Outside
February 2002
Edited by Laura Hohnhold
©
Bill Donahue
THE
HOUSE WAS EMPTY AND IT WOULD SOON BE DEMOLISHED—wrecking balls
and all that—so they decided to have one last party there,
the real estate agent and her friends. It would be a white-trash
theme party—the Corn Dog Hoedown. Guests showed up in cutoffs
and gingham halter tops. A tattoo artist named Bill Conner laid
out his needles on a table by the sliding-glass door overlooking
the pool and waited. Conner had traveled here to San Diego all the
way from Miami Beach, where he worked at Tattoo Circus, rendering
Harley logos, pinup girls, whatever, for tourists. On this February
night in 2000, he was doing tats for practically nothing.
Pretty
soon along came this guy—muscular, intense, somewhat inebriated.
He would get in a fistfight later that evening, after trying to
hit on some Marine's girlfriend. Conner remembers seeing him with
a gash on the head, being escorted off the property. But right now
all he wanted was a tattoo, an over-the-top number he'd thought
of himself. "I drew up a little skull with flames coming out
of it and a banner underneath with the words 'Ski to Die,'"
Conner says. "He was stoked."
Drunk-guy
tattoos are often a source of serious regret, but not this time.
The man who got it was an unrepentant speed demon, a former world-class
skier who'd attained a brief flash of stardom, ages before.
On
February 16, 1984, William Dean Johnson, then 23, won the men's
downhill at the Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia. On that
cold afternoon he became the first American man in Olympic history
to earn a gold medal in an alpine skiing event. Perhaps you remember
his run: the hissing violence of his skis as he knifed through the
tight turns on the upper half of the course, the wild looseness
of his body flowing over the jumps, that ultratight tuck, and the
euphoria with which ABC announcer Bob Beattie shouted, "Yes,
he's done it! He's done it!"
The
spectacle was even more poignant because Bill Johnson was a working-class
kid, a onetime juvenile delinquent snatching victory in a sport
long ruled by the rich. Johnson had grown up near Portland, Oregon,
in the logging town of Brightwood, and his family was so strapped
for cash that at times they had to sleep in the car when they traveled
to ski races. As a kid, Bill broke into houses for kicks. He once
stole a Chevy; he spent three days in jail.
He
was brash, abrasive, and wholly surprising. When he arrived in Sarajevo,
he wasn't even among the world's top ten downhillers. Yet the course—relatively
straight and flat—was tailor-made for fast gliders like Johnson,
and he saw this, cockily predicting, "Everyone else is here
to fight for second place." He backed it up, too, trouncing
his closest competitor by 0.27 seconds. When one reporter asked
about the value of his gold medal, he swaggered and said, "Millions.
We're talking millions."
He
was not a bad guy, actually. He responded to all of the 50 or so
fan letters he got each week, and after winning the gold he remained
the consummate buddy to a tight band of friends, most of them skiers.
"He's loyal to the death," says retired U.S. Ski Team
racer Mark Herhusky. "He's the kind of person you'd want on
your side in a barroom scuffle."
But
Johnson's crash-and-burn style was better suited to the slopes than
to daily life. He drove fast, partied hard, shot guns, surfed at
midnight, and in general carried on as if those clichéd extreme-sport
adages—Rip it! Tear shit up!—were his holy credo. In
the end, the fire that propelled him, that youthful fearlessness,
would devolve into a sort of desperation—nihilism, even. He
would become the stereotypical ex-jock who destroys himself trying
to act young, and his life would serve as proof that you cannot
burn on forever. There he was at the white-trash party—unemployed,
of no fixed address, in the midst of a divorce, and pathetically
intent on reconnecting to his glorious past.
Ski
to Die. Right after the ink dried on his shoulder, Johnson—who
was about to turn 40—launched a long-shot bid to make the
2002 Olympic ski team. Almost no one has stayed on the team past
30. Johnson had retired from the World Cup circuit at 29 and had
spent much of the past decade off skis, working as a freelance carpenter.
He had herniated five disks and his shoulder was held together with
pins, thanks to old ski-racing injuries. Without any sponsorship
of note, he had only one pair of new skis instead of the five or
six that elite racers typically need.
