The Denver Post

Vail downhiller Brown reaches lofty pinnacle

Racer, coach headed toColorado Ski& SnowboardH­all of Fame

- By JohnMeyer JohnMeyer: 303-954-1616, jmeyer@denverpost.com or twitter.com/johnmeyer

avon » For years, Vail downhiller Mike Brown looked forward to the 1988-89 season. For the first time since 1950, theworld alpine championsh­ips were coming to the United States, they would be held in his hometown, and he would get to compete on a Beaver Creek course where he had “skied really well” in the past.

But thatDecemb­er, Brownherni­ated two discs liftingwei­ghts after an on-snowtraini­ng session in Switzerlan­d, requiring back surgery only six weeks before worlds. Coaches held him out of the downhill atworlds but let him race in the super-G. With the nerves in his left leg impaired, he finished 47th.

Brown couldn’t have known the back injury that ended his competitiv­e career prematurel­y would affect him for the rest of his life, indirectly causing a disability that affects him today.

For years he couldn’t ski because nearly half of the nerves in his left leg were damaged by a botched follow-up surgery in 2002. His lower left leg is atrophied, noticeably smaller than his right. But thanks to more surgery in 2008, Brown nowcan ski with his wife, also a former ski racer, and their 8-year-old daughter.

OnFriday night his familywill get to stand and cheerwhen he is inducted into the Colorado Ski & SnowboardH­all of Fame. Here’s the irony: He is being inducted in part because of the seven years he coached the U.S. Disabled Ski Team— something he did after he stopped racing but before he was disabled.

“I never would have dreamed something like this would happen,” said Brown, who moved to Vail from Denver with his family in 1964, when he was 2 years old.

“I think he is one of the most deserving people,” said his wife, Jen, “and I’m incredibly thrilled because I knowwhat his career meant to him. His entreprene­urial side, his passion and love for Vail and for kids, to see him coach his athletes— he is the sport in every facet.”

A new beginning after an end

Growing up, Brown learned to ski atMeadow Mountain, a tiny area justwest ofVail that closed in 1969. It only had 570 feet of vertical rise, but it was great for kids. Season passes cost $25. It had a unique apres-ski amenity too.

“You had this really neat old A-frame lodge, and it was one of the only places in the valley that had TV,” Brown recalled. “Every Sunday night we’d get to stay there and watch TV. We’d watch ‘ Wonderful World of Disney’ and have a hamburger.”

Skiswerewo­oden and bootswere leather, but not for long. Soon Brown graduated to Vail, which had opened in 1962. There was no Interstate 70, just a two-lane U.S. 6 where the south frontage road is now.

“I’m probably in the last group of people that started on wooden skis with screw-on edges,” Brown said. “Itwas hard for us becausewe could never lace our boots up tight enough. They didn’t have kids’ buckle boots back then. We’d always have our dad lace up our boots for us, which made for seriously cold feet.”

Brown would race five seasons on the World Cup, capturing six top-15 results, but didn’t race after the Vail ’89 world championsh­ips. The following winter a friend asked him to help set up a training camp for the U.S. disabled team, which was preparing for the 1990world disabled championsh­ips atWinter Park.

Brown set up a downhill training course at Beaver Creek and helped the team atworlds, after which disabled team coach Homer Jennings asked him to remain with the program. At the time, Jennings was running the team out of the back of his pickup truck.

“They liked thework that I had done, soHomer hired me as a coach, which back then was maybe 11 or 12 days awinter,” Brown said. “There wasn’t a tremendous budget. More and more people started to move to Vail because of the coaching I was doing.”

Brown coached two of the most decorated racers in Paralympic history, Chris Waddell and SarahWill. He also worked to get more funding for Paralympic skiers.

Finally at ease and back on skis

Still struggling with back trouble in 2002, Brown opted for spinal fusion surgery, but that made thingswors­ewhen a screwwas placed too close to his spinal cord.

“We thought this was going to be such a great thing,” said Jen. “To have such a shock— we really didn’t knowwhatwa­s wrong. Itwas very, very difficult.”

For years he couldn’t ski because of the disability caused by that botched surgery. Then in 2008, more surgery repaired some of the damage. Nowhe can ski with Jen and their daughter, Maddie, even though he still can’t raise his left foot.

“I had to figure out certain things I could do still and other things that I couldn’t,” Brownsaid. “The things I couldn’t, I had to figure out shortcuts or ways to get around not doing them but still accomplish­ing what I wanted to do. It took three, four years to really get a handle on it.”

Now he’s coaching Maddie in Buddy Werner League racing.

“She loves it, and emulates Mike to a T in her technique,” Jen said. “If she gets into a tuck, it looks exactly like him in her angles.”

 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? FormerU.S. Ski Team member Mike Brown stands on aVail slope, nownamed for LindseyVon­n, onwhich he once raced.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post FormerU.S. Ski Team member Mike Brown stands on aVail slope, nownamed for LindseyVon­n, onwhich he once raced.

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