JFIFC    $ &%# #"(-90(*6+"#2D26;=@@@&0FKE>J9?@=C  =)#)==================================================`" }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz w!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz ?'BrDqy+=qqd7wJQplN'0H} {oMWyW :3z!6V-:6ctϵ]𨷽{vwy}6 3޷P QT_f{;Շ#ϟyњNvW\e܇ZݿNG9Kc.Xrxr+J_˂0qt:ך;(o-N}@vWx# 9 #؃tc]hN~VՄq1E붽87 xS εe Bơ~`8Z߱tdjm7Mscrv'֍?7Qo6 7=7rS8c.] $n8# A>wŋ}-vFds2 %vJ.+dzJ͉N;v#M*jwCK NzWUiVq-?USA\1l_P+eMV麌O3f1z~556]#T#f9`>i^ J0S9LN. [=? /J|},jFf&y޴!-R\FA!_7^uE}cE+Uv-#Qu%n|M{d}EXDlp(X˰9jE=˞AdUn C:ƞ ۔l]o4QwA\WM[:]ėnّz;4g [[mk [@˧ `Y `psjaKF9h#_,!!1]>dGU9nTpkʧoM3T|W5f9 D =k/N֭dPRNY(iDq]F\$XXIKȟg Y5sLnc>lǴn-|Mum}sr!ƈhns]hHʸd1Cz@x{O!.`;n$8DZo [x5 2ٌd'>٥o],"_Fb˩Ns5aI-ug"XHڲ 늟Q|Wʞ2 , sWb}MռYaֶ H9+Ht^+t?U}hwUGLpJ6.|R6guh7}=<'rH ޹5<7I8@>Y6嶕a|I,R(S9l$ρ#uMgx]nse U= 9iZD-$Et%]Y}ԬeԵ`5,J!'=Pmm(0SՖI1",,jy<][uL_2FS<uQo.fo"=pcH)5z|ыARud)}a $ o/''NuXbF6*A2?**q;L"'PF,ǷoKN4Q#:ry2AJd"Twu<+W5RY>u q]FlaA5k+Nyt#{sqja.a[4{/ Eϵ Pb˸֯3K6RY[7F3;}[kb")?2)!R巳s5u4 1Hf|~ aM{o+rʥzO\s\m Ö>|C߂nP֭|V-G qV9ESEi׍pdYBx֊յrn!>oď𢯚ht^c.tw3w޹].\;Odf[ku ӸDR64\=}-V;T:ߓ\Mٳ:/ _K}\v+d^2f3\s5޳<2B1ڜ͔6DTOPES[#R>κ#{hqʥCImg5c;χـbgfuɬI^ 1`>rNA>x*Q4wv&;m369n~dS~%}TqLno\B8$#FkFMM7v}[9Dw>a_P-,,4$-5ĮNX1Fd'%w6qi"9Eqn~3Z-{ *{ ʴQn%,ī _itE .>SRKYlL˞&׌ؼ~TƯOޗ#%J,1xnGJѐGͻ!nche^YjF9AUm'Icl,mu:)-'o^6J-VeԵYa3k}ozKK%ԊH3ʠ$c֨^7Wq{ kg,gzZ*݈|^7"NfYRzrj-9p:E?Dz\U Wci/!LӌsQ)Y4(ҼuʢHaw{W1A)>4JXg$[I[c"u2p҄j73O v'㠢Gu;"T99ǿZ+ʧ1bC! d|cuhse+8̠_JKOYb$({uˇ.fy$F*t9TwJ!銵hm0ĉc}C= -UČ SZyf)g(\t5sսڤ!>k"c^ kY0<0 !2IHFjE`ey[}?Jh.3RuӶæQxN20Fx;^ &M-vT(@ W[<}jq,nȯnon_$ڎt]@K.?ukðDZ1@誼``s"(tޡ$x u߶7a a k_D 6oId޸1¹$s^EcU<N"fVO+9d?1?N 57NK{yd%䃞3^E/dgxo>Dy6Sm6N@#=!|7B=Zh[찡v_0dJ^z{װ=8Mݔ44#SnkI>\'5zTfE%TSv`t?z7YK"q¿t.la;Y$:mxmV\#rW4WWHe had to take stock of his lifestyle and make some changes. He did, and the next year he started over again, enrolling in a junior college and for the first time, training with a new seriousness and discipline. In 1988 Dan made a decision that would change his life; he<br>decided he wanted to be a decathlete.<br><br> Milt Campbell was one of my mentors, says Dan about the former decathlon gold medalist.  There is so much history in the sport; so much dedication and pride in it. I love the story about Jim Thorpe, how after he won the first decathlon, the king of Sweden shook his hand and said,  Sir, you are the world s greatest athlete. When I heard that story I knew that what I wanted<br>to be wasn t just a great athlete, but the world s greatest athlete. <br><br>In 1991 Dan s goal came within reach when he became the Decathlon World Champion.<br><br>The No-Heighter<br><br>With the 1992 Olympics looming, Reebok saw tremendous marketing potential in two of the U.S. s top contenders for the decathlon: Dave Johnson and Dan O Brien. The  Dan or Dave ad campaign was launched on Super Bowl Sunday, and<br>overnight the pair became celebrities. Who would win in the showdown at Barcelona Dan or Dave? was the question the advertising campaign centered upon.<br><br>The only problem was Dan never made it on the Olympic team for Barcelona.<br><br> I will never know exactly what went wrong that day, says Dan in quiet<br>resignation, shaking his head and obviously waiting for the interview to move ahead.  I just don t know. <br>What happened was Dan missed all three pole vault attempts at the Olympic trials. His  no-heighter cost him his place on the U.S. team. Thanks to the publicity machine at Reebok, Dan s no-heighter was the most publicized athletic failure of the year, or perhaps decade.<br><br>For Dan, the public humiliation was tremendous. Sportswriters said he lacked the heart and guts of a true competitor, and that he was a much ballyhooed athlete with no discipline. Reebok dropped him like a hot potato. In a few minutes, Dan went from feeling on top of the world to the depths of depression. But while the media questioned Dan s true talent and potential, Dan knew that the no-heighter was a fluke. He had never done it before, and now he was determined that he would never do it again.<br><br> I can t explain what happened that day, but I realized I would have to be<br>totally prepared for any eventuality in the future, says Dan.  It took a few<br>weeks, and quite a few calls from friends, family, coaches and other<br>athletes. Then I was back into training and totally focused. <br><br>Dan s effort paid off almost immediately. Although he didn t compete at<br>Barcelona, a few months later Dan entered the decathlon event in Talence, France. There he set a new world record 8,891 points a record that still stands today. For Dan, he had proven to himself that he had what it takes to be the world s greatest athlete. But the public