Nonetheless,
last winter he began tooling around the West in his '84 Ford pickup—going
to races and slowly climbing out of the basement of the national
rankings. By March 2001, when it came time for the U.S. Alpine Championships
at Big Mountain in Montana, Johnson was starting 33rd in a field
of 63 racers. He hoped to triumph by skiing fast through an icy,
rutted dogleg turn near the base. He hit the turn at 50 miles per
hour. Then he caught an edge, his legs went spread-eagle, and his
body flew sideways through the mesh fence marking the course. His
helmeted head smacked the snow, hard; his brain rotated inside his
skull, and tissue tore and bled. Within minutes he was in a coma.
IT
WAS EARLY OCTOBER, SIX MONTHS AFTER THE CRASH, and Johnson was sitting
at the breakfast table inside his mother's home near Portland, puzzling
over a legal form as the soft autumn light washed in through the
window. He is five-foot-nine, with reddish blond hair, and he's
still handsome in a ruddy, straightforward way. He'd gained 25 pounds
and a slight paunch since his accident, though, and his movements
were herky-jerky. He smiled, and it was a huge smile, simple and
generous. I liked him.
"I
have to fill this out," Johnson said, "for the state."
I nodded, and then he said it again: "I have to fill this out
for the state."
Johnson's
fall made his brain swell, putting pressure on his upper brain stem
and triggering the coma. By the time medics arrived, his pupils
weren't reacting to light. A chunk of his tongue had torn free and
blood was filling his lungs. On the Glasgow coma scale, which ranges
from three (no brain activity) to 15 (fully cognitive), Johnson
was a five.
He
was unconscious for more than three weeks, and when he came to it
was like his brain, damaged by countless small tissue tears, was
a computer whose wiring had frayed. He couldn't remember anything
from the previous six years. He had to learn the most basic human
activities—walking, speaking, brushing his teeth—all
over again. After three months at the Centre for Neuro Skills in
Bakersfield, California, Johnson returned to Portland to live with
his mother, DB, and her second husband, Jimmy Cooper, a machinist.
Johnson continued to visit various therapists four or five times
a week, where he spent hours doing balance exercises and memorizing
words. He had the emotional outlook of a child, and when he tried
to talk, the phrases often floated loose in his mind.
"I
forget where I crashed," he said to me. "I think it was
1991, but people tell me I was 40 years old and that's amazing because
I didn't want to make a comeback when I was 40 years old. It doesn't
make any sense to me. But I want to get prepared for next year's
racing. There's no way I can be on the U.S. Ski Team, the way my
body is now, but next year..."
Johnson's
mother was in the garage, where she runs a small business selling
flags and banners for sporting events, but eventually she wandered
into the room. DB Johnson is 65, sturdily built, with gray hair.
She's brisk and upbeat in the manner of someone used to making the
best of tough situations.
"Bill,"
she said cheerfully, "tell him what you did yesterday."
"Caught
a 27-inch steelhead. It was no big deal. Normally I catch all the
fish in the river."
"And
what else?"
"Went
mountain biking. I fell a lot. I fell four or five times and my
knees and elbows are scratched, but I made it six miles."
Johnson
was also playing golf; recently he'd shot a 38 for nine holes. His
body, it seemed, remembered being an athlete. After months of therapy,
however, his brain was still faltering. "I'd place his physical
recovery in the upper third among brain-injury patients," says
his doctor, Molly Hoeflich, a physiatrist at Portland's Providence
Medical Center, "but he will be left with permanent cognitive
deficits. It's impossible to say how much, but people with brain
injuries—they frequently have a hard time returning to work.
They need to live in a supervised setting."
Which
means that, for the foreseeable future, Johnson will be staying
with his mother. His therapy could go on for years, and the cost
will be covered only partially by Johnson's insurance, so DB is
having him file for bankruptcy to protect himself from mounting
medical bills. Meanwhile, she will loyally shuttle him back and
forth between therapists.
"We
were prepared to walk him to the bathroom when he came home from
Bakersfield," DB told me. "This isn't scary. We just hope
he comes out of it. It's hard. It's very difficult." From the
warmth of her words, it was clear that she loved the youngest of
her four children and wanted to shield him from further hurt. If
you ask too much, DB's crossed arms and hard glare seemed to tell
me, I'll cut you off. She has always protected Bill—from the
pain of her 1976 divorce from her first husband, Wally Johnson,
and from the trouble that Bill never seemed able to escape both
as a child and as a grown man. It was DB who lobbied principals
to keep Bill in school despite his playground brawling. Later, in
1985, she quit her job so that she could travel the ski circuit
and work as his agent, soliciting endorsements. Their relationship
was at times contentious. In fact, they were enmeshed in a dispute
over finances before Bill crashed. Even now he can get sour on her.
