Los Angeles Times

Rising star’s halfpipe dreams

Snowboarde­r Chloe Kim should get serious airtime at Games

- By David Wharton

Spinning, flipping, flitting from one place to the next, Chloe Kim speaks in much the same way she rides the halfpipe, with breathless velocity and startling twists.

“Snowboardi­ng brought me out of my shell,” she says. “You know, if you meet someone for the first time, they’re not going to bite you.”

Sitting before a clutch of reporters, looking every bit the Southern California teenager in lipstick and blond highlights, Kim muses rapidfire about fan letters from prison, less-than-stellar SAT scores and the relative merits of the Korean food her mother cooks.

“I need to go to Chipotle,” she says. “It’s like KFC, where you at?”

Grit and daring have made this 17year-old from La Palma a prodigy in her sport. The first woman to land back-to-back 1080s — two triple-spins in a flash — she is expected to medal at the upcoming 2018 Winter Olympics.

But if the Games serve as a watershed moment in her career, athleticis­m will be only part of the equation.

The U.S. State Department recently enlisted Kim, a first-generation Korean American, for a goodwill tour of South Korea, where the Olympics will take place. NBC has placed her at the forefront of its promotiona­l spots, and corporate sponsors love her connection with a young demographi­c.

Sheer personalit­y could make this self-proclaimed “girly girl” a crossover star in the vein of fellow snow-

boarder Shaun White.

“She is going to play very well on TV,” says Andrew Rohm, a marketing professor at Loyola Marymount University. “This is her coming-out party on the world stage.”

At first glance, nothing about Kim — not her slim build or bright smile or the pitch of her voice — hints at the ferocity with which she attacks the 22-foot walls of the halfpipe.

Speed translates into big air. This amplitude buys precious time to do things no one has seen in women’s snowboardi­ng.

“Ridiculous­ly talented,” says Rick Bower, a U.S. national coach. “She has a huge bag of tricks.”

It all started with her father, Jong Jin Kim, who years ago wanted to try snowboardi­ng. When his wife refused to join him, he instead brought their daughter up to the Mountain High resort.

“He took me as bait so he could be like, your 4-year-old daughter is here with me on the mountain, do you know how dangerous that is? You’re a bad mom for not coming with her,” Kim recalls.

Southern California’s warm climate might not seem conducive to winter sports, but White — the Michael Jordan of snowboardi­ng — grew up near San Diego, honing his skills in the San Bernardino Mountains.

Two aspects of Kim’s early start laid a foundation for success.

So small at first, she could not afford to cautiously zig-zag across the pipe. The preschoole­r needed to take a riskier path, angling downhill to generate enough pace to launch herself even a few feet off the lip.

And though she was a natural “goofy-foot,” riding with her right foot forward, her dad made her practice regular-foot until she was comfortabl­e either way.

“That’s not normal,” Bower says. “Her ability to ride switch-stance is pretty amazing.”

After winning her first junior competitio­n at age 6, Kim spent two years living with an aunt in Switzerlan­d, making weekly trips to the Alps. She then returned to Los Angeles and joined the developmen­tal program at Mammoth Mountain.

As his daughter’s skills continued to blossom, Jong decided to quit his job as an engineer.

“He went home and just told my mom, ‘I’m done working, I’m going to make my daughter an Olympian,’ ” Kim says.

Jong would drag himself out of bed in the early morning, bundling his daughter into the car, letting her sleep as he drove hours north to Mammoth Lakes.

Though not quite as confident about future stardom, Kim gladly threw herself into riding, which she considered “a good obsession.” People started noticing her on the mountain.

“Just this tiny little girl,” Bower recalls. “But she could go so big out of the pipe.”

The first milestone came in 2014 when a 13-year-old Kim performed a stunning final run, capped by consecutiv­e 720s, to take silver at the X Games. Veteran rider Kelly Clark, who won that day, figures it was the start of something historic.

“She’s one of the most talented young riders I’ve ever seen,” Clark says.

One after another, Kim mastered her sport’s midair acrobatics — the spins, flips and rotations known by such names as McTwists, frontside 9s and cab 720 melons. Her relaxed style belied the strength and conviction required to perform such tricks.

Only a minimum-age requiremen­t kept her out of the 2014 Winter Olympics as she began rattling off a string of podium finishes at competitio­ns around the world. The media dubbed her an overnight success, a natural-born talent.

That did not sound right to her coach.

“It took a decade of very hard work,” Bower says. “She’s committed to doing the nasty stuff that no one likes to do, improving the things she’s not good at.”

If anything came naturally, it was Kim’s ability to draw fans.

Born to a generation that subsists on social media, she regularly posted photograph­s of her puppy and her latest hair color, which morphed into shades of purple, green and blue.

That letter from a prisoner? She answered it.

“I’m always trying to respond to my Instagram direct messages, even if they’re a little weird,” she says. “I’ll have a Q&A on Snapchat and talk to everyone.”

In this very public life, no subject is off-limits. At a recent media event organized by the U.S. Olympic Committee, she free-associated through a range of personal topics.

On the first time her father met her mother: “He was like, you’re actually really cool. I’m gonna wife you up.”

Growing up Korean American: “What do they call it? Yeah, banana. Asian on the outside, white on the inside.”

Earning an “average” SAT score: “If someone’s kid got that score, their [parents] are probably like, ‘Oh, you’re taking it again.’ But my parents were so happy.”

As the second-born from an immigrant family — she has an older sister — Kim faced skepticism from relatives early on. She says: “You know, a Korean’s ideal thing is to be a lawyer, a doctor.” Now the only one who harbors any doubts might be Kim herself.

As the Winter Games draw near, scheduled to begin in Pyeongchan­g on Feb. 9, she wonders about how her life might change.

On the recent goodwill tour of South Korea, as she met with a group of schoolchil­dren, photograph­ers crowded around. It was her first paparazzi moment.

“I straight-up ran away,” she says. “I was so scared.”

It took a few minutes to calm down, at which point Kim reconsider­ed.

If things go as expected next month, she will face a new level of celebrity. She might even enjoy it.

“Like Kim Kardashian,” she says, turning to show her profile. “Yeah, this is my good side.”

 ?? Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ?? CHLOE KIM soars in the finals of the ladies’ halfpipe competitio­n at the Toyota U.S. Grand Prix in Copper Mountain, Colo., last month. Kim, 17, a first-generation Korean American, finished in first place.
Sean M. Haffey Getty Images CHLOE KIM soars in the finals of the ladies’ halfpipe competitio­n at the Toyota U.S. Grand Prix in Copper Mountain, Colo., last month. Kim, 17, a first-generation Korean American, finished in first place.
 ??  ??
 ?? Matthew Stockman Getty Images ?? CHLOE KIM competes in Colorado. She is “ridiculous­ly talented,” says Rick Bower, a U.S. national coach. “She has a huge bag of tricks.”
Matthew Stockman Getty Images CHLOE KIM competes in Colorado. She is “ridiculous­ly talented,” says Rick Bower, a U.S. national coach. “She has a huge bag of tricks.”
 ?? Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ?? ONLY A minimum-age requiremen­t kept Kim out of the 2014 Winter Olympics as she began rattling off podium finishes at competitio­ns around the world.
Sean M. Haffey Getty Images ONLY A minimum-age requiremen­t kept Kim out of the 2014 Winter Olympics as she began rattling off podium finishes at competitio­ns around the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States