Friday, July 28, 2006

Ice skater Michelle Kwan a paragon of the sport

By Misha Berson

Seattle Times arts critic

Don't cry for Michelle Kwan.

Yes, we know this beloved American skater hasn't won a coveted Olympic gold medal in several tries. And that she endured a heartbreaker in Torino, Italy, this year, when she had to withdraw from competition due to a recurring injury.

And, yes, we do understand that she has just turned 26 — which in champion skater years is something like 67.

But you have to believe Kwan, who performs in two shows Saturday at the Everett Events Center with Champions on Ice, when she insists she's just dandy, thank you.

"You have to live in the moment, and I feel like the luckiest person alive," said Kwan, from her parents' home in Southern California. "A lot of people would love to be in my position! I wear beautiful skating dresses made by Vera Wang. I perform before thousands of people. And I do what I love most." What Kwan loves most happens to give millions of others immense pleasure, too. A wondrously lithe, strong and soulful skater, her performances often have a seamless beauty. When she's at her best, watching her move is like seeing a bolt of the finest silk unfurl across a rink.

That combination of limpid elegance and power is increasingly rare these days, as competitive figure skaters are graded more heavily on their execution of difficult jumps and footwork than on their artistry.

Kwan acknowledges this. "A few years ago, they said it's all about the jumping, and I was called the little jumping bean! Then I got older, and I was the lyrical skater, and I wasn't jumping enough. It was, 'Why isn't she doing triple-triples?' "

"Unfortunately," she continued, "the new rules have really changed the sport. You have to evolve with the new judging system, and I had a tough time evolving. But as the rules change, I do hope the lyrical, beautiful part of the sport doesn't disappear. I'd hate to see that."

Though she can be candidly critical of the sport she's been a major force in since her teens, when chatting with a reporter Kwan is as gracious and upbeat as her public image suggests.

The native Californian has been a class act since she emerged as a skating superstar in 1996 — the year when, age sweet 16, she won the first of five World Championships and nine U.S. National championships.

Kwan actually began skating at 5, and it runs in the family: a brother played hockey and an older sister also skated competitively.

But there was no doubt that little Michelle (she's still just 5'2") was something special. She handily mastered the jumps, the spins, the change-of-edge spirals (her signature move). However, it was her innate sense of musicality and radiant ice presence that set her apart, as she performed to music ranging from Rachmaninoff classics to Sting's "Fields of Gold".

"I took dance classes when I was real young, and it's just the way I move," Kwan reflected. "Skating also gives you a chance to express your emotions. And I've always been this way — with my heart and soul written right on my chest."

Yet through her long, remarkably consistent career on ice, Kwan has been a tough competitor, too. She changed coaches more than once, and coached herself. She performed while ill, and maintained a steely resolve to keep chasing Olympic gold — after winning silver at Japan's 1998 Games in Nagano, and bronze at the 2002 Olympics in Salt Lake City.

Last winter, after that groin-muscle injury had kept her away from key qualifying contests, Kwan petitioned for a spot on the U.S. Olympic team headed to Torino. To prove her readiness, she skated a program with four triple jumps for a monitoring committee. They passed her with flying colors.

But during practice in Torino, the stiffness and pain from her injury returned. She won wide respect for quickly bowing out of the Olympic team, allowing Emily Hughes to take her place.

Today, Kwan voices no regrets about the decision. "It was pretty intense, and definitely so emotional," she recalled, "but it's not all about the gold. It's the journey, completely the journey. It's being inspired, motivated, believing in yourself."

She's in good company for the Champions on Ice show's journey: Fellow Olympians Irina Slutskaya, Evgeni Plushenko and Sasha Cohen are also in the star-studded cast. (Under current rules, many skaters who perform in touring shows are still eligible for competitions.)

In Everett, Kwan will perform a solo to Natalie Cole's rendition of the heartfelt Leon Russell ballad, "A Song for You." She explains, "I heard it, and I knew I had to skate it."

She also observed, "When I go out on the ice people feel they know me, because they do. I've been on tour since I was 13. It's fun — we have a blast. And I really, really love Seattle."

