USA Curling doesn't keep track of these things, but it's probably safe to assume Chris Plys made history late last year. On a trip to Los Angeles, the curler from Duluth was asked out by a member of the Pussycat Dolls, and the president of Wilhelmina Models suggested Plys could have a future in front of the camera.
He even picked up a new nickname: "the cute one," bestowed by TV humorist Stephen Colbert. But on his way to bringing sexy back -- or, actually, introducing it to the Olympics' everyman game -- Plys hasn't allowed his head to outgrow his heart. His happiest day in the past few months came when his father, Patrick, was declared cancer-free. The trip to L.A. came in a close second, mostly because he won $6,500 on a reality-TV show to help pay for his parents to travel to the Vancouver Winter Games.
The alternate for the U.S. men's Olympic team never expected to become curling's rock star. Giving his sport a dose of pop-culture cool has been yet another happy surprise, in a year that feels like one big celebration.
"Going on the show was my way to say thanks to my parents," Plys said. "They've always been there for me, and it was rough when my dad was sick. But they've been really strong through the whole thing.
"All of this just came out of nowhere. To be asked to be part of the Olympic team was amazing, and to see the sport get all this publicity and air time on national programs is really exciting. It's been a really good year."
Patrick Plys didn't know of his son's plan to help finance his Olympic trip until a film crew pulled up to their home in Duluth last fall. Given his son's personality, it didn't surprise him a bit.
In January 2007, he had surgery for stage 3 astrocytoma, a type of brain tumor. That was followed by 40 days of chemotherapy and radiation therapy. His doctors suggested another 14 months of treatment to try to prevent a recurrence.
"It was 18 months of hell," said Plys, who owns a food brokerage. "You can either be scared to death, or you can take every part of your being and your spirituality and fight as hard as you can. We as a family had a great support network around us with our church community and our friends, and we were going to fight."