|
Where
are they Now?
ABC
Sports Online Report
A queen of the ice, Debi Thomas was one of the most popular female
sports stars of the 1980s.
Thomas
burst onto the figure skating scene in 1986, when she won the national
and world championships during her freshman year at Stanford University.
In honor of these feats, she was named Wide World of Sports' 1986
Athlete of the Year. Two years later she added a second national
title along with a bronze medal in the Olympics.
Debi
Thomas is the only African-American to win a medal in the Winter
Olympics. After earning three world professional skating championships,
Thomas graduated from Stanford in 1991 with a degree in engineering.
She graduated from Northwestern University Medical School in 1997
and intends to specialize in orthopedic surgery.
Thomas
married sports attorney Chris Bequette in the fall of 1996. The
couple lives in Little Rock, Ark., with their two-year-old son Christopher.
This
weekend, Thomas will cap her skating career with an induction into
the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame.
ABC
Sports Online:
What was it like to win the national championship in 1986?
Debi
Thomas:
That was probably one of the best experiences that I've ever had
in skating. There were so many people saying that I [couldn't] do
[that] and go to school full time, and I was able to prove them
wrong.
ABC
Sports Online:
How would you compare winning in '86 to winning in '88?
Debi
Thomas:
Both were very different. In 1988, that was probably the best-trained
I ever was during my skating career. It was one of those competitions
where you knew you were ready, but you didn't want to blow it by
not having your head straight. Plus, it also meant a lot because
it was the Olympic year, and if I wanted a shot at Olympic gold
I needed to be national champion.
ABC
Sports Online:
What was your favorite memory of the Olympics?
Debi
Thomas:
I've erased that from my memory. The Olympics: not one of my better
memories. The majority of the competition I was doing well. It was
disappointing to know that it was a much better schedule than what
I performed. It all comes down to psychology. The things going through
my mind were not the right things to focus on. I got a bronze medal
and I can't complain about that, the only African-American to get
a medal in the Winter Olympics.
ABC
Sports Online:
What was the most special moment for you in your figure skating
career?
Debi
Thomas:
Probably the '86 nationals. That was my first real national title
and first real statement I ever made in figure skating, and my life
changed after I returned. Then I went on to win worlds, which added
to the change in my life. Winning that was outstanding, but I skated
better at the nationals. What was most important to me at the Olympics
was going out there and performing my best. When I messed up the
first jump combination, which was my big move, it hit me that I
messed up the program of my life. It is hard to overturn that. Maybe
if I was more concerned with the gold medal than my performance,
I probably wouldn't have missed anything else. My skating is a very
emotional thing that comes from the heart, never doing it for the
medal.
ABC
Sports Online:
What brought figure skating into your life?
Debi Thomas:
My mother introduced me to many different things, and figure skating
was one of them. I just thought that it was magical having to glide
across the ice. I begged my mom to let me start skating. My idol
was the comedian Mr. Frick, formerly of Frick and Frack. I would
be on the ice, "Look mom, I'm Mr. Frick." When I went to my first
world championship, I mentioned the story, and Mr. Frick saw it
on TV. He sent me a letter and we met at Geneva when I won the world
championship.
ABC
Sports Online:
Why and when did you decide to pursue engineering, medicine and
the sciences?
Debi
Thomas:
I am not really sure how I got interested in medicine. For as long
as I can really remember, I wanted to be a doctor. Even as a little
girl, I would be questioned about what I wanted to be when I grew
up and I would say "doctor." I would make my mom buy me the toy
doctor kit. I was always very strong in math, physics and calculus.
In college, when I had to declare a major, I first went for medical
microbiology, but it wasn't what I thought it would be. My sophomore
year I lived in this co-ed fraternity called Alpha Sigma Phi, and
one of my friends was a mechanical engineer. And I thought it was
so fun to see him always making stuff. Then I left for awhile to
train for the Olympics, and when I came back I no longer wanted
to be a medical microbiology major. So I went for engineering, specifically
product design, which I enjoyed. With orthopedics, I imagine that
I can use my experience to make better prosthetic devices or surgical
equipment. First I have to get into orthopedics. Right now I am
doing my residency in orthopedic research.
ABC
Sports Online:
How do you feel about being inducted into the U.S. Figure Skating
Hall of Fame?
Debi Thomas:
It is great to be a part of the whole skating family, and it makes
me feel ecstatic that my name will be among the greats of the sport.
ABC
Sports Online:
Tell us a little about your volunteer work. Which is the most rewarding
for you? Debi Thomas: I am doing a figure skating clinic right now
for inner-city youth in Chicago along with Blue Cross Blue Shield.
Teaching the young to skate. I sit on all these committees, the
U.S. Figure Skating Sports Medicine Committee and the U.S. Olympic
Sports Medicine Committee.
ABC
Sports Online:
How much do you monitor the sport now? Who are your favorite skaters
to watch?
Debi Thomas:
I watch a lot of professional skating, and I am really looking forward
to going to nationals. I haven't really taken a look at the new
up-and-comers. I judged the world professional championship in 1999,
and it felt good to be on the other side judging instead of skating.
|