Koss now a world-class humanitarian


(AP Photo/Jasper Juinen) :: Olympic Speedskating Champion Joey Cheek, right, from the United States, signs a soccer ball for former Olympic speedskater champion Norway's Johann Olav Koss in Turino, Italy.


Updated: 2/20/2006

TURIN, Italy

A dozen years ago in Lillehammer, Johann Olav Koss had a fairytale Winter Olympics. Competing in his home country, he won three speedskating gold medals, setting a world record each time.

He's doing pretty well at the Turin Games, too _ thanks to an American inspired by what ''Koss The Boss'' did on the ice and what he's done since hanging up his skates.

Koss now runs Right To Play, an organization he created six years ago to improve the lives of children in impoverished, wartorn areas. The group already has reached more than a half-million kids and hopes to double that soon through the money that's started flowing in over the last few days.

Joey Cheek started the windfall after winning the 500 meters Monday, announcing he was donating his $25,000 Olympic bonus for winning the event to Koss' charity. He challenged others to join him, and they sure have. More than $250,000 was pledged by Thursday, Koss said.

''It's absolutely incredible,'' Koss said. ''I'm so thankful and humbled. Joey's done something that we would've had to work years and years and years to do as an organization.''

Koss is no ordinary ex-jock lending his name and some of his time. This is a guy who won five Olympic medals (a gold and silver in Albertville in 1992, too), then earned a medical degree but opted to devote himself to humanitarian work.

He got hooked on bringing sports to children during a 1993 trip to Africa for a new charity called Olympic Aid. After Sydney in 2000, he felt that group wasn't doing enough, so he came up with a new concept and the new name.

''Before, we raisedmoney at the Olympics and gave it to other organizations,'' Koss said. ''We needed to implement our own programs on the ground. ... You need to be there every single day for them, not every four years.''

Right To Play has 40 projects in 20 countries across Africa, Asia and the Middle East. They start by ''training the trainers'' so their programs can become a permanent part of the community, unlike groups whose contributions are forgotten once their money and equipment run out.

Then the games begin _ about 450 of them, each with a life lesson slipped in.

A good example is ''The Vaccine Game,'' a variation of the playground favorite Red Rover.

Kids lock arms and form a circle, with one child in the middle and another on the outside. The outsider pretends to be a disease trying to break through the immune system (the ring) to infect the body (the person inside). When they succeed, a second ring is added, making it twice as tough to get in.

''They realize, 'Wow!' that's how important a vaccine is,'' Koss said, smiling.

Vaccinations and prevention of AIDS and other diseases are prime objectives. Through sports, Right To Play also aims to provide confidence, leadership and teamwork, character-building skills they otherwise might not have learned.

''It's surprising to me that everybody thinks that children always play,'' Koss said. ''It's not true. In the worst areas of the world, what we see is apathy, violence and sexual abuse. There is no play. It's forgotten.''

Besides working for children, Koss has helped fight drugs and doping. He was a founding board member of the World Anti-Doping Agency and served on the International Olympic Committee's Athlete's Commission.

Right To Play is his sole focus nowadays. He's the president and CEO, and so dedicated to running it right that he recently earned an MBA degree.

While the group had a low profile until Cheek's gesture, it already had some big-name ambassadors: Lance Armstrong and Wayne Gretzky, who is pictured in a brochure holding the organization's signature red soccer ball emblazoned with the slogan, ''Look after yourself, look after one another.''

The organization's headquarters are in Toronto, with offices in New York and five European countries. In Turin, they have a booth at the athletes' village where they're trading hats for autographed memorabilia to be sold on eBay, plus an exhibit near the medals plaza featuring photos from Right to Play projects in Pakistan and Rwanda.

Three days before Cheek raced the 500, he told Koss he was ''going to do something big'' for Right To Play if he won. Koss was at the oval for the race, but left before learning what Cheek meant. He found out soon enough from reporters calling for his reaction.

His cell phone and Blackberry have gotten a workout ever since. Among his favorite e-mails are the Syracuse Speedskating Club asking if they can send a check (''Yes!'' he screamed) and another showing that the U.N. Wire news service made Cheek's victory speech its quote of the day.

''You can't plan these things,'' Koss said, breaking into another wide smile.

So, is ''The Boss'' enjoying Turin as much as he did Lillehammer?

''It's different and equally rewarding,'' he said. ''It's sometimes more rewarding because every day you get messages about changing a child's life, and there's nothing more rewarding than that.

''If everybody can do a little bit, we can help so much of the world.''


Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Print This Article | E-Mail This Article | Mark This Article UNhappy

Home InternationalNationalHeroesHealthOpinion & EditorialsScience & TechnologyEnvironmentArts & EntertainmentSportsBusiness/Money$1000 Are You Optimistic About the Future Contest Essays HappyLiving
Columns Craig HarrisSilent KimblyLife Coach Susan SchollDavid J. PollayWonderQuest
Contact Us About Us Report Happy News
Happy Newsletter
Sign up to get our top happy headlines e-mailed to you daily by entering your e-mail address below:


"The Happynews glass is always at least half-full, and sometimes it bubbles right over."
"Happynews.com forsakes war and famine, terror and man's inhumanity to man 24/7."
"As far as anyone can tell, it's the first international and national daily news organization dedicated exclusively to upbeat stories."

Unhappy News
MSNBC CNN ABCNews FOX News BBC News
Terms of Use & Disclaimer | Contact Us | © 2008 HappyNews.com

Demand Media