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Kwan's Olympic ends on a sad note (AP) Updated: 2006-02-13 10:20
TURIN, Italy - Dressed in black, her eyes red and swollen from crying,
Michelle Kwan flashed none of the spark and charisma the world has come to
admire. Her smile did little to hide her misery. "I've had a great career. I've
been very lucky," she said, pausing to compose herself.
Everywhere but at the Olympics.
 Figure skater
Michelle Kwan of the United States listens to a question during a media
conference after pulling out of the Torino 2006 Winter Olympic Games in
Turin, Italy February 12, 2006. Kwan, a five-time world champion,
sustained a groin strain during practice on Saturday.
[Reuters] | Kwan's last chance to win the only
medal that has eluded her grasp _ an Olympic gold _ ended sadly Sunday when she
withdrew from the Turin Games because of a groin injury.
She has chased that medal for a decade, coming so close twice that she could
feel its heavy weight around her neck. Now she's headed home, her neck as empty
as her heart.
After waiting four years for one final chance, the gold is all but certain to
remain a dream unfulfilled.
Her body isn't as indestructible as it once was _ two groin injuries in less
than two months _ and she'll be 29 by the next Winter Games in Vancouver in
2010.
"I can't even think past right now," she said, biting her lip and fighting
tears. "It's physical pain that's keeping me from performing and skating. But
it's also emotional pain as well."
Emily Hughes, younger sister of 2002 Olympic champion Sarah Hughes, replaced
Kwan on the U.S. team and will join national champion Sasha Cohen and Kimmie
Meissner. The women's competition doesn't begin until Feb. 21, and Hughes plans
to spend a few days at home in Great Neck, N.Y., and in school before leaving
for Turin.
"It was fair that Michelle had all the opportunities to make the Olympic
team," said Hughes, who finished third at the U.S. national championships last
month but was bumped after Kwan got a medical bye onto the Olympic team. "It's
unfortunate that she was injured.
"I'm just ready to compete whatever it is. Right now it is the Olympics," the
17-year-old skater said.
For Hughes, this marks a beginning, her first major international
competition. For Kwan, it's likely the end.
She's been the face of figure skating for a decade, beloved as much for her
grace and humility in defeat as her long list of triumphs. Though she won five
world and nine U.S. titles, she is best remembered for her heartbreaking
finishes at both the Nagano and Salt Lake City games. The favorite at each, she
settled instead for a silver (1998) and a bronze (2002).
Indeed, the image of her sobbing as she stood below a beaming Tara Lipinski
on the Nagano medals podium is as enduring as her majestic performance at the
national championships a month earlier.
"I love her, win or lose," said Frank Carroll, her coach from 1991 to 2001.
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