As for the future, Kwan is not committing to or ruling out anything — including skating in the next Olympic Games. "I'm playing it all by ear. Right now, I'm still sort of nursing the injury. I do a lot of water therapy, swimming laps and doing exercises in the water."

But Kwan promises, convincingly, that she's not afraid of life after skating. "I have so many interests outside skating! I look at what's next as a challenge. I would love to get into politics. I want to finish college at UCLA, majoring in political science or international studies.

"I'm ready to learn, just to learn. Skating's so incredible, I just hope to find something else to do that I love as much."

Thursday, July 27, 2006

Sarah Hughes puts skating on ice, back in school

NEW YORK -- Sarah Hughes is back at Yale and encouraging her peers to pursue their college degrees.

The 2002 Olympic figure skating champion is finishing off summer classes and will be a junior at the Ivy League school this fall.

Hughes entered Yale after winning at Salt Lake City, but skipped one year to tour with Stars on Ice. She also didn't attend classes last spring and was in Italy to support her sister, Emily, in the Olympics.

"Right now, I am 21 and concentrating on my education," she said. "But it has to be an individual decision to pursue what you want in your life.

"I look at some skaters who never went to college and, like Kristi Yamaguchi, for example, and they have achieved so much and still are doing so much with their lives. But, for me, going to Yale was what I wanted to do and something I am very glad I am doing. I think it is very important."

Hughes doesn't regret giving up competitive skating while still a teenager.

"When I am much older, I will still enjoy going out on the rink and going around," she said. "I enjoy the skill, it's a wonderful skill to have. But to compete at any level is not in the cards right now. When I started, I didn't think the Olympics or worlds or nationals were my one goal. But the things I miss are having a goal each day and trying new things."

So she faces challenges in the classroom instead of on the ice, although Hughes is uncertain what her major will be.

"I'm not in a rush to do anything but be a student," she said.

Sasha Cohen - 1999 Keri Lotion Classic

Look how confident she was...I wish she could find that spark again.

Olympic Retrospect - 2002 Olympics (Kwan)

I found this article on Michelle Kwan today from the 2002 Olympics. She was such a diva that year, haha. I think the skating world will always be amift (did I just makeup that word?) why she fired her coach and choreographer right before the Games - it almost seemed like professional suicide. Yeah, she did get a second medal, and two Olympic medals are great for any figure skater - unless, however, you've been touted as the latest ballerina perfect since you were fifteen years old.

I love the pool pictures - she has an amazing body. I've been ice skating for two months, when will I start looking like that?!

Kwan's Song
February 2002

It's a winter night in Manhattan Beach, Calif., and Michelle Kwan is in the driver's seat. She's picked a sushi place for dinner and, though the restaurant is only a five-minute walk from your hotel, she insists on driving you herself. That's partly because she's always as polite as advertised. But you suspect it's also because she wants to make a little declaration of independence by chauffeuring a "grown-up" around and because she wants to show off her new black Corvette convertible. Years ago you had dinner with Kwan and her family at Legal Sea Foods in Boston, and you remember her cheering ebulliently as a waiter dismembered her lobster for her. Tonight, as you eat sushi on the restaurant's patio, Kwan seems less girlish, more willful, more blunt. "Who cares what goes on in my head?" she says when the talk turns to the mental game. "To win I have to be in the zone. If I knew how to get there--if I knew how to explain it--I'd always be there when I had to be."

Kwan is still the most respectful, least self-involved superstar athelete you've ever met. She still speaks carefully, often tilting her head back while searching for the right word. In key ways, however, she's become a palpably different person. When the skater excuses herself to use the restroom, a woman at a nearby table leans over to you. "I know she's famous, and I know I know her," she says, "but who is she?"

At the XVIII Winter Games in Nagano, Kwan was still a child, at 16 very much a product of her strong-willed coach, very much just another sweet kid in sequins who could skate circles around all but one of the other figure skaters (she scored silver to Tara Lipinski's gold). That's not the Kwan who'll compete in Salt Lake City next week. When they announce her name, look for a 21-year-old SoCal babe who's an A-list celebrity, whose boyfriend is an NHL defenseman and who abruptly canned both her longtime choreographer and her coach last year--in short, a Kwan ready to kick ice.

