Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Cool Runnings: A skiing sequel for Jamaica's 'Dream Chaser?'

Michael Williams is striving to take part in the 2014 Winter Olympics for Jamaica. The 42-year-old has until January 2014 to achieve the required points to get in.
Michael Williams is striving to take part in the 2014 Winter Olympics for Jamaica. The 42-year-old has until January 2014 to achieve the required points to get in.
HIDE CAPTION
Pride of Jamaica
Man on a mission
'Jamaica, we have a bobsled team'
The underdogs
Canadian-born
Snow joke
College football
The Snow Leopard
Jump for Jamaica
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Michael Williams aiming to qualify for 2014 Winter Olympics with Jamaica
  • The 42-year-old skier was inspired by Hollywood movie "Cool Runnings"
  • Tropical island spawns very few people who excel at winter sports
  • Williams has until January 2014 to qualify for the Sochi Games

Alpine Edge is CNN's skiing show. Click here for latest videos, news and features.

(CNN) -- "Jamaica, we have a bobsled team," cried the Hollywood film that immortalized an unlikely quartet of Winter Olympians who became the story of the 1988 Games.

The novelty of four Jamaicans swapping their tropical Caribbean homeland for the freezing slopes of Canada to become the first team from their country to compete in the bobsleigh was a story that resonated around the world.

It also planted a seed in the brain of another Jamaican who, 22 years later, began his quest to ski at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

Jamaican skier's Olympic dream
Hirscher: 'Exciting' to win World Cup
Secret of U.S. ski team's success

Now 42, Michael Williams is hoping he'll be the next pioneer from the Great Antilles to blaze a trail in sport -- though perhaps not quite to the same extent as the world's fastest man Usain Bolt.

Read: Skiing's pop queen Maze does it her way

"I actually watched 'Cool Runnings' and the bobsleigh team from 1988 and was inspired," Williams, who refers to himself as "The Dream Chaser," told CNN's Alpine Edge show.

"I just thought it was the coolest thing -- Jamaica in the Winter Olympics and they did well.

"I watched a lot of skiing during those Olympics, Alberto Tomba (Italian who won two golds in Calgary) was the king of the Games and I thought, 'Wow, it's incredible what these guys can do.'

"I thought I'd love to combine the two, represent Jamaica and ski for Jamaica some time in my life. Jamaica is really proud there's another guy trying to do what the bobsleigh guys did in 1988."

But it wasn't until the 2010 installment of the Games in Vancouver that Williams, who was born and raised by his West Indian mother in Canada, was spurred on to transform his pipe dream into a reality, as another pair of underdogs took on the establishment.

Kwame Nkrumah-Acheampong, known as the "Snow Leopard," was the first person from Ghana to qualify for the Winter Olympics. He skied in the slalom and made quite an impression with his eccentric outfits.

Read: Putin's grand ambition for Sochi

Jamaican Errol Kerr also made an impact, securing ninth place in the skicross event -- the highest finish ever by a Caribbean athlete at the Winter Games.

Williams was now a man on a mission. "I saw a report on CNN with the Snow Leopard who qualified from Ghana for the Winter Olympics in 2010," he explained.

Maze on historic win, music career
Tomba: The greatest slalom skier ever?
Schladming ski resort gets tech facelift

"I was on my couch and when I saw that, that just put a click in my head and I said, 'If this guy can do it, I can do it.'

"I knew we had a Jamaican Ski Federation because I heard about Errol Kerr, but the Snow Leopard really inspired me to get off my butt and call them."

There was just one problem: Williams had no idea how to ski.

He drove straight to an indoor ski slope near his home in Frankfurt, Germany, and threw himself at the mercy of its resident coach, who quickly realized the scale of his task.

"I met one of my instructors, Andre, and he took me skiing a couple of times in the indoor hall and said 'You can't ski at all, but I like your attitude and I'll definitely work with you.'

"I actually picked up the phone and called Errol Kerr's mum and said, 'Listen, I know your son skis for Jamaica, how did he get in the team?' She gave me some tips and the rest is history."

The task facing Williams is a tough one. He needs to bring his points average down to 140 by January 2014 to have a shot at qualifying for Sochi -- it is currently 763.

His best finish this season is 43rd out of 45 finishers at an event in Schladming in Austria back in February. In the actual world championships event the following day he was 63rd, but did not qualify for the final race.

Williams has had many obstacles to overcome, not just in sporting terms, but also with the image of him held by the seasoned professionals on the skiing circuit, who offered him a somewhat frosty reception to begin with.

Read: Bond shaken and stirred on the slopes

See skier's downhill (careful at 1:21!)
Franz Klammer reflects on career
Putting ski tech to the test

"In the beginning I went to a race, my first race, in a blue ski jacket, black pants, a helmet that wasn't regulation, I borrowed the boots from the actual hill where we had the race. I just wanted to try it and I looked like a vacationer going skiing!" he said.

