Winter Olympics: Shaun White on staying on top at 35 as he bids for fourth title at Beijing 2022
- Published
24th Winter Olympic Games |
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Hosts: Beijing, China Dates: 4-20 February |
Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, BBC iPlayer, BBC Red Button and online; listen on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds; live text and highlights on BBC Sport website and mobile app |
Shaun White announced himself on the world stage as a teenager at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, where he triumphed in snowboard halfpipe.
Sixteen years later, the triple Olympic champion is in China competing at his fifth and final Winter Games - and chasing a fourth gold medal.
He announced at a pre-competition media conference he was retiring from all snowboarding competitions after Beijing.
The 35-year-old American said: "I think this will be my, well this will be my last competition too, which is pretty special."
White is competing in halfpipe, with qualification on 9 February and the final two days later.
After a stellar career, he will be bowing out while still mixing it with the best in the world.
Before setting off for Beijing, White sat down with British snowboarder Aimee Fuller to discuss his career on Ski Sunday.
He said his greatest accomplishment was still being "on top of a sport that's ever-changing for so long".
"I am the oldest competitor. I kind of like it as a little badge of honour," he said.
'You will carry that for the rest of your life'
When he won the first of his Olympic golds, his mum was there in Italy watching her son compete and, he says, told him: "You will forever be known as Shaun White, the Olympic gold medallist. You will carry that title for the rest of your life."
Nicknamed 'The Flying Tomato' because of his long red hair, White was instantly recognisable.
"I was just 19," he says. "I had no idea how massive that was, how many people in the world were going to tune in and see me do my thing, and afterwards I couldn't really go anywhere. It definitely changed my life."
White says snowboarding was misunderstood at the beginning. His teachers struggled with accepting it when he asked them to set work for him while he was travelling to competitions.
"Every single step of the way felt like we were fighting to be accepted, or not looked at as if we were crazy, or that I was throwing my life away for a sport that wasn't a legitimate sport," he explains.
But White, and snowboarding, went mainstream and he soon amassed a fortune in endorsements, following up his first Olympics with a second gold in Vancouver in 2010 and excelling at the X Games.
By 2013, he had won six superpipe titles in a row at the X Games, where he had also won in skateboarding - the first person to win medals in both the summer and winter series of the event.
'This is what it's like to lose at an Olympics'
But there is a gap in White's list of Olympic medals.
He left Sochi in 2014 empty-handed. He had crashed on his first run and when he entered the halfpipe as the last rider on his second, he couldn't land his tricks cleanly and the judges placed him fourth, out of the medal positions for the first time.
White admits he had lost the motivation and desire to succeed. He was isolated, training on his own private halfpipes, built for him by sponsors, where he could practise his own tricks without letting the competition see what he was working on.
But seeing his friends and family having fun on social media made him feel like he was missing out, and made it harder for him to focus on snowboarding.
"You have a revolving window on your phone of what everyone is up to," he says. "The things that you don't normally think about, that you normally shut out to get the job done.
"I had the winning run in my hands, I just couldn't do it. When I was at the top of the pipe I was standing there thinking 'wow, I'm going to lose'.
"It was like watching a movie where I couldn't control the outcome.
"Once I had lost, I awoke from this daydream and was like 'so this is what it is like to lose at an Olympics'."
'I'm about to win this'
It was a turning point for White. He ditched the private halfpipes and started training with other people again at Mammoth resort in California, where he had spent the early days of his career.
"Over time I realised I needed more people around me. I needed my team, my friend group and people that I work with and count on to make it fun and exciting," he says.
When it came to Pyeongchang in 2018, White qualified for the final with the highest score, meaning he would once again be the last rider down the course.
He had a score of 95.25 to beat - which had been laid down by Japanese teenager Ayumu Hirano.
"Fast forward to the Korea Olympics and it was deja vu," he says. "I'm the last guy to go, I had one run."
Only this time, White's mindset had switched to thinking "I'm about to win this".
And win he did, picking up his third Olympic gold with a score of 97.75 - the highest score ever recorded in the men's halfpipe at the Winter Olympics.
Four years on and he is back for his final Olympics.
"I'm kind of picking the joy from every single moment instead of just putting my head down and just getting through it," White says.
"All athletes know that there is a finite amount of time that you have to do your craft. So as that door or window is closing, I think you kind of stop and take it all in and enjoy it."
But will Beijing be a repeat of Sochi or Pyeongchang?
"I don't know if I was really considering another [Olympics] after my last performance," White says. "I was so happy with how well that all went down in Korea.
"Every time it comes back around I'm like, 'how's the neck, how's everything feeling?' and I just make the call."
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