From the age of 7, Kwan has known that she would achieve greatness as a figure skater, but she wasn't sure that would be enough. "I wanted to be the Michael Jordan of my sport," she said. "I dreamed of being a legend." And by some measures she has succeeded. In less than a decade of competition, the 21-year-old Kwan has been the U.S. champion six times, world champion four times and won more perfect 6.0 scores from judges than any other skater in history. But legends are not made by points alone, in the rink or on the basketball court. For figure skaters, the door to that mythic realm of eight-figure endorsement deals, of celebrity that transcends sports itself, opens only once every four years, when the world briefly suspends its customary indifference to the spectacle of pretty young women leaping and spinning to the accompaniment of Ravel or Rachmaninoff. And Kwan knows this better than anyone. "To the public," she tells you, "the Olympics is the supreme of the supreme, and I don't believe you can ever truly be a legend without winning it."

And to win it, of course, you have to take it away from someone else: the title of America's Sweetheart is as hard-fought as any other in sports, as Tonya Harding demonstrated so vividly eight years ago. Although Lipinski has retired to the lucrative obscurity of the professional circuit, there is a new crop of teenagers eager to take on Kwan, led by her two euphemistically designated "teammates," fierce Sasha Cohen, 17, and smooth Sarah Hughes, 16.

Her toughest competition, though, is expected to come from a longstanding rival, the Russian Irina Slutskaya, 22, who this season outscored Kwan all three times they met. And she must face them without her highly regarded longtime coach, Frank Carroll, whom she inexplicably dismissed last October. The move was widely interpreted as a sign of desperation--if not, in fact, outright insanity, as she made good her vow to train and compete without a coach--an endeavor as unprecedented in the world of sports as a champion boxer's taking a step without an entourage. When she finished her winning program at last month's National Championships in Los Angeles and skated over to the "kiss and cry" bench, she had for company only her father. Danny Kwan was a systems analyst for Pacific Bell for many years, then took early retirement to work in the family's restaurant, the Golden Pheasant, in Torrance, Calif. He's been a crucial cheerleader and confidant for his daughter. Still, he's never pretended to know much about the technical aspects of figure skating.

To Salt Lake City's Delta Center next week, Kwan will bring her familiar strengths of unrivaled artistry and balletic grace, which, for the first time this season, were amply on display at January's Nationals. She won that championship decisively--and more important, she said, rediscovered "the freedom and joy" that have always fueled her triumphs. It is just those intangible, evanescent and subjective qualities that the judges and critics will be looking for at the Olympics. In 1998 Kwan peaked too early, turning in
one of the most dazzling performances ever in the Nationals, only to allow a tiny note of flatness to creep into her routine at the Olympics--at least in comparison to the ecstatic Lipinski.

Early this season, notes of flatness were resounding and frequent. Kwan lost to a fellow American (Hughes) for the first time since 1998. She placed third in an international competition for the first time since 1996. And perhaps most alarming of all, the figure-skating community pronounced her act stale, at least in comparison with a reinvigorated Slutskaya. "Everything she has brought to skating--the passion, the flow--was missing," the veteran coach of one rival said shortly before the Nationals. "It looked like the fire was out." Kwan herself admits that she has struggled recently to find the spark that once ignited automatically when she stepped onto the ice. She says her decison to go solo stemmed from her conviction that she alone knew what she had to do to win at this Olympics. And she is appalled at how "some people talk about me being over the hill. You'd think I was 35 years old."

Ever since Nagano, Kwan had tried to balance her skating aspirations with competing desires to lead the more conventional life of an all-American girl. That meant an L.A. life: Kwan bought a condo near Manhattan Beach, enrolled part-time at UCLA, took some acting classes as part of a sponsorship deal with Disney and, for the first time, had a few pals who didn't know a lutz from a salchow. Occasionally, she'd put the top of her convertible down and stray from the rink to the beach. Her taste matured from California rolls to melt-in-your-mouth slivers of tuna sashimi. While her life wasn't exactly a social whirl, Kwan could count on invitations to star-studded events--and got to train at the same complex with the likes of the Lakers' Kobe Bryant. Her parents watched her practice regularly. You'd see her mother, Estella, sitting in the stands--"If I skate and look happy, my mom is happy," Kwan once told you--and you'd see her father pacing around the huge complex, frequently stepping outside for a cigarette. (Somehow during this high-pressure season, her dad quit smoking.) Between skating, school and other demands, Kwan's life in L.A. was so busy that her parents rarely saw her. They would come to the practices, her mother told you, just to get a glimpse.