"I
could live in this house forever," he told me as I was leaving
one day, "but do I want to? It's not a question." He turned
to his mother. "I don't want to live with you right now. It's
just not part of my life."
"Well,
where do you want to live?" DB said, unfazed.
"Alone,"
Bill said. He slumped in his chair and glowered.
MARK
HERHUSKY FLEW to Montana immediately after the accident. He sat
in Johnson's hospital room for five days, reading fan letters out
loud. Other friends played Led Zeppelin and Stevie Ray Vaughn tapes,
in hopes that the familiar tunes would jolt something deep in his
memory. They stayed with him overnight, listening for a conscious
moan, waiting for him to open his eyes. A guy who washed dishes
with Johnson more than two decades ago recently launched the Bill
Johnson Foundation, which has raised $6,000 toward Johnson's future
living expenses. Clearly, the best thing that has happened in the
wake of Johnson's crash is the great outpouring of support he's
gotten from friends, from what former pro downhiller John Creel
calls "the ski-racing brotherhood." Creel, 45, is a firefighter
who raced against Johnson in the seventies. Like Johnson, he is
friendly and boisterous, with a testosterone-heavy résumé.
He's a waterfall kayaker and was the first person to ski the crater
of Mount St. Helens after it erupted in 1980. He entered Bill Johnson's
story in the summer of 2000, when Johnson showed up at Creel's fire
station, looking for someone to coach him through his comeback attempt.
"He
walked in with an ice cream cone and ice cream dripping down his
shirt, and he said he wanted my help," Creel remembers. "We
weren't close friends. It wasn't like we'd chased chicks together,
but he was part of the brotherhood. I told him, 'Follow me home.
We start training tomorrow.'"
Creel
still styles himself as Johnson's coach. Though he acknowledges
Dr. Hoeflich's assessment—that it's extremely unlikely Johnson
will ski at a top level again—he's reluctant to let go of
the notion that he's orchestrating an Olympic comeback. All last
fall, as Johnson struggled with ordinary tasks, Creel shepherded
him through a training regimen he described as "riding the
edge." It consisted largely of drinking beer, with a little
golf and fishing thrown in. In late November, Johnson officially
returned to the slopes with some mild runs at Mount Hood. The primary
training camp was Creel's house in Maupin, Oregon, a tiny desert
town on the Deschutes River, 100 miles east of Portland. One morning
Johnson and I decided to head out there with fishing poles. He wore
a special T-shirt for the occasion. It read: "Goin' Richter."
We
went with Petr Kakes, a Czech national who placed sixth in speed
skiing (that is, shooting straight down a steep slope) at the 1992
Winter Olympics. Kakes drove at least 75 the whole way, and we pulled
some serious g's on the winding turns of Route 26.
I asked
Johnson if he liked driving fast. "It's more of a thrill to
shoot a gun," he said. "I used to shoot birds that go
in the ocean—any kind of birds that ate fish. I used to shoot
them for themselves."
We
arrived at Creel's around noon, and right away he forked Johnson
a cold beer.
"His mom said only one an hour," Creel said, smirking.
"That's
history now," Kakes said.
We
walked over to the Rainbow Tavern to get some sandwiches and ran
into Gary Odam, a retired sheet-metal worker who'd met Johnson a
couple of times the summer before. Odam insisted on buying Johnson
a beer. "What this guy's been through," he said, "I
should buy him a jug of whiskey." He turned to Johnson. "You
were fucked up, man. But you came through. You got a lot of guts,
man."
"I
do got a lot of guts, man," Johnson said. It was impossible
to tell whether the comment was a wry quip or just vacant mimicry.
But it carried a glint of the old cocky Johnson, and Odam loved
it.
"Let
me buy you another one," he said. "I can't think of anything
that'd be more of an honor to me. What you did at the Olympics,
it was phenomenal! Man, that was like those guys landing on the
moon or something! All the bars and taverns in Portland were full,
and everyone was ecstatic. I mean, people were going fucking crazy
that night. Crazy!"
