
Jamie Squire-- Allsport for TIME
f you want Vivaldi or Wagner or Lloyd Webber, go figure
skating. Snowboarding's sound tracks are different. Last week at
the Olympic snowboard park, as riders launched into the air like
skateboarders in the 120-m halfpipe course, Pearl Jam and
Metallica ruled. Several riders chose as their personal song the
rap group Cypress Hill's Hits from the Bong. That was
appropriate. The International Olympic Committee had been hoping
to create a buzz and draw in a generation of sports fans used to
pierced noses when it added snowboarding as a full-medal sport
to the Nagano Games. And buzz it did.
Three days after Canadian Ross Rebagliati took snowboarding's
first-ever gold medal in the giant slalom, the I.O.C. asked him
to give it back. The 26-year-old from British Columbia had
tested positive for marijuana (a urine level of 17.8 nanograms
per milliliter, exceeding the 15.0 limit set by snowboarding's
Olympic governing body, the International Ski Federation), and
after a 3-to-2 vote, the I.O.C.'s executive board recommended he
be stripped of his prize. Rebagliati admitted to having smoked
in the past, but he asserted that he had not sparked up since
April 1997, claiming to have ingested the offending substance as
secondhand smoke at a farewell party thrown by several friends
in his home ski resort of Whistler, B.C., on Jan. 31. Though
journalists saw this as a Clintonesque and laughable defense,
the Canadian Olympic Association filed an appeal on Rebagliati's
behalf. And the word among snowboarding's tight brotherhood in
Nagano was that no one was going to accept any prizes they
didn't earn if the giant-slalom medals were redistributed.
Then came the next twist. A day later, the Court of Arbitration
for Sport ruled that because there was no formal agreement
between the I.O.C. and the I.S.F. to ban marijuana outright, the
I.O.C. could not legally strip Rebagliati of his medal. I.O.C.
medical guidelines, which ban everything from cocaine to some
cold remedies, qualify marijuana as "restricted" and a substance
to be used "cautiously," while I.S.F. rules name pot as a
prohibited drug. Said the panel: "We cannot invent prohibitions
or sanctions where none appear."
Meanwhile, the Canadian Olympic team came up with medical
evidence to back Rebagliati's claims. Carol Anne Letheren, chief
of the Canadian Olympic Association, said that a single joint
would bring an athlete's level to 400 ng/mL but that just being
in a room with eight to 10 smokers an hour a day for six days
could result in levels over 100. Ronald Alkana, professor of
molecular pharmacology and toxicology at the University of
Southern California's School of Pharmacy, said that marijuana's
primary active ingredient, THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), can be
stored in the body's fat cells for relatively long periods and
that "it's reasonable to assume that secondhand smoke could be
absorbed." After the final ruling, Rebagliati remained cool,
redisplaying the medal he had kept in his pocket during the
three-day fracas. He said he would join in some antidrug
campaigns but refused to condemn drugs outright. "I am
definitely going to change my life-style. But I will not change
my friends," he said. "I will stick by them." He added, "I may
have to wear a gas mask from now on."
And that's just one point of contention between the worlds of
the Olympics and snowboarding. Within some of the sport's core
circles, pot has been a common part of the life-style. Along
with freedom, travel and the pursuit of that perfect powder day,
marijuana is regarded by certain riders as traditional ritual.
Scott McKinley, a snowboard rider and assistant manager of a
Whistler snowboard shop, says of the culture, "I don't want to
give the impression that everybody up here is a stoner. I
compare it to cracking open a beer at a friend's [house]: it's
so common, nobody thinks about it." In fact, many had joked that
with snowboarding's induction into the Nagano Olympics, some
riders would inevitably get busted for their hemp affections. In
any case, most of Rebagliati's fellow Olympic snowboarders have
come to his defense. "He still won the gold medal," says women's
halfpipe finalist American Cara Beth Burnside. "Everyone's just
furious about it. It's not affecting his performance. C'mon,
they're kicking people out for cough medicine." "It's too bad,"
says American pro snowboarder Adam Merriman. "Pot doesn't make
your muscles swell up--otherwise he'd have a reason to lose his
gold. But marijuana just mellows you out. I don't understand why
they busted him." Says Swiss halfpipe rider Anita Schwaller:
"It's so ridiculous. It's not the riders who wanted to be in the
Olympics; they wanted us." (Snowboarding is still banned in many
elite ski resorts, including, during regular season, the course
in Nagano.)
Even before the opening ceremonies commenced, many snowboarders
feared the Games would alter their subculture. Norwegian Terje
Haakonsen, widely recognized as the best snowboarder in the
world, opted to sit out Nagano altogether. Haakonsen even
described I.O.C. president Juan Antonio Samaranch as an "Al
Capone" figure. Samaranch shrugged off the boycott and said,
"All I know is this: those who don't enter don't win."
But controversy and failed pot tests aside, many snowboarders
did come, and those who earned some hardware were happy to keep
it. As gallons of freezing rain pelted spectators, riders and
the media, the halfpipe (snowboarding's freestyle discipline)
managed to go off without incident, as riders hurled themselves
into the air before judges and the entire world. "Sticking"
(landing) such "sick" (impressive) maneuvers as caballerials
(backward 360[degree] rotations), McTwists (inverted 540[degree]
spins) and Haakonsen's patented move, the Haakon flip (a
540[degree] with a flip), snowboarders showed everyone that
rebels can be athletes.
With two preliminary runs and two finals, the halfpipe riders
powered through the relentless downpour, pumping up the
resilient crowd that lined the course in bleachers and stood
thousands deep at the bottom. In the end, Swiss rider Gian
Simmen managed to edge out Norwegian Daniel Franck in the day's
last run for the gold medal. American Ross Powers hung on for
bronze with huge airs and rapid rotations. Germany's Nicola
Thost took the first women's halfpipe gold and Norway's Stine
Brun Kjeldaas picked up the silver. American Shannon Dunn
slipped slightly just before the end of her second run to fall
back from the lead, but took bronze.
Although Rebagliati kept his medal, many within snowboarding
felt the damage inflicted by the incident would unfairly taint
his victory and the sport's debut. "Thanks to an idiotic
mistake by the I.O.C., snowboarding's debut is going to be
remembered as the year those wacky pot smokers invaded the
Olympics, not as the year snowboarding athletes showed the world
an amazing new sport," said Lee Crane, director of Snowboarding
Online (www.solsnowboarding.com), a Website devoted to snowboard
news. Still, many in snowboarding saw the notoriety as a chance
to exert influence. "Snowboarding has always been about youth
confronting adult society. That's why it has dramatically
affected sports, fashion and music," says Brad Steward,
president of Bonfire Snowboarding, a clothing manufacturer. "Now
it's clear that snowboarding has an opportunity to influence
larger social issues, and I think that's a positive opportunity
for kids to speak their mind."
--With reporting by Barry Hillenbrand and Lawrence Mondi/Nagano,
Mary Jollimore/Toronto and Maggie Sieger/Whistler
Galbraith is a senior editor at Snowboarder magazine. |