In November, Kwan decided to move back to sleepy, no-sashimi Lake Arrowhead, Calif., where she grew up. She returned to the tidy A-frame next door to her parents, where her dad was always ready to run over with a fresh-fruit plate or a comforting word. Most important, she could focus on training. The back-to-the-future approach seems to be working. Without a coach her practices appear more intense because there are no pauses for discussion; whatever input she requires, she provides herself, from her own bottomless well of experience. In the final session of one typical day, Kwan skated virtually nonstop for 45 minutes, except for brief pauses to restart her music, "Scheherazade," or to grab a tissue--and to pick herself up off the rink after crashing in a shower of ice chips. "There's not a day when you're not tired and hurting, when you don't have to plead with yourself, 'just keep on going'," she says. "You have to be like a gladiator because, in the end, the toughest person usually wins."

By retreating from L.A. to Lake Arrowhead, Kwan escaped the prying eyes and questions of the media, which she believes turned on her after she dismissed the popular Carroll. "We had differences," was as specific as she would get about the split, which only fueled speculation among reporters who still look back fondly on the Harding-Kerrigan brawl as a shining moment in figure-skating journalism. Rumors circulated that Kwan was in the thrall of some new Svengali--if not her father, then perhaps her boyfriend, or else the boyfriend of her sister, Peter Oppegard, a former Olympian and skating coach. Kwan bristles at the sexism inherent in what she regards as ridiculous assumptions. And she insists the decision was all her own--and less earthshaking than everyone makes it out to be. "I learned an awful lot from Frank," Kwan says, "but in the end you're always out there alone."

Both say they parted as friends. But that didn't stop the media from suggesting Kwan was headstrong, ungrateful or cavalier in her treatment of someone who had invested as many years in her career as she had herself. Kwan had been praised for the gracious way she handled her second-place finish in 1998. Now she was described in terms once reserved for Tonya Harding. "People were saying, 'She's insane,' and making me out to be a nasty, evil person," Kwan said. "You know how they say, 'Sticks and stones break your bones, but names will never hurt you'? Well, they both hurt." Life in Lake Arrowhead has been therapeutic. Everybody in town cheers Kwan on and respects her privacy. And everybody, the skater says, seems to be wearing the same button these
days. It says KWAN GOLD.

Soon, the flap over Kwan and Carroll will be forgotten--if Kwan wins, that is. Otherwise it will go down in Olympic history as a cautionary tale of how even a levelheaded young woman can go astray when she put her destiny entirely in her own hands, as well as on her own feet. Skating against Cohen and Hughes is like being caught between fire and ice. Cohen finished a strong second in the Nationals after missing the previous season with a back injury. But she got far more attention for delivering what she claims were a few inadvertent bumps to Kwan during the warm-ups, which the press treated as gravely as if she had taken a Tyson-like chomp from the champ's leg.

Hughes, at 16, skates with a confidence and serenity that belie her years. In October, at her first major international competition this season, she was stunned to hear the crowd booing when her second-place marks were announced. As unassuming as Cohen is cocky, Hughes couldn't fathom that they were upset because they believed she deserved to beat Kwan. A week later Hughes startled the figure-skating world by beating not only Kwan, but Slutskaya, too.

But perhaps it's Slutskaya who should concern Kwan the most. Slutskaya is Lipinski grown up--the same energy, leaping ability and winning smile, but with far more style and sophistication as a performer. With this season's routine, a frantically emotional skate to Puccini's "Tosca" she has finally shed a reputation for pedestrian artistry that had kept her a perennial runner-up to Kwan at the World Championships. Now Kwan, unquestionably the greatest skater of her generation, actually finds herself an underdog going
into this last-chance Olympics. Could that help Kwan somehow? Is it possible that losing has given her an edge? Kwan waves the notion away. "Losing is negative," she says. "I don't think it can ever be a positive thing. I don't think that way." Others disagree. "The Olympics is an incredible pressure cooker," says Brian Boitano, the 1988 Olympic champ and a friend of Kwan's. "Anything that brings that pressure down even the tiniest notch can be very
helpful."