FOR
A SHORT WHILE after he won the gold, Johnson was a national hero.
He made the cover of Sports Illustrated. He got a Porsche 911 and
an Audi Quattro, along with fat victory payouts from Atomic and
his other gear sponsors. Corporations paid him to show up at their
ski outings.
He
did not, to put it mildly, husband his resources carefully. He bought
a house overlooking California's Malibu Canyon; a pickup truck;
a speedboat. He paid for most of it with cash. Herhusky remembers
seeing him once with $40,000 worth of $100 bills in his pocket;
the serial numbers on the bills were consecutive.
Johnson
met and later married a waitress from Lake Tahoe named Gina Ricci,
and the couple traveled in style. "I visited them once at a
resort and they were in a high-rise suite, with flowers all over
the room," says Herhusky. "We were eating chocolate-covered
strawberries and drinking champagne."
Johnson
lived like a rock star, and his skiing suffered for it. He showed
up for the 1985–1986 season out of shape and he crashed hellaciously
in Italy, wrenching his knee and herniating disks in his back. "He
came to Tahoe to visit me in a cast, bent and broken," recalls
Herhusky, "and he just went crazy, gambling, partying. He went
to the casino four days straight."
His
15 minutes of fame were over. The endorsements stopped flowing,
and in the late eighties he sold the Malibu house. He and Gina began
wandering California and Oregon in an RV, with Johnson, a skilled
carpenter, picking up money here and there doing renovation work.
He
eventually landed a job with Crested Butte Mountain Resort in 1990;
as the mountain's "ski ambassador," he was paid to schuss
with visiting journalists and corporate bigwigs. But Johnson had
a bad habit of bombing the hill and leaving civilians in the dust.
In 1995 Crested Butte canceled his five-season contract a year early.
As
his old teammates built solid careers in the ski industry, the gold
medalist found himself on the margins. "Americans want their
Olympic athletes to be wholesome—to have integrity, pride,
and sportsmanship," says Ryan Schinman, president of a New
York marketing firm called Platinum Rye Entertainment, which has
represented Picabo Street and other star performers. "Bill
was outlandish, and he had his mother as his agent. What did she
know about corporate America?"
For
a few years after leaving Crested Butte, Johnson eked out a living
on the appearance fees he made at King of the Mountain, a downhill
series for retired greats. He never worked a steady job but spent
his days scheming—trading stocks on the phone and laying plans
to launch a senior ski-racing tour. After he and Gina moved to San
Diego in 1996, he played tons of golf. "He fell in with a bunch
of guys who had nothing to do but play golf with a bottle of Jack
Daniel's," says Herhusky. "He'd stay out for days at a
time."
There
was tension in the Johnson household, and also bad luck. In 1991,
while Bill was caring for his one-year-old son, Ryan, the boy quietly
let himself outside and into the hot tub. He didn't drown, but he
came so close that, after he spent three hopeless weeks on life
support, the Johnsons made the agonizing decision to let him die.
They had two more boys—Nicholas in 1992 and Tyler in 1994—but
the marriage ended for good in 2000.
Gina
now lives with the kids in Northern California, where she works
as an orthodontist's assistant. She did not return my phone calls.
Bill sees her and his sons rarely, and since his crash he has lost
all comprehension of why she vanished from his life. "The real
tough part is my wife, the thing with me and my wife," he says.
"I don't understand why she doesn't want to be with me. I told
her all I want is love. She doesn't understand I don't have a life.
My whole life is lost."
THE
DESCHUTES RIVER TUMBLES down from the high lava fields of central
Oregon, through ranches and pine forests and over myriad whitewater
rapids on its way to the city of Bend. It's a fisherman's paradise,
and in October the returning steelhead are profuse if you know where
to look. Creel took us a few miles outside Maupin to his favorite
fishing hole, and we unloaded the rods and the beer. Gary Odam,
the guy from the bar, arrived with a 12-pack of Hamm's.
Johnson
threw a hook into the water and Creel, who stands six-foot-two and
weighs 200 pounds, lingered on the bank, exuding the mangy power
of an athlete just a few brewskis past his prime. He popped open
a fresh beer, took a drag on his Marlboro, and began to describe
his training plan for the upcoming winter.
