who begins, a quarrel or dispute, either by threatening or striking another. No man may strike another because he has threatened, or in consequence of the use of any words. , forever fearless, consistently positive.

This was something else, though, something that couldn't be bothered by everyday logic, that confronted common sense.

Lindsey Kildow wasn't having any of it, but in the end that shouldn't have been a surprise.

Her hip was bruised bruise  
v. bruised, bruis·ing, bruis·es

v.tr.
1.
a. To injure the underlying soft tissue or bone of (part of the body) without breaking the skin, as by a blow.

b.
, her back in sharp pain. Forty-eight hours earlier she had been airlifted by helicopter to a Turin hospital after a horrific hor·rif·ic  
adj.
Causing horror; terrifying.



[Latin horrificus : horrre, to tremble + -ficus, -fic.
 fall in a downhill practice run.

Yet there she was Wednesday, standing at the top of the women's downhill, preparing to test her body like never before, refusing to give in to the pain, to classic wisdom that said she really should be healing in bed.

``It is difficult going from the hospital bed to the starting gate starting gate
n. Sports
1. A series of stalls with interconnected doors that open simultaneously at the beginning of a race.

2.
,'' Kildow said. ``But I wasn't worried that I'd forgotten anything.''

Kildow, 21, couldn't be sure how her body would hold up Wednesday in the downhill, but it never occurred to her not to find out.

``Not racing wasn't an option,'' she said. ``That was a last resort. I wasn't even thinking about not racing at all.''

She took what therapy she could, received medication for pain and inflammation. It's inconceivable she was near top condition, yet she had to find out, had to discover how she could respond.

``It was important to know I could do it,'' Kildow said. ``I believed in myself.

``I had such a good feeling. I just had to try it. This is the Olympics.''

So, like defending Olympic champion Carole Montillet-Carles of France, who also was injured in·jure  
tr.v. in·jured, in·jur·ing, in·jures
1. To cause physical harm to; hurt.

2. To cause damage to; impair.

3.
 Monday during a practice run, Kildow took the lift up San Sicario Fraiteve to await AWAIT, crim. law. Seems to signify what is now understood by lying in wait, or way-laying.  her turn down the mountain.

Down below in the crowd her mother, Linda, waited, uncertain what to expect.

``I don't think she's nervous,'' Linda said. ``She's probably the most cool person I've ever known.''

Her mother was flying to Italy when her daughter lost control on a bump, went airborne and landed hard on her back.

``I really don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 what happened,'' Lindsey said. ``All I remember is being in my tuck and suddenly looking back at the gate.''

Her mother rushed to the hospital after her plane landed. The news had to be frightening, but there was relief when she saw her at the hospital.

``Once I saw her and she was in such good spirits and she looked so good ... I knew Lindsey was OK,'' Linda said. ``I don't know how you could do it. I don't know how you could keep wanting it that badly. I couldn't do that. I'm just in awe of her.''

Kildow had grown close to two-time Olympic gold Olympic Gold is the official video game of the XXV Olympic Summer Games, hosted by Barcelona, Spain in 1992. It was released for the Sega consoles, Mega Drive/Genesis and Master System, and Sega's handheld, Game Gear.  medalist Picabo Street Picabo Street (born April 3, 1971, in Triumph, Idaho) is an American skier, now retired and living in Park City, Utah. She was raised on a small farm in Triumph, several miles southeast of Sun Valley, Idaho, where she learned to ski and race.  during her training, and Street tried to help her through her setback setback

In architecture, a steplike recession in the profile of a high-rise building. Usually dictated by building codes to allow sunlight to reach streets and lower floors, the building must take another step back from the street for every specified added height interval.
.

``She supported me and cried with me,'' Kildow said. ``She just said, 'I know you can do it. You can medal.' ''

But at the top of the downhill, it was just Kildow. Just a young woman who had almost exploded ex·plode  
v. ex·plod·ed, ex·plod·ing, ex·plodes

v.intr.
1. To release mechanical, chemical, or nuclear energy by the sudden production of gases in a confined space:
 upon the World Cup scene the past two years, now fighting questions and doubts she had never expected.

