After dreaming about winning a gold medal since he was nine years old, Canadian freestyle skier Mikael Kingsbury soaked in every moment as he felt the weight of the medal tug against his neck a day after he secured the top title at the Pyeongchang Olympics on Monday evening.
The “King of the Moguls” has been preparing for that moment since he was a nine-year-old boy watching the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah from his home in Deux-Montagnes, Que. At the time, Kingsbury printed out a photo of the Olympic rings and wrote on it ‘I will win’ and pasted it above his bed.
“Every time I was going to bed I would see it on the roof over my bed or every time I would wake up I would see it so I dreamed about winning the gold at the Olympics a million times,” he told CTV’s Your Morning on Tuesday.
After Kingsbury clinched the gold in the men’s moguls competition with a score of 86.63 for his final run, his older brother made a small edit to the poster still hanging in his bedroom.
“[He] scratched out ‘I will’ and wrote ‘You did win,’” he said with a smile.
The 25-year-old athlete described how he felt when he was presented with his medal on Tuesday.
“It feels amazing. I’ve been dreaming about that gold medal all my life and now that I have it and the first time they put it around your neck, the feeling is unbelievable,” he told 鶹ý Channel.
Kingsbury credited his parents for his success and said he plans to give his gold medal to them.
“This is our medal,” he said. “They’re a big part of why I won this. Without them there’s no chance I would have this around my neck so I’m so grateful that they’ve helped me throughout my career.”
After dominating the World Cup circuit by winning six out of seven titles and with a silver Olympic medal already under his belt from the previous Winter Olympics, Kingsbury said he was ready to go for gold.
“There was a lot of pressure. I was the favourite to win the event,” he said. “Once I went through the first round and the second round and I arrived at the medal round I felt more and more confident.”
“I trust myself, especially in those big moments where it’s so easy to become stiff and crisp on top of the course and let the pressure get to your head.”
With files from CTV’s Your Morning and 鶹ý Channel