Watch: Kristi Yamaguchi Addresses Intimate Olympic Village Rumors
Even when she jumps into the unknown, Kristi Yamaguchi plans to nail the landing.
“I’m looking forward to what is around the corner, or what the future could look like,” the 54-year-old recently told People. “There’s a lot of life left to live, whether it’s starting to date or new relationships, but also just personally enjoying where I am right now and the opportunities ahead.”
And when it comes to her 23-year marriage to Bret Hedican, which quietly ended in 2023, the mom to daughters Keara, 22, and Emma, 20, has “no regrets.”
“We’ve got a beautiful family and incredible memories,” she added, “but I’m looking forward to creating new ones.”
The champion figure skater, who in 1992 became the first Asian-American woman to win gold at any Winter Olympics, is certainly a seasoned professional when it comes to pivoting, ready or not.
Even as a 20-year-old experiencing “pure elation and joy” atop the Olympic podium in Albertville, France, Yamaguchi knew it also marked the end of what had been her life’s journey so far.
“Was this my last moment on competitive ice? And what’s going to happen after?” she thought at the time, describing her legacy-defining moment to Jenna Ushkowitz and Kara Wang on their Undefinable podcast ahead of the Milan-Cortina Olympics in February. “So, it’s a little bittersweet.”
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When the Bay Area native joined Stars on Ice, she felt “like a rookie,” she recalled. “I’m on the bottom step of the ladder now.”
But, Yamaguchi continued, “You just kind of work your way in and learn along the way…I hadn’t developed as a performer yet. And that was super fulfilling when I finally got to skate professionally, because beyond competitive routines I was able to explore other genres.”
Meanwhile, she had met Hedican in Albertville, where he was making his Olympics debut with the U.S. men’s hockey team, and they reconnected a few years later.
In July 2000, they tied the knot in Hawaii in front of 300 guests, including skating icons Scott Hamilton, Brian Boitano and Peggy Fleming.
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After Yamaguchi stopped touring in 2002, “My transition was really quick, going from my professional focus on me and then becoming a mom,” she recalled, “but I was so ready for it…I went so hard for 10 years, I was ready to step away.”
Yamaguchi and Hedican welcomed Keara in October 2003 and Emma was born in November 2005.
While Yamaguchi presided over Always Dream, the reading advocacy nonprofit she founded in 1996, and performed occasionally—including her Mirror Ball-winning turn on Dancing With the Stars in 2008—she triple-flipped over motherhood.
“I now know what complete unconditional love is,” she told CBS News in 2011. “I understand how parents will do anything in their power for the benefit of their children.”
She counted “cuddling, seeing them laugh and smile, seeing them learn something new and the fascination that comes with it” as some of her favorite moments.
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And Hedican was “a great dad,” Yamaguchi told People in 2014. “The girls just adore him.”
While Keara was into art, skiing and gymnastics as a kid, Emma did pursue ice skating, at least recreationally.
“I was a terrible skating mom,” Yamaguchi admitted on Undefinable, “and I didn’t want to push too much…The mother-daughter [coaching] thing, can’t do that.”
Ultimately, the author of the children’s book Dream Big, Little Pig! wanted her kids to discover their own passions and glide accordingly.
“I ask them every so often what they want to be when they grow up,” she told CBS News, “and then explain to them what they need to do to get there.”
Because Yamaguchi only made winning Olympic gold look effortless.
People “see the shiny ending, the successes,” she noted on Undefinable. “It’s kind of a snippet of like what social media is now, right? That’s not real life…In sports it’s like that, you see the glory moments. There’s a lot of challenges, obstacles, overcoming downs along the way.”
Meanwhile, Yamaguchi navigated a recent personal setback very privately, only sharing that she and Hedican had split up after their divorce was finalized.
Kristi Yamaguchi/Instagram
“After 23 years together, we had an amazing marriage and loving family—especially bringing up our two daughters together,” she told People. “But I think it got to a point where we amicably thought maybe we aren’t at our happiest and we’d be happier separating.”
That major life change coincided with her grown daughters leaving the nest, which Yamaguchi admitted was “bittersweet” but also “fulfilling to see them spreading their wings.” (And they still love a girls’ trip with Mom, not least when it’s to Italy for the Olympics.)
But back on her own path, Yamaguchi continues to practice what she preaches, which is to enjoy the “little steps along the way” toward her larger goals.
“Finding resilience, building that up and realizing that, OK, with every failure I have, it’s not going to kill you.” she said on Undefinable. “You’re going to survive it and find a way to move on from it to become stronger and better.”
Words to live by on and off the ice.
See how more iconic Olympic figure skaters have navigated life outside the rink:
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