"These guys were just looking at me at the top of the hill going 'What are you doing here?' but I didn't care, I just sort of went about my ways, closed my eyes and air planed down the hill and managed to make it."

Williams has dedicated his life to fulfilling his dream, training for eight hours a day -- four on the slopes and the rest taken up with work on technique and conditioning.

His mum beams with pride whenever he competes on the international stage under the Jamaican flag, so what would it be like if he realized his dream and made it to Sochi?

"It would be incredible," he said. "I think the moment you walk into the stadium with all the other athletes and you're holding up your flag ... to me, it's incredible.

"I've played a lot of sports in my life -- I've played professional American Football, and I know what it's like to achieve something in sports, but I think the Olympics, summer or winter, is the pinnacle of any sporting achievement.

"I'd be really proud, it would be awesome."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
-- Updated GMT ( HKT)
"Jamaica, we have a bobsled team," cried the Hollywood film that immortalized an unlikely quartet of Winter Olympians who became a worldwide hit.
March 18, 2013 -- Updated 1725 GMT (0125 HKT)
CNN's Christina Macfarlane speaks with World Cup skiing champion Marcel Hirscher about clinching his second successive overall title.
March 18, 2013 -- Updated 1700 GMT (0100 HKT)
Alpine Edge's Christina Macfarlane reports on the U.S. ski team's remarkable success at the World Cup finals in Switzerland.
March 13, 2013 -- Updated 1835 GMT (0235 HKT)
Injured U.S. star Lindsey Vonn claims a record sixth successive downhill title after the final race of the World Cup season is hit by fog.
March 4, 2013 -- Updated 1331 GMT (2131 HKT)
Whether it's breaking records on the piste, or making hit records in the studio, Tina Maze is determined to do things her way.
March 1, 2013 -- Updated 1420 GMT (2220 HKT)
He is one of the greatest skiers of all time, the winner of every major prize, but when Alberto Tomba looks back on his career he feels one regret.
February 25, 2013 -- Updated 1156 GMT (1956 HKT)
Roger Moore played Bond for some of his most enthralling ski scenes
From over 50 years of 007, the most iconic James Bond scene of all time is arguably the opening skiing sequence in "The Spy Who Loved Me."
February 15, 2013 -- Updated 1755 GMT (0155 HKT)
Olympic and world champion Ted Ligety loosens up his body before throwing himself down the mountain.
February 15, 2013 -- Updated 1751 GMT (0151 HKT)
CNN's Christina MacFarlane visits Schladming ski resort where investment has bucked the trend of austerity.
February 8, 2013 -- Updated 1159 GMT (1959 HKT)
The snow-covered mountains tower above the sub-tropical beach, but what sets Sochi apart is its sheer scale of concrete and steel.
January 28, 2013 -- Updated 1750 GMT (0150 HKT)
CNN's Christina Macfarlane meets Norway's World Cup skiing star Aksel Lund Svindal.
January 25, 2013 -- Updated 1057 GMT (1857 HKT)
Franz Klammer had few relationship issues with the fearsome mountain run that all skiers want to conquer.
January 28, 2013 -- Updated 1442 GMT (2242 HKT)
CNN's Christina Macfarlane tests the latest ski technology, including a leading brand's new GPS goggles.
January 21, 2013 -- Updated 1149 GMT (1949 HKT)
CNN's Christina MacFarlane visits the oldest ski factory in the world, Rossignol.
January 21, 2013 -- Updated 1153 GMT (1953 HKT)
Safety specialists at Wengen work on-piste can make the difference between life and death for ski racers.
January 17, 2013 -- Updated 1430 GMT (2230 HKT)
World Cup alpine skier Ivica Kostelic talks to CNN's Alpine Edge series about his sister Janica's influence on his career.
January 14, 2013 -- Updated 1642 GMT (0042 HKT)
As the winter sports season reaches its peak in Europe and North America so the toll of deaths and injuries will surely mount.
January 10, 2013 -- Updated 1404 GMT (2204 HKT)
We love the glamor of alpine racing, but do we love it enough to keep watching when skiing's "dark side" is so much more on the edge?
December 19, 2012 -- Updated 1308 GMT (2108 HKT)
Marcel Hirscher of Austria celebrates with a cow bell he received during the podium ceremony of the men's slalom race at the FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup on January 8, 2012 in Adelboden.
"Mittens don't clap," is how California-based cowbell importer Elisabeth Halvorson explains it.
December 20, 2012 -- Updated 1626 GMT (0026 HKT)
CNN's Alpine Edge takes a pictorial look at the career of champion Norwegian skier Aksel Lund Svindal.
December 19, 2012 -- Updated 1300 GMT (2100 HKT)
Val d'Isere gal tease
Buried deep in the French Alps, a tiny 11th-century village has produced some of the most successful -- and wild-spirited -- skiers in racing history.
December 13, 2012 -- Updated 1620 GMT (0020 HKT)
With the European leg of the Skiing World Cup in full swing, CNN's Alpine Edge takes you inside five of the continent's most high-profile locations.
ADVERTISEMENT