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Picabo Street

American alpine skier


American alpine skier

FieldValue
namePicabo Street
imagePicabo Street.jpg
captionPicabo Street in October 1999
disciplinesDownhill, Super-G, Combined
birth_date
birth_placeTriumph, Idaho, U.S.
height
wcdebutDecember 6 1992
(age 21)
retiredFebruary 2002 (age 30)
olympicteams3 – (1994, 1998, 2002)
olympicmedals2
olympicgolds1
worldsteams2 – (1993, 1996)
worldsmedals3
worldsgolds1
wcseasons8 – (1993 -2002)
(injured 1999, 2000)
wcwins9 – (9 DH)
wcpodiums17 – (15 DH, 2 SG)
wcoveralls0 – (5th, 1995)
wctitles2 – (DH: 1995, 1996)
show-medalsyes

(age 21) (injured 1999, 2000) |show-medals = yes

Picabo Street (; born April 3, 1971) is an American former World Cup alpine ski racer and Olympic gold medalist. She won the super G at the 1998 Winter Olympics and the downhill at the 1996 World Championships, along with three other Olympic and World Championship medals. Street also won World Cup downhill season titles in 1995 and 1996, the first American woman to do so, along with nine World Cup downhill race wins. Street was inducted into the National Ski Hall of Fame in 2004.

Early life

Street was born at home in Triumph, Idaho; her parents are Dee (a music teacher) and Roland "Stubby" Street (a stonemason). Her brother Roland, Jr. is one year older. Her parents decided to let their daughter choose her own name when she was old enough, so for the first two years of her life she was called "baby girl" or "little girl". At age three she was required to have a name in order to get a passport. She was named after the nearby village of Picabo. She was raised on a small farm in Triumph, several miles southeast of Sun Valley, where she learned to ski and race.

She attended Rowland Hall-St. Mark's School in Salt Lake City, Utah, and participated in its Rowmark Ski Academy for one year before returning to Sun Valley to race for the Sun Valley Ski Education Foundation. Before joining the academy, she was a member of the local Hailey Ski Team.

Skiing career

Street joined the U.S. Ski Team in 1989 at the age of 17. She primarily competed in the speed events of downhill and super G, with her World Cup debut at age 21 in a slalom on December 6 1992. Two months later at the 1993 World Championships in Japan she won the silver medal in the combined event.

1994–1996

After her silver medal performance in the downhill at the 1994 Winter Olympics, a run was named after her at Sun Valley, on the Warm Springs side of Bald Mountain; the expert run formerly known as "Plaza" became "Picabo's Street." Street joined Christin Cooper and Gretchen Fraser as Sun Valley Olympic medalists (their named runs are on Seattle Ridge).

By winning the 1995 downhill title, she became the first American to win a World Cup season title in a speed event. She repeated as downhill champion the following season, adding the title of world champion with her gold medal at the 1996 World Championships in Sierra Nevada, Spain.

1997–2002

While training in Colorado in early December 1996, Street suffered an ACL injury to her left knee and missed the remainder of the 1997 season. A month after her gold medal win in the super G at the 1998 Winter Olympics, she careened off course at the final downhill of the 1998 season at Crans-Montana, Switzerland. Street crashed, snapping her left femur and tearing the ACL in her right knee. She was in rehabilitation for two years following the accident.

Street returned to ski racing in late 2000, and retired from international competition after the 2002 Winter Olympics in Utah, where she finished sixteenth in the downhill.

Commercial endeavors

Street appeared on the TV shows Nickelodeon GUTS in 1994, and Pyramid (2002). She performed well on the show American Gladiators, where Street used her strength to defeat the gladiator character "Ice" in a couple of events.

In the late 1990s, after her success at the 1998 Winter Olympics, Street became a spokeswoman for a variety of products, including the soft drink Mountain Dew and ChapStick-brand lip balm.

In 1998 she signed with Giro Sport Design which was then developing its first winter sports helmet. In August she toured the company's headquarters/manufacturing facility, then located in Santa Cruz, CA. She spoke with the senior manufacturing engineer, a long-time skier himself, about the progression of equipment, signing a prototype helmet for him as she left. She also appeared on Celebrity Paranormal Project.

She wrote an autobiography in 2001 titled Picabo: Nothing to Hide (). In it, Street revealed the pressure placed on her by her sponsors to succeed and win, which she maintains contributed to her devastating 1998 crash. She also described how she was able to transform from a rebellious tomboy into a world-class athlete.

A feature film based on Street's life story was in development as of late 2009, written by Eric Preston with director Charles Winkler slated to direct, and produced by Jeff Luini and Richard Weiner. Filming was slated begin in 2010 in Argentina.