No one, least of all Kwan, thinks the world should feel sorry for a beautiful 21-year-old with worldwide renown and endorsement deals for products ranging from Yoplait to Chevrolet. It's hard, though, not to sympathize as she struggles not just to master the minute and exacting demands of her sport, but to summon up, after so many years of competition, the passion and joy and vitality that will find favor in the judges' gimlet eyes. And so she will be battling not just Cohen, Hughes and Slutskaya, but herself as well--up against
the judges' memories of who she was, and their exaggerated expectations of what she might have become. "When you hang in all these years, people seem to get tired of you," she says, in a characteristic moment of introspection. "When I don't measure up to what they expect, it's as if they say, 'Well, then, you deserve to be placed second' [whether or not another skater actually surpassed her]. I feel like they're always demanding that I reinvent myself."
Which is a burden no ordinary figure skater, let alone a great one, ever faced. But it is, perhaps, the fitting test of a legend.

Sasha Cohen

RECORD: At 15, she took second at the 2000 Nationals and was hailed as America's hot young teen. A back injury cost her a season. But Cohen, now 17, has rebounded with another silver behind Kwan at the Nationals.

STRENGTHS: At 5 feet 1, she is the next in a long line of petite American dynamos who fire up the ice. Cohen is light on her feet and flashy, with sharp lines and dramatic expression. She also appears fearless and, if the situation calls for a gamble, is willing to go for it.

WEAKNESSES: Cohen can be inconsistent and can appear rattled under pressure. She was the consensus favorite at the World Junior Championships in 2000 but finished a sloppy sixth. THREAT ASSESSMENT

Sarah Hughes

RECORD: Hughes, 16, had a break-through season last year, winning a silver at the Nationals and a bronze at the Worlds. This year she became the first American to defeat Kwan since 1998, before taking third at last month's Nationals.

STRENGTHS: Hughes seldom makes a major error and conveys great serenity on ice. She also has the muscle to be a big jumper. She has two triple-triple combinations planned for Salt Lake City.

WEAKNESSES: Hughes has a reputation for "cheating'' on her lutz--they call it a `"flutz''--by taking off on the wrong and easier edge of her skate. Her coach claims that lots of skaters do it, but the judges have been punishing Hughes.

July 8 - Champions on Ice Dallas



















I was surpised at how many people showed up. I've read that the show has been underselling, most likely due to the lackluster that was the Olympics this year. However, at the Dallas Show a good 3/5ths of the seats were filled.

During the opening, each skater was introdued individually and took the ice for about one minute before the group opening. Rudy Galindo was introduced, followed by Surya Bonaly, Viktor Petrenko, Dan Hollander, Anissina & Peizerat and the other professional skaters - the eligible skaters were announced last, including Johnny Weir, Evan Lysacek, Michelle Kwan, Belbin & Agosto, Totmianina & Marinin, Sasha Cohen, Shizuka Arakawa, Irina Slutskaya and Evgeni Plushenko. All the ladies wore sequined halters and hot pants and the men wore sequined shirts and baggy cargos.

It seemed we were blessed with sitting in the "gynecological section" of the rink. My mom joked she saw more crotches in two hours at the show than she's seen during a week of giving pap smears at the office.

(I just did a few reviews over my favorite performances)


(In the middle of a spin)
(Random shot)
(More Johnny)

Johnny Weir (USA)
3-time U.S. National Champion (2004-2006)
2006 Olympic Team Member (5th)





Johnny skated in the middle of the first half of the show. I was hoping that he would perform his new “Desert Rose” exhibition, but he stuck with “My Way”. As always his costume was exquisite – it was black with solid white and grey sequins down the sides, a different one than he had at Marshall's with his name written in Cyrillic down the side (or was that his exhibition to "Unchained Melody"?). He is an internal skater and doesn’t express his emotions in the way that a lot of other “show-biz” skaters do who like to amuse or excite the audience – he doesn't skate for anyone else, including the crowd. My mom described his skating as "other-wordly" and I agree - he is artistic beyond belief. I don't think I have ever seen another male skater with as much balletic quality as Weir. He also demonstrated his athletic ability and did several triples in his program - I think the same amount or more than Plushenko did. He also did a triple axel - and while its so clean and crisp on TV, live it is simply amazing - its beyond me how he can make them look so effortless. His edges were deep with no falls, doubles or two-footed landings. Absolutely flawless.The crowd really enjoyed it and got a great reaction.


(Going into a triple axel during the opening)

Evgeni Plushenko (Russia)
Olympic Gold Medalist (2006)
Olympic Silver Medalist (2002)
3-time World Champion (2001, 2003-2004)
5-time European Champion (2000-2001, 2003, 2005-2006)





Plushenko wore a similar outfit to Weir and skated to “Tosca”. He has never really “done it” for me on TV, but is absolutely mesmerizing live, and despite the complaint that he does his “footwork with his arms” he had the entire audience in a trance during his straightline footwork. I was surprised when he did a few hard triples one of which was a combination. He came right over to our boards and stood for a minute doing some dramatic body movements. It would’ve been amazing to see his quad-triple-triple combination live, but I can understand the risk of injury, and the crowd always likes to see a clean easy triple rather than a fallen quad. The crowd really enjoyed his performance and I would rate it as one of the best of the night technically and artistically.


(Beautiful hydroblade position - terrible picture)
(Another terrible picture)

Michelle Kwan (USA)
Olympic Silver Medalist (1998)
Olympic Bronze Medalist (2002)
5-time World Champion (1996, 1998, 2000-2001, 2003)
9-time U.S. National Champion (1996, 1998-2005)





Michelle closed the show, which was a bit surprising given Shizuka is now in the cast. I figured the powers that be would allow the reigning Olympic champion to close the show, but Michelle is arguably the most well known in the bunch, so I can see why she was asked to close. She skated to a Natalie Cole song. She is incredibly gorgeous in person and looked like she had lost weight since Marshall’s back in April. She scaled back a lot technically; no jumps and minimal spins. She looked like she was skating more conservatively than the other skaters, taking her time to complete each element. Its evident the injury is still giving her some problems; her spins weren’t as fast as usual and her lines weren't as extended, but it was quintessential Kwan when she did her signature spiral sequence. Her inside-outside edge spiral is beautiful on TV, but seeing it live literally took my breath away. I got a bit star struck when she did a charlotte right in front of our section. Of all the skaters, Michelle looked the happiest to be there, as I'm guessing this is her final year on tour. At the end of her performance everyone started getting out of their seats to give her a standing ovation. She smiled, laughed and pointed to a few audience members who yelled out "Happy Birthday" to her. The crowd really enjoyed her and responded to her more so than anyone else.


(A blurry picture during the closing)





Irina Slutskaya (Russia)
2-time Olympic medalist (Silver in 2002, Bronze in 2006)
2-time World Champion (2002, 2005)
7-time European Champion (1996-1997, 2000-2001, 2003, 2005-2006)
4-time Russian National Champion (2000-2002, 2005)

Irina is such a powerful skater. She probably skated the fastest of all the ladies and did a few jumps - I think a double loop and triple toe - and yes, they are as huge as they look on TV. She skated to "Big Spender" and really pulled off the flirtatious act. She's absolutely cute in person, and she looks about 17 instead of 27, haha. I think she did one biellmann (I can't remmeber for sure - and it wasn't double foot!) but she did quite a few catchfoot spirals and spins throughout the program, though. I didn't really like the costume as it wasn't all that flattering, but I liked the idea of it. I've always found it interesting that Russian skaters tend to use American show tunes for all their exhibition performances; perhaps its to win the favor of the audience, lol. She plays to the audience surprisingly well and seemed to be enjoying herself. She's always been one of my favorite technical skaters but this program definitely showcased her presence. She was well received and got a few standing Os.


