Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Bode on his performance: ‘I did it my way’

Miller says ‘I got to party and socialize at an Olympic level,’ not win medals

IMAGE: Bode Miller
Felice Calabro' / AP
Bode Miller after skiing out on the first run of the men's slalom.  Miller failed to medal in five Alpine events.  Despite that, he says he's happy with his experience in Turin.
Slide show
Image: Bode
  Bode's Games
See pictures of Bode Miller's 2006 Olympic performances.
COMMENTARY
By Jim Litke
updated 3:24 a.m. ET Feb. 26, 2006

JIM LITKE
Jim Litke
SESTRIERE, Italy - The sticker on the side of the RV read “Go Fast Sports.”

“I’m eating,” Bode Miller said after opening the door. He was holding up a sandwich. “Gimme five minutes.”

An hour earlier, Miller had skidded of the course in the slalom, the last of his five events, completing an 0-for-the-Olympics. And then he kept on skiing, ducking reporters again.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

I had tracked him down after a mile-long trek in ankle-deep snow, and good as his word, Miller came out soon and was his rambling, revealing, remarkably stubborn self in a half-hour interview. A few highlights:

  • “People said, ‘Why can’t you stay in for the two weeks, three weeks? You’ve got the rest of your life to experience the games the way everybody else does.’ But I like the whole package. I always have.”
  • “People want athletes to cater to their image of what an athlete should be, but they also want them to fail so they can feel like their screwups are all right. If I make a priority shift, I’ll make it because it’s best for me.”
  • “It does matter that it’s the Olympics. I just did it my way. I’m not a martyr, and I’m not a do-gooder. I just want to go out and rock. And man, I rocked here.”
  • “The same people who recognize I came out with no medals should recognize I could have won three.”

Give Miller this much: He’s consistent.

A week ago, after spinning off the course in the super-G, he skied a back route through the woods rather than answer questions. On Monday, after finishing sixth in the giant slalom, he ditched his skis at the finish line, dodged a gauntlet of reporters waiting nearby and ran for the exit wearing sneakers and using his ski poles for balance in the slush. After spotting him 100 yards or so, not to mention much lighter footwear, I caught up with him a quarter-mile later.

He was 0-for-4 at that point, and Saturday’s last-chance slalom still loomed. But Miller vowed he wouldn’t do anything different. And he didn’t.

Slide show
Italy's Zoeggler competes in men's singles luge event at Winter Olympic Games in Cesana Pariol
  Taking gold
Check out the best images from the 2006 Winter Olympics.
He continued to revel in the nightlife in a hamlet with one real saloon and no more discotheques. And Miller always occupied the front table, making him impossible to miss.

“It’s important for me to live my life honestly,” he said. Besides, he added, “I was only out one night before a race.”

In fact, Miller said he spent Friday night before the slalom watching “Miracle,” the movie about a bunch of college kids who came together as the 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team and beat the Soviet Union’s heavily favored “Big Red Machine” en route to a gold medal.

Slide show
  Pictures of the Day
Check out Sunday's best Olympic images.
“That’s what the Olympics are about ... underdogs, about providing an opportunity for people to do something they didn’t know they were capable of,” he said.

Miller then talked softly, almost longingly about how U.S. ski teammates Ted Ligety and Julia Mancuso, both just 21 and largely unburdened by expectations, had risen to the occasion at these Olympics and won gold. He was in the same position four years ago in Salt Lake City, when he sneaked in and won two silvers.

To recreate that feeling, Miller said he went as far as purposely slacking off in his training.

“For the last eight to 10 months, I was less prepared than the last Olympics. That left me the opportunity to dig deep, to go down that other route, to make more sacrifices and get back to where I was,” he said.

But none of it worked. Miller came here as an overwhelming overdog, the defending overall World Cup championship, the first American to hold that title since 1983. Anybody who saw NBC’s promotional campaign ahead of the Winter Olympics must have thought all the other skiers in the world were auditioning for parts as extras in Miller’s highlight reel.

“I wanted an Olympic experience like in ‘Miracle.’ But how was it for the Russians?” Miller said, leaving little doubt which role was thrust on him. “Horrible.”

But hardly surprising, I countered, considering the high-paying endorsement deal he took from Nike and a few other sponsors. Miller then countered that he left plenty of money on the table, and accepted only those deals that let him put his message out unfiltered by the media.

Slide show
Finland's Olli Jokinen (L) and Swedish D
  Emotional Moments
Feb. 26: See photos of athletes' highs and lows from Sunday.
I offered him the same. “What would you tell people who are going to look at you in these Olympics and see a failure?”

Miller paused.

“Where the quality of life fits in the priority scale is something everybody has to decide for themselves. Nobody else can tell you what your quality of life is, or should be.”

I told him that sounded like an excuse to party.

“If I wasn’t prepared at the start of the races, that would be something I would look at. But I guarantee you every athlete who stood up at the top of the hill could say, ‘Hey, what about that weightlifting workout you skipped last summer or whatever?”’

Then he brought up teammate Daron Rahlves. Like Miller, he was a favorite to medal — although in only two events as opposed to Miller’s five. And like Miller, he never made it onto the podium.

“Look at what happened to Rahlves. He was holed up in his RV, he’s probably the fittest guy out here and he made a point of talking about how important the Olympics were to him,” Miller said. “And then look — a little bad luck and he’s got nothing to show for the whole thing.

“Me, it’s been an awesome two weeks,” Miller said. “I got to party and socialize at an Olympic level.”

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links