"This year, we're just going to get our feet under us,"
he said. "It'll be about getting out there and skiing. We'll
go poach a course now and then, and yeah, we're gonna play to win.
It'll be extreme and it'll be flat-out because here's the deal:
We can get back on the team. We just gotta pick the right courses.
We don't want the turny ones. We want the ones where he can go 75,
80 miles an hour."
I figured
Creel was rhapsodizing like this for Johnson's benefit, but I looked
around and saw that Bill was well out of earshot. I can only conclude
that the beer was working its magic, because a few days later, in
sober reflection, Creel would shun all talk of a Johnson comeback.
"Trying to make the team was hard enough for Bill the first
and second times," he would say. "What person in their
right mind would want to be involved with that scenario a third
time?"
On
the river, though, Creel envisioned great things. "We're going
to the Olympics," he said. "The drill is, we're trying
to light the torch."
Creel
meant the Olympic torch. He and other Johnson friends had been lobbying
the U.S. Olympic Committee since last May. There was, of course,
a chance that their man would be chosen, but it was very slim. By
the time of his accident America had largely forgotten Bill Johnson,
and that hasn't changed, despite the made-for-TV drama of his recovery
from a coma. Even in the ski world he's inspired only qualified
sympathy. The U.S. Ski Team posts Johnson updates on its Web site,
but has yet to sponsor any fund-raisers.
So
Johnson was lucky to have someone like Creel. Here was a guy who
truly believed in Johnson's greatness, even when doing so was absurd.
Creel believed in the particulars—the torch, the fame that
would have come after that dogleg turn at the nationals—and
he did not regard this fishing trip as baby-sitting or an act of
charity. He and Bill, he told me, were on a nonstop adventure.
We
caught nothing all afternoon; we didn't even get a nibble. Everything
was quiet and still until about four o'clock, when suddenly I heard
something go splash. It was Johnson. He'd slipped and fallen into
the river and now he was floating there, his head up and his eyes
bulging.
Kakes
got to him first. He anchored his powerful legs on the bank, pulled
Johnson out of the water, and rushed him up to the picnic table.
"Take
off your socks," advised Creel.
"Here,
use this towel," said Kakes.
"Take
off your shirt," said Creel.
"Aw,
hell," said Odam, "why don't you just take it all off
and give us a table dance?" Johnson threw his head back and
laughed, and then we fished for a couple more hours.
DB
picked us up near Kakes's house on Mount Hood that evening. She
knew about Bill's fall in the river (he'd called her from Creel's),
and she had the heat cranked up in the car for him. "We forgot
to pack you an extra set of clothes," said DB. "Next time
we'll just send them along whether you like it or not. Are you warm
enough?"
It
was 79 degrees in the car, according to the gauge on the dash, but
he wanted it warmer. DB turned the heat up a touch and then smiled
over at Bill. She was just recovering from abdominal surgery and
yet here she was, driving an hour to get us.
DB
told me she was prepared to care for Bill until infirmity stopped
her, and I thought of what his doctor, Molly Hoeflich, had said
about the importance of this kind of care and attention: "If
you go into any city in the country, you see people with cognitive
deficits who live on the streets because they can't function in
the world; they have no one to take care of them. These people just
spiral downward. They get in fights. Their brain damage gets worse.
Bill is doing well largely because he's gotten tremendous love and
support.
"But
is this enough? I hear people say, 'I got better because I really
wanted it, because my family really wanted it.' But there are people
who really want it and don't get it. Bill's outcome," she concluded,
"is becoming increasingly predictable. He will improve, but
not drastically."
We
drove on. Johnson told me he could hit a golf ball 300 yards. He
reminded me, again, that he'd won the gold medal. Eventually his
mother mentioned that the next morning she'd be taking him to a
health club for his first visit.
"You
can lift weights, Bill," she said.
"That's
good," he said, "because all I want to do now, all I want
to do now—" We reached the Johnsons' driveway and DB
turned in as Bill groped for the words. "All I want to do now
is be a weight holder."
"Oh,
Bill," said DB. She turned off the car and patted him on the
back, gently.
Johnson smiled at the gesture. Then he followed his mother across
the driveway and into the house.
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