``I was just worried my body wouldn't be able to hold up, but it did,'' she said. ``I told myself, 'Just don't think about it, just go.' ''

And so she did, attacking the slope, flying down the mountain. Her time was very good, if less than what she would have hoped prior to the accident.

The body held, the back did not give in, her nerves did not desert her.

``I was just a little nervous going through the bumps bumps

a term used to describe a variety of papulonodular dermatoses in horses, including 'heat bumps', 'feed bumps', 'protein bumps', 'wheat bumps' and others. No specific disease or etiology has been assigned to the term and veterinary dermatologists wish it would disappear from use.
 where I crashed,'' she said.

She finished in 1:57.78, good enough to tie for eighth. There would be no medal this time, but there was victory nonetheless.

``I'm just so happy she finished,'' Linda said. ``She looked tentative, but knowing what she went through, I thought it was a good finish.''

Her time was 1.29 seconds behind Austrian winner Michaela Dorfmeister Michaela Dorfmeister (born 25 March, 1973 in Vienna) is a professional alpine skier from Austria. Her specialities are both the Downhill and Super-G disciplines, although she skis in and has had success in Giant Slalom. , a veteran star who had never won Olympic gold and is retiring after this season.

It was a sweet moment for Dorfmeister, yet she took a moment to reflect on her American competitor.

``She has magic knees,'' Dorfmeister said. ``I think it's a miracle It's a Miracle was a television show that aired on PAX-TV (now Independent Television) between September 6, 1998 and September 1, 2004.[1] Initially hosted by Richard Thomas[2], and later by Roma Downey, [3]  she's already skiing, and she did a good job.''

France's Montillet-Carles also completed her run, but her 28th-place finish was 4.54 seconds behind Dorfmeister.

Kildow walked stiffly after the race was over, her back still in obvious pain. She has four more races she can run. If it's uncertain whether she will compete in Friday's combined, she fully expects to ski again at these Olympics.

``I want to get a medal,'' she said. ``I still have other races. Don't give up on me yet.''

She has already triumphed, already pushed herself when it would have been easy to let the downhill pass. It's the one thing that makes perfect sense.

CAPTION(S):

2 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color) Lindsey Kildow, injured in a crash two days earlier, skis to a tie for eighth place Wednesday in the women's downhill.

Thomas Kienzle/Associated Press

(2 -- color) American Lindsey Kildow pauses after completing the women's downhill Wednesday in San Sicario Fraiteve, Italy.

Luca Bruno/Associated Press
COPYRIGHT 2006 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Sports
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Feb 16, 2006
Words:881
Previous Article:INSPIRATIONAL SLAM-DUNK HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS MOTIVATE KIDS TO GET FIT.(U)
Next Article:9 DVD PIRATES ARRESTED FOR SALES ON TRAINS COUNTERFEITS INCLUDE FILMS BEING SHOWN IN THEATERS.(Business)



Related Articles
FUND BACKS WOMEN IN TECHNOLOGY.(News)
Several eras departing with Heinonen.(Columns)
OSAA redistricting will help balance.(Sports)(Despite the increased travel distance, the changes for next year should be a positive for most teams)
CRASH COURSE: ATHLETES ARE INJURED IN SPILLS AMERICANS KILDOW, RETROSI ARE AMONG THOSE HURT IN FALLS.(Sports)
PRIME VIEWING TODAY'S TV HIGHLIGHTS.(Sports)
PRIME VIEWING TODAY'S TV HIGHLIGHTS.(Sports)
SKIING: U.S. HAS A MEDAL NEGLECTER SKI TEAM, LED BY MILLER, FALLS SHORT AGAIN.(Sports)
PRIME VIEWING TODAY'S TV HIGHLIGHTS.(Sports)
PAVAROTTI, FLYING TOMATO WIN BIG.(Sports)
BRIEFLY.(Sports)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles