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In 1984 Derek began roller skating and by 1996 he had become the most decorated athlete in the history of the sport.  As an inliner he was a three-time national champion, two-time overall World Champion, two-time World record holder (1500m and 42K) and earned eighteen individual gold medals.  He was the most decorated athlete at 1995 Pan-Am Games winning 5 gold, 2 silver and a bronze medal.  He had everything but an Olympic Medal.  So in 1996, he switched from inline roller skates to ice skates to chase after that medal.  Just two years later he earned a spot on the 1998 US Olympic Team.

In February of 2001 he won a silver medal at the World Single Distance Championships (1500 meters) setting a new American Record and marking himself as "one to watch at the 2002 Olympic Games".  Later that year, in November, he won a gold medal at the World Cup competition in Den Hague, Netherlands and became one of America's foremost medal contenders heading into the Olympics.  In Salt Lake City he did not disappoint!  After being selected to carry the World Trade Center flag into the opening ceremonies, the emotional evening inspired Derek through a remarkable 5000 meter performance on opening day of the Games.  He briefly held the world record en route to a silver medal finish.  That set the stage for a stunning world record finish and Olympic Gold Medal in the 1500 meter event!

Derek is also the first-ever Mexican American to compete in, and medal, in the Olympic Winter Games. Upon retirement from the sport, Derek began a coaching career leading a transition program that guided other inline skating athletes with Olympic dreams over to the ice. The success of the program earned him the head coaching position for the US Speed Skating Team at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver, BC.

Today, Derek is the Director of Sports at the Utah Olympic Oval in Kearns, Utah; sharing the vision of the Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation to the youth of Utah and the surrounding communities.