The stakes were low — and the time ripe — for a 54-year old personal injury lawyer and six-time winner of “Minnesota Attorney of the Year” to make Olympic history.
It was the end of the U.S. men’s curling match against Switzerland on Thursday and they were down 8-2.
The team called a substitution. Rich Ruohonen, from Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, stepped onto the ice. He hurled the corner guard and watched his stone, biting his lip until it arrived safely at the left flank of the house.
“Yeah, baby! Good shot, Rich!” skip Danny Casper — who was born in 2001, making him 30 years younger than Ruohonen — shouted across the ice.
U.S. fans gave a standing ovation. The lawyer looked wistful. He’d had just become the oldest person to compete for the U.S. at the Winter Olympics.
“I would have rather done it when we were up 8-2 instead of down 8-2,” he said, “but I really appreciate the guys giving me a chance.”
Since inviting Ruohonen onto their Gen-Z team, he has become something of an honorary uncle: driving them around, waking them up for morning trainings and buying them snacks.
“We got Rich. Uh, he’s a lawyer. I don’t know if you guys knew that,” said Casper at a recent press conference, after that fact had already been mentioned four times. Curlers from the US women’s and men’s teams cracked up.
All jokes aside, it’s a serious commitment.
“I get up three days a week at 5 in the morning, go drive 30 miles to work out and train,” Ruohonen told the AP.
He then heads to his law practice and works all day before returning at 6 p.m. before heading to practice again. He spends Thursday through Sunday away at curling tournaments, toting around a collared shirt and a tie so he can handle hearings on Zoom from the road.
Though his teammates poke fun and make him the butt of the occasional TikTok video, there’s clearly a lot of love on both sides.
It’s because of the younger teammates that Ruohonen has finally gotten his Olympic moment after falling just short on several occasions. And it’s because of Ruohonen that the team has a mentor and a connection to the older generation of the sport, some of whom they defeated to clinch their Olympic qualification.
“I came from the days when guys were smoking cigarettes out on the ice and all we did was throw rocks and think that we could be better,” Ruohonen said while praising his teammates’ work ethic.
“Look at these guys,” he added. “Every one of them’s ripped. And every one of them sweeps their butt off.”
(AP Photo Fatima Shbair)
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54-year-old curling lawyer becomes oldest Winter Olympic athlete for USA
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