BEIJING - Mike Pederson was walking through the halls of Wayzata High School one day when he heard the clash of metal. Pederson peeked into the auditorium and thought, "What are these funny-looking people doing all dressed in white?'
"It was a fluke, really."
Pederson played basketball and ran cross-country. He was not likely to make it to the Olympics by continuing with those sports. Stumbling across the Wayzata High fencing team led to this improbable moment:
On Friday, Pederson walked into Beijing's National Stadium near Kobe Bryant, and had his picture taken with one of the world's most recognizable people.
"That was cool," Pederson said. "I'm going to send that picture to my nephews in Wisconsin because they are diehard basketball fans. They're going to be very jealous.
"The best moment is walking through that tunnel and going right out on that field. That is a phenomenal feeling. I've never experienced anything like it."
Fencing isn't the most American of sports, but it was fencing that earned the United States its first three medals of the Beijing Olympics, in a sweep of the women's saber competition, in front of President Bush on Saturday. "It was amazing. It was emotional. It was such a dramatic moment," Bush said. "To win all three was simply magnificent."
Pederson is the women's epee coach. He won the Minnesota state title twice while at Wayzata and was captain of the University of Wisconsin team in '85, when he won the Big Ten foil championship. Wisconsin won three Big Ten team titles while he was at the school.