Scott Hamilton: Training for Olympic Gold
The year before the 1984 Olympics was my most intensive year of training in figure skating. I thought about the Olympics daily, and I visualized them daily. I was not going to wait until the last minute to train. Instead, I treated every practice like a competition. I repeated every move in my program over and over, committing my body to muscle memory. I even let myself get nervous before a run-through, just as I would in competition. I wanted my body to be in sync, right down to the number of crossovers I would do before every spin or jump. I wanted it to be like going for a walk. You don’t think about walking—you just do it.
(Read Britannica’s biography of Scott Hamilton.)
My whole life became skating. I barely even socialized. I started practice at the rink at 7 am by working on compulsory figures and my short program. I skated until lunchtime; then I went home to eat and take a nap. I returned at 4 pm to work for a few more hours, and I ended the day by doing a long-program run-through as a stamina builder. After that I went home for dinner and then slept, so I could start all over again the next day. In addition to the skating, I did a lot of stretching off the ice, but I never took any dance classes. I would also work with light weights off the ice three days a week.
There was no Grand Prix of skating in 1984, and there were no $50,000 purses for a first-place finish. You got your expenses paid to a competition, and that was it. As a U.S. national champion, I had first choice of which international competition I wanted to compete in for the fall of 1983. I chose the Golden Spin in Zagreb (then in Yugoslavia, now in Croatia), mainly because it was just a train ride away from Sarajevo, the site of the 1984 Olympic Winter Games. The United States Figure Skating Association did not want me skating that event because some of my top European rivals were in it. They thought it would look bad if I lost, and they didn’t want me to show any weakness during the three months before the Olympics. I, though, was not afraid of anyone beating me. In fact, it bothered me that they had their doubts. I wanted to go to Europe and show my competitors how ready I was. I insisted on going and won that competition. Then I went to see the ice-skating venue in Sarajevo. The Zetra was still under construction when I arrived, and it would look much different when I returned in February for the Olympics.
For this, my last season as an amateur, I wore a new style of costume— something my coach, Don Laws, and I had conjured up with a Japanese ski-apparel manufacturer. It looked like an altered speed-skating outfit; it was almost a unitard, except for the flared pant legs, and it contained no sequins. The outfit for my long program reflected my feelings about the sport and about the young men and women who devote years of their lives to mastering it. It was the look of an athlete, not an "artist."
My last U.S. national championships were in Salt Lake City, Utah, and I wanted to go out with my best performance ever. I wanted a clean sweep of all the disciplines—figures, short program, and freestyle—so that my rivals abroad would be aware that I was, once again, ready. In compulsory figures, all nine judges placed me first for all three figures, usually by seven-tenths. My short-program music in 1984 contained the same music I had used in 1981—“Samson and Delilah” and a Czech folk dance. It was a good decision because I was placed first once again by all nine judges on the panel. My combination jump in that program was a double loop–triple toe. Some of my international competitors were doing the more difficult triple lutz–double loop combination, but my main goal was to be consistent and error-free. I guessed that my combination might cost me first place in the short program at the Olympics, but it would be irrelevant so long as I dominated figures and the long program.
My four-and-a-half-minute program featured five triple jumps—salchow, toe loop, toe walley (a slight variation on the toe loop), flip, and lutz. My music for this program combined George Duke’s Guardian of the Light, some haunting Asian jazz music by the Japanese band Hiroshima, and Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake. Choosing music was not normally my area of expertise, so I usually left it to my coach, who wanted my program to have maximum impact at the beginning and end of the program. The music played to my power and speed, which is why I always opened with my most consistent and hardest jump—the triple lutz. It had great impact, and I liked getting the jump out of the way. Although my coach and I experimented with different combinations of music for the four years leading up to the 1984 Olympics, we kept the basics of the program the same for four years. We also kept the same jump sequences—triple lutz first, followed by triple toe loop, triple flip, triple toe walley, and triple salchow. I performed two double axels in the middle of my program and one at the end. For this program I again came in first with every judge, and I even earned four perfect 6.0 marks for style. I was pleased, especially because the word would now get to my competitors in Europe and Canada that I was in top form.
Finally it was time for the Olympics. I stayed in the Olympic Village in Sarajevo, but I kept focused on what I was doing. I even brought over an air ionizer to keep the polluted air in Sarajevo from making me sick. When I had downtime, I listened to music—mostly rock—wrote in my journal, and had dinner in town with friends and family. Keeping a low profile, however, did not prevent me from getting sick. I won figures, which was a huge accomplishment, because I had never won them before in world-level competition. I got through my short program all right and finished second to Canada’s Brian Orser. Figures and the short program counted for 50 percent of the total score, so I was in great shape going into the long program. I was a little under the weather for my long program, though, and congestion, which really played havoc with my balance and jumping, made matters worse. I missed two jumps, my triple flip and triple salchow (I singled the flip and doubled the salchow), but I skated well enough to finish second in the long and first overall. I was disappointed in my performance, but after about 10 minutes it sank in that I had won the gold. All the hard work had paid off. After the competition, I remember what American Broadcasting Company (ABC) television director, Doug Wilson, said to me, "Your life has changed forever." I thought he was being polite, but he turned out to be absolutely right. During the national anthem, I became swept up in the emotion of the moment. I felt pride at winning a gold medal for my country. I thought about all the people who were close to me—friends from home; my father, Ernie; and my mother, Dorothy, who had sacrificed so much for my skating. My mother died of breast cancer in 1977, and this medal was as much hers as mine. It was an accomplishment I wanted to share with everyone in the United States.