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TIME EUROPE
September 11, 2000, Vol. 156 No. 11


Caroline Brunet
Silver will be no salve to this ultracompetitive Canadian kayaker
By MARY JOLLIMORE

Fear of failure is a great motivator. Hate also works nicely in a pinch. You donÕt see these emotions in Caroline BrunetÕs face. They manifest themselves in how the worldÕs best female kayaker trains, how she thinks and how she speaks. With refreshing un-Canadian candor she tells you, ÒI hate losing more than I love to win.Ó ItÕs been her mantra, first in French, then in English, since age 13, when she won her first race at home in Lac Beauport, Que.



Many Canadian athletes say theyÕre thrilled just to go to the Olympics and will happily settle for a Òpersonal best.Ó Brunet doesnÕt toe that party line. ÒThe Canadian way is to think, ÔO.K., go out, do your best and have fun,ÕÓ she says. ÒFor me itÕs not enough to go to the Olympics to participate. IÕm never satisfied.Ó

World-championship medals arenÕt enough. For the past three years, Brunet has owned the kayak world, winning eight of the nine gold medals available in K-1, or solo, events. But itÕs like having a closet full of shoes and nothing to wear. ÒTheyÕre nice, but theyÕre not enough,Ó she says. ÒI could win 20 times in a row at the worlds, but I need to know I have succeeded in this sport. To really do that, you need to win at the Olympics.Ó

Sydney will be her fourth Olympics, but the first in which she is a favorite. At Seoul in 1988, as a shy 19-year-old, she was 13th. ÒWhen I think back, I was soooo naive,Ó she laughs. In 1992 she improved and finished seventh.

She concluded that doing things the Canadian way was just not good enough. She revamped her training program, settled in Denmark and hired former world canoe champion Christian Frederiksen as her coach. (He also was for a time her lover.) Brunet captured silver at Atlanta in 1996, losing by 0.2 sec. She thought silver was O.K. until the replay showed how close she was to gold. ÒThat made it worse,Ó she says, ÒEven now it bothers me.Ó

Losing in Sydney, no doubt, would bother her more. So she trains 30 hours a week: 20 on water, 10 in the gym. ÒAfter I retire,Ó she vows, ÒIÕll never go into another gym again.Ó The grind of a sport that has no off-season has left Brunet, 31, with nagging shoulder and hip pain in her sturdy 152-lb., 5-ft. 8-in. frame, and scar tissue from muscle rubbing on bone in her behind. ÒMy bum is so sore,Ó she says, voicing the kayakerÕs lament.

Brunet is hedging her bets in a way, opting to add the K-2, or two-person kayaking, challenge by teaming with Karen Furneaux, 23, an Olympic rookie. ÒItÕs the first time for me sharing anything,Ó says Brunet of the partnership. ÒIÕve never before had to share victory. ItÕs nice to share good moments. This is something IÕve found out very late.Ó

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More Stories

September 11, 2000

PHOTO ESSAY
The Sporting Life
Jason Bell's portraits of Olympians at rest

PHOTO ESSAY
The Sporting Life
Jason Bell's portraits of Olympians at rest

OLYMPICS
The Greatest Show on Earth
Sydney is ready to welcome 10,000 athletes from 200 nations. Here are the likely star performers, certainly the ones to beat

Alexander Carelin
His Olympic foes call him 'King Kong' or 'The Experiment'. None of them have beaten him — ever

Ralf Schumann
Germany's Mr. Rapid Fire aims for another 72 seconds of glory

Laura Flessel-Colovic
'The Wasp' has given France and fencing a flashy new dimension

Magnus Wislander
Sweden's 'The Snake' returns

Félix Savón
Cuba's hope for gold gets back in the ring

Camilla Martin
Denmark's badminton champ

Hicham El Guerrouj
Morocco's hero will gain new admirers once he blows through the field in the 1,500 m

Caroline Brunet
Silver will be no salve to this ultracompetitive Canadian kayaker

Are Drugs Winning the Games?
There will be new tests to catch the cheaters in Sydney. Will the Games be clean? Not a chance

This Is Sport?
Some events should get medals for silliness

WHAT DO YOU THINK?
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