Quotes from Dan O'Brien


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I was playing little league baseball when Bruce Jenner was winning the gold but I don't think I was really paying attention at that time.


I was a good decathlete until I got with a coach that really knew how to train specifically for the event... I'd really describe it as like being a juggler; you have ten balls and you're trying to get them all in the air at the same time.


To me, the decathlon is its own little society and I am part of that culture.


It really means a lot that I won the gold medal - but I woke up the next morning expecting to feel different. I felt the same.


I've always had to have some kind of failure before I was successful.


I call myself a chameleon.


And there is such a thing as a decathlon high. It's like a rock rolling down hill, picking up momentum. You get better and better.


Through everything I've gone through- and I've been everywhere, at the top of the world, in jail, hung over drunk - I never gave up my dream of winning a gold medal in the Olympics.


Breaking the world record in '92 was a very special personal moment, but I'd say my favorite moment as a decathlete was winning the Olympic gold medal.


There is nothing better than having a personal-best day, being in shape and pushing myself beyond my own limits.


It's important for me to think I'm mixed-race.


The decathlon includes ten separate events and they all matter. You can't work on just one of them.


As a young athlete, it was first about having fun; then it was about winning.


When my world record got broken in 1999, it hurt a little bit, to say the least. But I was in a leg brace at the time and I had just had knee surgery and I couldn't do anything about it.


I was playing little league baseball when Bruce Jenner was winning the gold, but I don't think I was really paying attention at that time. It wasn't until 1980 - I think I was 12 years old - that I thought, 'Wow that's what I want to do. I want to be on the Olympic team.'


It took me time to realize that the men who won Olympic gold medals in the decathlon are just men, just like me.


Try everything, because you're never sure what you're going to be great at.


I think what my parents did was perfect. They were strict, concerned about my safety and held me back just a little.


When I was little, I wasn't allowed to put sugar on my breakfast cereal because it made me so hyper.


You have to be able to be a good loser. You have to be okay knowing you're going to fail every day in something without getting mad and upset.