Oh, yes! Ohno wins

Olympian, partner are 'Dancing With the Stars' champs

Published: Wednesday, May 23 2007 12:47 a.m. MDT

Ohno and Hough go through their moves. Tuesday, the team of once and future Utahns (Ohno is moving to Utah and Hough is a Utah native) danced their way to victory.

Carol Kaelson, ABC photos

The team of once and future Utahns danced their way to victory in one of TV's biggest hits Tuesday night.

Olympic gold medal speedskater Apolo Anton Ohno (who is moving to Utah) and his partner, Utah native Julianne Hough, were crowned champions of ABC's "Dancing With the Stars." The pair finished first when the judges' voting and the viewers' balloting were tallied together, beating second-place Joey Fatone, a former 'N Sync star, and his partner and third-place Laila Ali and her partner.

"It's just been an amazing opportunity.... I definitely wouldn't have been able to get here if he wasn't my partner," said Hough, who is from Sandy and graduated from Alta High School.

"And I have been completely blessed," Hough said. At 18 she is the youngest participant in the four seasons of "Dancing,"

"I feel amazing," Ohno said. "You put your mind to something, you give 100 percent, sacrifice and dedication, anything is possible."

Ohno, 25, became a technical master during the season, training in the dance studio as he would on the ice.

"Apolo's competitiveness is almost on the verge of insanity," his coach, John Schaeffer, said on Tuesday's show.

Fatone, 30, was the season's undisputed showman. He used a light saber for a "Star Wars" themed tango and wore breakaway clothes and a sparkly gold suit for his freestyle dance.

"Congratulations to them. Well-deserved," he said of Ohno and Hough, adding, "I feel like a winner."

Being on the show "has been an amazing journey," Fatone said: "It's probably one of the best things I've ever done in my life."

Laila Ali, who joined Ohno and Fatone during the final round, was eliminated from the trophy race in the middle of Tuesday's two-hour finale. She and her partner, Maksim Chmerkovskiy, earned the lowest score from the judges, and fans failed to make up the difference.

When asked which of her fellow competitors was poised to take the trophy, Ali called both "great."

"It doesn't mean anything no matter who wins," said the world champion boxer. "Especially because I didn't."

Being on the show allowed fans to see her in a different light, she said. The 29-year-old daughter of Muhammad Ali was the last remaining female contestant.

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