She appeared in two skits on Sesame Street with the character Elmo and Telly. In one, Telly was looking for a place called Peekaboo Street and met the real Picabo Street; in the other, Elmo insisted on introducing Picabo because he thought she was a world champion peek-a-boo player. Her name also appeared in the song "One Big Mob" by the rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Street was the runner up (with a time of 5:37) in the NBC celebrity reality competition series Stars Earn Stripes.

Personal life

Street is retired and splits her time between homes in Alabama and Winter Park, Colorado. She has a son born in August 2004, with her former partner N. J. Pawley. On October 25, 2008, she married businessman John Reeser atop Prospect Mountain, near Hanceville, Alabama. On August 3, 2009, Street gave birth to her second son.

On ESPN's College Game Day in Boise on September 25, 2010, Street stated that she was pregnant and expecting her third boy.

Street named her skis for people who were strong and meaningful to her. Among them are her "Earnies" (after Dale Earnhardt) and her "Arnolds" (after Arnold Schwarzenegger).

In the early 2000s, an internet joke spread which claimed Street made a "substantial donation" to her hometown hospital, which named a wing after her, the "Picabo ICU" (as in "Peekaboo! I see you!"). Another version claimed she became an ICU nurse and would answer the phone by saying, "Picabo, ICU!" A less common variant claimed a fan feared Street would be injured and appear in a headline reading, "Picabo? ICU." All three variants of the joke were debunked by Snopes.

World Cup results

Season titles

SeasonDiscipline
1995Downhill
1996Downhill

Season standings

SeasonAgeOverallSlalomGiant
SlalomSuper GDownhillCombined
19932139563918
1994223642816
199523581
1996246491415
1997257125
199826462417
199927no World Cup starts
200028
2001296826
2002305217

Race podiums

  • 9 wins – (9 DH)
  • 17 podiums – (15 DH, 2 SG)
SeasonDateLocationDisciplinePlace
1993March 13, 1993Kvitfjell, NorwayDownhill2nd
1995December 9, 1994Lake Louise, CanadaDownhill1st
December 11, 1994Super G3rd
January 14, 1995Garmisch, GermanySuper G2nd
January 20, 1995Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyDownhill2nd
January 21, 1995Downhill1st
February 17, 1995Åre, SwedenDownhill1st
March 4, 1995Saalbach, AustriaDownhill1st
March 11, 1995Lenzerheide, SwitzerlandDownhill1st
March 15, 1995Bormio, ItalyDownhill1st
1996December 1, 1995Lake Louise, CanadaDownhill1st
December 16, 1995St. Anton, AustriaDownhill3rd
January 19, 1996Cortina d'Ampezzo, ItalyDownhill1st
January 20, 1996Downhill2nd
February 3, 1996Val-d'Isère, FranceDownhill2nd
February 29, 1996Narvik, NorwayDownhill1st
March 1, 1996Downhill2nd

World Championship results

YearAgeSlalomGiant
SlalomSuper GDownhillCombined
199321102
19962431
199725injured, did not compete
199927

Olympic results

YearAgeSlalomGiant
SlalomSuper GDownhillCombined
199422210
19982616
20023016

References

References

  1. [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/sports/longterm/olympics1998/sport/profiles/street.htm ALPINE SKIING: Picabo Street ]
  2. Phillips, Bob. (2002). "Injuries haven't stopped greatest U.S. skier". ESPN.
  3. http://www.rowlandhall.org/schoollife/rowmark/college_placement/index.php {{Webarchive. link. (January 31, 2010 Recent Articles : Ski Program – Rowmark Ski Academy, accessed February 21, 2010)
  4. (February 6, 1993). "Vogt wins women's combined". Lodi News Sentinel.
  5. Baum, Bob. (July 8, 1997). "Street's back on skis with sights set on Nagano". Moscow-Pullman Daily News.
  6. [http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/1998/03/14/oth_224121.shtml ''The Augusta Chronicle''] – March 14, 1998 – accessed April 3, 2011
  7. (March 14, 1998). "Street breaks leg in crash". Lodi News Sentinel.
  8. "The Santa Cruz Sentinel", August 6, 1998.
  9. (September 2, 2009). "SportsBusiness Daily: Names in the News".
  10. "Stars Earn Stripes, Episode 105 (Harbor Demolition) Results".
  11. Sheff-Cahan, Vicki. (November 3, 2008). "Olympic skier Picabo Street weds".
  12. [http://www.usoc.org/26_13382.htm United States Olympic Committee – Street, Picabo]
  13. [https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/picabo-icu/ - "Picabo ICU" joke]
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