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Top skaters must learn how to handle dizzying spins

Source: Plattsburgh Press-Republican
Date: November 23, 2002
Author: Ned P. Rauch

LAKE PLACID - Of all the amazing tricks world-class figure skaters perform, perhaps none is more confounding than their ability to defy dizziness.

The flips, the jumps, the skating backwards really fast - they all elicit well-earned gasps from audiences. But those spins, the ones in which skaters disappear into whirling, sequined blurs, only to re-emerge as focused and sure-footed as ever, are what really separate the stars on the ice from the spectators in the stands.

It must be trick, right? Perhaps a quirk of evolution? If figure-skating legend Scott Hamilton and several other skaters on the Stars on Ice tour are to be believed, the answer's surprising simple.

"You really do get dizzy," Hamilton said.

Kurt Browning said his first few spins after taking time off from skating leave him stumbling around like a drunk.

What keeps him from doing that in a show is practice. Skaters just get used to a certain kind of dizziness and eventually, they can handle it.

Jamie Sale and David Pelletier, the Canadian pair who won gold in Salt Lake City, called it "muscle memory." It's only when that memory is rattled that dizziness can debilitate a skater.

"I spin counter-clockwise," Hamilton explained. "If I do 30 to 40 rotations counterclockwise, I can recover."

Spin him around five times in the other direction, however, "I'm done," Hamilton said.