STREET SMARTS
The Speedster Has Taken Her Falls, Including One Last
Week, But She's Back and Revved For Gold
BY
Stephen Koepp /Lake Placid
icabo Street thinks fast, as if she were in a time zone all her
own. It was about a year ago, when she was still falling through
the air at about 70 m.p.h., that she started planning for her
comeback. She had been streaking along on a training run at
Vail, Colo., when she encountered a smooth spot where a speed
bump had always been. "So I didn't have to make some real crappy
turn like we usually do up there. I carved a fatty," she says
with some admiration for the slingshot turn that blew her off
the fast track to Olympic gold. "That's when I decided, when I
saw where I was going to hit, that the potential for me to blow
out both my knees right now is pretty high, so I'd better just
blow my left one out again. [The surgeon] can clean it up when
he goes in there to fix it." The crash went according to plan;
with an awful pop, Street tore the anterior cruciate ligament.
The damage-control maneuver, she explains, was just like jumping
off a big roof. "You wouldn't try to land on both feet, you'd
kind of slide out of it." Of course. Just like jumping off a roof.
Well, look out below. The ponytailed tomboy queen of the
downhill is back, running on Picabo Standard Time. A human
cannonball at 5 ft. 7 in. and 158 lbs., she recovered from her
injury about twice as fast as most people would have. But most
people don't have Olympic gold as the top item on their list of
unfinished business. Street has lately zoomed close to her
world-beating form, posting a fourth-place finish in a World Cup
downhill at Cortina, Italy. But her comeback took a scary detour
in a downhill last Saturday at Are, Sweden, when she crashed at
about 75 m.p.h. and was knocked briefly unconscious. Afterward,
coach Herwig Demschar proclaimed it "just a normal crash" and
said the worst damage was to one of Street's favorite skis. Her
father, Ron Street, predicted she would be fit for Nagano,
despite a bad headache at the moment: "This will just make it
more interesting."
When Street won the silver at Lillehammer in 1994, the
freckle-faced 22-year-old instantly vaulted beyond the celebrity
of any run-of-the-hill medalist, thanks to her peek-a-boo catchy
name, a superabundance of personality and a mountain-hippie
upbringing. During the next two years, she matured into a
dominant athlete as well. She not only became the first American
to win a World Cup downhill title but did it two years in a row.
Now she's rich too, from endorsement deals with the likes of
Nike, United Airlines and Chap Stick. Her signature
cross-training shoe, the Air Max Electrify, is scheduled to hit
shelves this month. Her career dreams go even beyond all that:
she aims to become a talk-show host. "Every time I watch Rosie
O'Donnell, I think about it more," she said last month as she
waited to climb up on an awards podium in Lake Placid, N.Y. "I
want to do that with athletes so that the world can see all
these powerful and funny personalities." For Picabo, stage
fright will not be an obstacle.
Such pluck may come from growing up the only girl in her
hometown of Triumph, Idaho (pop. 50). Her free-spirited parents
named her after a nearby town; when neighborhood boys made fun
of her name, she beat them up. Her father Ron, a brickmason, and
mother Dee, a music teacher, couldn't afford many luxuries, so
they lavished freedom and adventure on Picabo and her elder
brother Roland ("Baba") Street. The family owned no TV set but
took trips through Central America and skied at nearby Sun
Valley.
From the start, Picabo was a misfit in the upscale world of ski
racing. "We were poor kids, so we didn't have all the rad gear
to wear," recalls Baba, now 28. "The rich kids' moms really
couldn't deal with the fact that Peek could whop them." Despite
her talent, early in her career on the national team she got in
trouble for goofing off and staging temper tantrums featuring
language unsuitable for the pristine slopes. "She likes to call
attention to herself. She likes to be loud, and she takes up a
lot of space in a room," recalls Hilary Lindh, an ex-teammate
and Olympic medalist who feuded with Street but eventually
patched it up. The team bounced Street in 1990 for being out of
shape, an incident that inspired in her a boot-camp attitude
toward training that has never let up.
It helped her recover from the knee injury, but so did a chance
meeting last February in Maui, her favorite escape. Looking
across a nightclub dance floor, her eyes met those of J.J.
Lasley, a kindred spirit. Says he: "I was in Hawaii soul
searching, having just quit my job in investment banking. She
was soul searching and trying to get away from the world
championships, which were going to be all over TV." Lasley, 27,
a former Stanford running back who tried out with the Green Bay
Packers and played briefly for the Minnesota Vikings, has more
than a few things in common with Street. He grew up poor in
South Central Los Angeles and endured a near crippling disease
and three knee operations before the age of 21. Both boyfriend
and girlfriend have a slightly unusual gait because each has one
leg shorter than the other. "In fact," Lasley recalls, "it's
when her knee healed that she started limping again. Then I knew
she was walking right." Lasley, who once posed for the Stanford
newspaper wearing only a strategically placed football helmet,
is Street's karma companion, the rare person who can keep up
with her nonstop personality parade.
Besides her physical conditioning, Street is preparing her mind
for her big day at Hakuba, where she learned the downhill course
last winter by riding down the mountain on a coach's back.
(She'll race in the super-G as well.) Picabo isn't letting
public expectations rattle her. "I always put more pressure on
myself than anyone could ever put on me. I create that pressure,
so therefore I own that pressure," says Street, a believer in
meditation and Zen-like attitudes. Hers is a far cry from the
old days of the downhill, when some of the top guns, notably the
men, would get so psyched up they'd walk into the woods to throw
up before a race. Picabo, by contrast, can be seen near the
starting gate with headphones on, and some dance music by
Jamiroquai piping into her nervous system, her limbs swinging
through a warmup. While she admits that a few things in life do
scare her--including the dark, which she fends off with a
night-light--going fast is rarely one of them. "There's no room
for fear with speed," she says. "They don't coincide."
-- With reporting by Aisha Labi/New York