Home GRASP GRASP/Korea Chloe Kim: California kid heads to South Korea's games

Chloe Kim: California kid heads to South Korea's games

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ASPEN, Colo. (AP) — Ask snowboarder Chloe Kim what she thinks the “Chloe Kim Story” really is this year and she hesitates just a moment,…
ASPEN, Colo. (AP) — Ask snowboarder Chloe Kim what she thinks the “Chloe Kim Story” really is this year and she hesitates just a moment, before deciding on “The California girl that went to the Olympics.”
It’s perfect, easy, and oh-so-fitting for the 17-year-old from Torrance, California, who loves music and the mall almost as much as she loves stomping her runs — and the competition — in the halfpipe.
But Kim, whether it’s fair or not, has come to represent more than that for these Olympics.
Her parents are from South Korea, where the games will be held starting Feb. 9. Among the handful of relatives who live there is Chloe’s grandma, who has been known to brag about her high-flying granddaughter if, say, she’s out to tea with her friends and a picture of Chloe happens to appear in the newspaper, which happens fairly often.
“They’ve never seen me compete before,” Chloe says. “I’m excited to have them there.”
Though it’s tempting to turn Kim’s story into a bigger narrative about a lifelong wish to win a gold medal in her family’s country, that narrative is not the right one.
She admits to not having all that much more familiarity with South Korea than the average 17-year-old American kid, and the fact is, more than any grand plan, it was the quirks of the calendar, the International Olympic Committee and a hundred other things that will place her in Pyeongchang for her Olympic debut.
Kim was so good at age 13, she might have won the Sochi Olympics had she been old enough. But with the Olympics not allowing anyone in under 15, she did not make the cut. And though her father sacrificed much time, effort and sleep to further Chloe’s career, the thought of doing it so his daughter could make her first Olympic splash in his native country was never part of the equation.
“When we started, Korea was not declared as hosting the Olympics,” Jong Jin Kim says. “I thought I had a chance to bring her to the Olympics, so it was amazing and very lucky that they matched together.”
Jong Jin Kim moved to the United States in 1982 to pursue his engineering degree. He met his wife, Boran, in Switzerland. Chloe, the youngest of three sisters, was born in 2000, and when she turned 4, Jong Jin bought her a snowboard on eBay and dragged her onto the mountain, in part because he wanted his wife to come along, too.

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