Jon Kreamelmeyer’s work as a coach for Paralympic skiers earned him an induction into the Visa Paralympic Hall of Fame earlier this year in Sochi, Russia. His involvement with the U.S. Disabled Ski Team began as a guide for visually impaired athlete Michele Drolet who won a bronze medal at the 1994 Paralympics in Lillehammer, Norway. He became an assistant coach for the team in 1995 and was hired as head coach in 1999.
At the 2000 World Championships, the team came home with a USA-record eight medals. At Soldier Hollow in 2002, U.S. skiers earned five Paralympic medals, including the first relay medal for U.S. athletes. The team earned three more podiums in Torino in 2006. Kreamelmeyer shifted positions in 2009 to cross-country development coach in order to help produce future athletes for the sport. He retired from the U.S. Ski Team in 2011 but continues to serve as a technical classifier for the International Paralympic Committee.
Kreamelmeyer grew up in Colorado in the 1950s and attended Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell. After graduation, he returned to Colorado as an English teacher and high school ski coach
On Thursday evening, Kreamelmeyer receives this year’s Distinguished Alumni Award representing the College of Leadership and Public Service from Dakota Wesleyan during the annual Legacy Banquet on campus. He delivers the Opperman Lecture on “Skiing, Service and Success: Lessons from the Slope” in the morning.
Kreamelmeyer joined Dakota Midday and discussed his experience coaching Paralympic athletes.