(Sideways shot of her Russian split)
(Gorgeous charlotte spiral)
(Spinning)

Sasha Cohen (USA)
Olympic Silver Medalist (2006)
2-time World Silver Medalist (2004-2005)
U.S. National Champion (2006)
4-time U.S. National Silver Medalist (2000, 2002, 2004-2005)





Sasha Cohen is perhaps the worlds most flexible human being. It truly is amazing how she can make a 180 degree spiral extension look natural. Like most of the other programs, I saw this back at Marshall's last Spring, and she skated just as beautifully. While I hated the hideous choice of music to Celine Dion's "God Bless America" she is such a gorgeous skater. Physically, she is stunning. She is so tiny and cannot be more than 5'1 and 100lbs and really is as beautiful as she is in pictures. She showcased her trademark flexibility as usual and did a couple charlottes and an incredible spiral just a few feet from our boards which was gorgeous. She fell on a double axel early on but landed a triple salchow later on in the program smoothly. She is such a balanced skater - artistically and technically - but its a shame she can't get her jumps more consistent in competition, because she really is a wonderful skater. She didn't smile a lot, but towards the end she started to lighten up and enjoy it.


(Blurry catchfoot spin)
(Blurry spiral)

Shizuka Arakawa (Japan)
Olympic Gold Medalist (2006)
World Champion (2004)
2-time Japanese National Champion (1998-1999)





I was under the impression that Shizuka was only skating during the end of July and early August, so it was a treat that she performed in Dallas. I got so excited when they announced her during the opening. She skated to "You Raise Me Up" by Celtic Woman in a beautiful blue dress (I couldn't help but think of Michelle since she had the same exhibition song last year and wore a blue dress) that probably wouldn't have been flattering on anyone else, but looked amazing on her. She did a couple jumps that were all clean. As much as she does tend to overuse the "doughnut spin" it put a smile on my face when she did one on our side of the rink. I love the freehand she uses during the spin - minor, but elegant. She also did her extraordinary Ina Bauer - she betters Sasha for most flexible in that category. She did a beautiful spiral sequence as well as a "Biellmann Spiral". She's a very quiet skater in that she doesn't attempt to draw attention to herself, and she is simplistically elegant - she is well-rounded, technically consistent and wonderfully artistic. As Dick Button said at the end of her Olympic free skate, "That's a lady skating."



Rudy Galindo (USA)
World bronze medalist (1996)
U.S. National Champion (1996)

Rudy is such a great performer. He really knows how to play to an audience and get their attention. I remember when there was some controversy about him carrying the gay pride flag during an exhibition skate several years ago. Its strange that even in such a seemingly liberal sport as figure skating that there is so much intolerance within the community towards the male skaters that are out. Rudy very much played up the stereotype and skated to some disco music, took his shirt off to reveal a sequined-flesh colored shirt and began "vogue-ing". He did a couple triples and did his "shotgun" spin position. The audience really enjoyed it and got them pumped up for the rest of the show.


(A lift)
(Throw Jump in the opening program)

Tatiana Totmianina & Maxim Marinin (Russia)
Olympic Gold Medalists (2006)
2-time World Champions (2004-2005)
4-time European Champions (2002-2006)

Tatiana and Maxim are such classical skaters. They epitomize what Russian skating is about - beauty and strength (I know it sounds cheesy). Their lifts and throw jumps are spectacular and they kept a lot of speed throughout the program. They have so much passion, but not in the way that the American or Chinese pairs do - its much more internally focused instead of outward.


Tanith Belbin & Benjamin Agosto (USA)
Olympic Silver Medalists (2006)
World Silver Medalists (2005)
World Bronze Medalists (2006)
Three-time U.S. National Champions (2004-2006)

I love this couple and I'm not even that big a fan of ice dance. They have so much fire and passion on the ice - they are just plain fun to watch. It doesn't hurt that she's a gorgeous blonde bombshell and he has this sexy Latin lover vibe going on. I really don't know any ice dance technical jargon (besides "twizzles" and all I know is that they're hideous) so I really can't describe in detail all their choreography and elements - but like I said, they are impossible not to watch. Unlike a lot of ice dancers, they have personality. They're the first American-produced ice dance team in half a century to medal at the Olympics, so they're definitely doing something right.


Katy Taylor (USA)
Four Continents Champion (2006)
U.S. National Pewter Medaist (4th)


Marina Anissina & Gwendal Peizerat (France)
Olympic Gold Medalists (2002)
World Champions (2001)
2-time European Champions (2000, 2002)
4-time French National Champions (1998-2001)






Closing
(Another Shot)