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Dorothy Hamill Quotes


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Dorothy Hamill
July 26, 1956 -
Nationality: American
Category: Athlete
Subcategory: American Athlete

I hated to read. My mother could not get me to read. I'm going through the same thing with my daughter now. I love to read now, but I don't remember reading.

   

My parents didn't have a lot of money, but we never knew that. They really did the best they could.

   

It's different today than it was then. In those days we were strictly amateurs. If I had wanted to stay in for the '80 Olympics, my parents couldn't have afforded it.

   

My mother stopped working when she had my brother. She was a full time mom until I started getting heavily into ice skating lessons, and it got to the point where they really needed my mom to earn an income.

   

Every time you go out on the ice, there are slight flaws. You can always think of something you should have done better. These are the things you must work on.

   

I was passionate. I found something that I loved. I could be all alone in a big old skating rink and nobody could get near me and I didn't have to talk to anybody because of my shyness. It was great. I was in my fantasy world.

   

They're still considered Olympic eligibles, so there's never an issue whether they're going to turn pro or not. When they get to that level, money is never an issue. They make so much money now.

   

I wanted to learn how to skate backwards and they wouldn't help me and they went off and left me on my own.

   

In group lesson number six I think we learned how to turn backwards and then just kind of wiggle. That wasn't really skating backward, but I guess I was going in the right direction.

   

I don't really think they saw anything in me, except the fact that I was interested in it. Some of the kids would miss a week here and miss a week there, I think they could see that I really enjoyed it.

   

I was just ice skating. I had no concept of that. In those days you couldn't see the judges. I was this little person on the ice and they were just people that would stand around the boards.

   

My coach was a great politician, so he did most of the work. He was good.

   

There were no competitions on television. The first skating competition I ever remember seeing on television was the 1968 Olympics when Peggy Fleming won.

   

I wouldn't say that there's ever been an Olympic champion that didn't deserve to win an Olympic Gold Medal.

   

It was very much like Norman Rockwell: small town America. We walked to school or rode our bikes, stopped at the penny candy store on the way home from school, skated on the pond.

   

I was a bratty little sister. I was the youngest of three, and I often felt as though I didn't fit in.

   

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