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News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Column: Ross Rebagliati: Coming 'Round the Mountain of Infamy
Title:Canada: Column: Ross Rebagliati: Coming 'Round the Mountain of Infamy
Published On:2010-01-04
Source:Globe and Mail (Canada)
Fetched On:2010-01-25 23:37:51
ROSS REBAGLIATI: COMING 'ROUND THE MOUNTAIN OF INFAMY

After a tainted triumph in snowboarding at the 1998 Olympic Games,
Ross Rebagliati is finally gaining ground in his quest for respect

Ross Rebagliati knows what you think of him. He's "that guy" -- the
dude who tested positive for marijuana in 1998 after winning the gold
medal for Canada in snowboarding, the first year the sport was
included in the Olympic Games.

And he knows that mention of it will always be there, often in the
first sentence of articles written about him.

It doesn't matter that he had 17 billionths of a gram in his blood --
the result of secondhand smoke, he said -- or that days later he got
the medal back when it was discovered in the appeal process that
marijuana was not on the list of banned substances.

But it's only now, more than 10 years later, that he is managing to
fight his way back from the infamy that he says devastated his life.

He has written a book, Off the Chain: An Insider's History of
Snowboarding , released in November, in which he puts the issue in
perspective and takes the high road, describing his love for the
sport from its early days in the late eighties, when snowboarders
were banned from ski hills, to its inclusion in the Olympics.

"If I had written this book any earlier, it would have been much
darker," he says.

In the fall, when approached by the federal Liberal party, he jumped
at the chance to run as a candidate in the next election in the
Okanagan-Coquihalla riding in B.C., currently held by Stockwell Day.

The Vancouver native also speaks openly about how the Olympic
committee continues to shun him. "They hate me," he says unequivocally
while in Toronto recently on book tour. "They called me a liar. They
didn't want to give me my medal back. They never use images of me."

Is he bitter?

"Oh yes," he practically snorts. "Because they use images of athletes
who won medals, and they deserve it. You don't get anything for being
an Olympian."

The assumption that Olympic medal winners in Canada make a lot of
money is "a huge misconception."

Mr. Rebagliati was not asked to be a torchbearer in next month's
Winter Olympics, despite filling out an application, until his
exclusion became the subject of a Twitter fight between the CBC's Rick
Mercer and Heritage Minister James Moore after the TV host asked Mr.
Rebagliati if he was going to be involved. "The call came after that,"
Mr. Rebagliati says. "And I'm really excited."

It has been a long road to this particular podium of
self-worth.

"I had PTSD after," the 38-year-old states bluntly, referring to
post-traumatic stress disorder, commonly suffered by soldiers
returning from the battlefield.

"I came back from the Olympics in Nagano as somebody known for
something other than athletics. I wasn't able to function normally. I
didn't have the mental capacity to do anything."

He credits his wife, Alexandra, with helping him pick up the
pieces.

"My wife was really the beginning of the rest of my life," he says
without hesitation. He proposed to her two weeks after they met at a
charity hockey event in Toronto in 2004. A nurse who also had a degree
in marketing and public relations, she "was able to rebrand my brand.
Alexandra just wanted me to continue doing my snowboarding thing and
live up to the celebrity and use the gold medal for positive reasons,
for kids and stuff like that, rather than stashing it away and hiding
it and hopefully never seeing it by accident because it didn't
represent anything good to me. It represented the demise of my life."

Almost all of his endorsement deals dried up post-Nagano. Even the
snowboarding community, known for its renegade reputation, shunned
him, he says.

His wife, who is seven years his junior and the mother of their
six-month-old son, encouraged him to do more charity work. He opened a
snowboarding camp. His father-in-law, an American lawyer, helped him
get off the no-fly list in the U.S., on which he had been placed
because of his positive-drug test.

Having always supported himself as a real-estate agent, he tried to
use his name in other ways -- for possible reality shows or in the
media. All those efforts, including a bid to provide commentary on TV
for the Olympics, have been met with silence.

Starting in 2006, when Vancouver's bid for the 2010 Olympics was
successful, Mr. Rebagliati spent two years training to make a comeback
in his hometown event, on hills where he had spent his youth. But he
found it hard to get support from sponsors and couldn't afford the
investment required to build up points through racing on circuits
around the world -- the system by which athletes qualify to be Olympic
contenders.

"I was disappointed, but I was also relieved," he says. "It's a very
stressful and anxiety-ridden affair to go for the Olympics."

Still, he had regained his desire to prevail -- even if only to win
back his good name. In 2006, he sued CTV for misappropriation of image
when a blue-eyed, blond-haired snowboarder, who had won Olympic gold,
was introduced in the drama series Whistler .

"The character was a real loser. I didn't like it that people
would think that's me. And I felt I had been ripped off already -- and
to be ripped off again?"

The suit was settled out of court; he won't disclose the amount he was
paid.

The idea of running for political office came as a surprise, but he
has always been interested in political issues and in the game.

"It's not like if someone says something negative about me that I'll
be shocked the way I was when I came back from the Olympics," he
explains. "I was getting death threats. So was my family. Some
Canadians thought I was the worst thing ever."

And even though he is unsure how his reputation might help or hinder
him in politics, he is ready for the challenge.

"People think they know me because of what they read, because of that
first sentence," he says. "But I feel I am just like everybody else,
and I've had good times and bad times."

With that, he takes his Olympic gold medal out of a little pouch
clipped to his belt, and places it on the table.

Why is he showing me that? I ask.

"Because I knew you'd like to see it." He smiles proudly. "People
do."
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