Kaillie Humphries’ legal battle with Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton subject of documentary
In her golden moment atop the medal podium in Beijing, as the U.S. flag was raised, Kaillie Humphries says a couple of Canadian team executives turned their back.
Humphries had just become the first woman in history to win Olympic gold medals for two different countries. After four years of living in limbo that saw her receive the American citizenship that even allowed her to compete for the U.S. less than two months earlier, she sang along to “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
The 36-year-old said it was a moment of pure joy and triumph, and not about turning her back on a country she’d felt in some ways had turned its back on her.
“I haven’t given up on being Canadian. I’m a dual citizen,” Humphries said from Carlsbad, Calif., where she lives with husband Travis Armbruster, a former U.S. bobsledder. “I love Canada. But I also love the United States. We are not a women’s hockey game when it comes to my life and my career. It’s not one over the other, one is not greater or worse.”