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New Verve In World Figure Skating.

Source: San Francisco Chronicle
Date: December 15, 1997
It's not the Olympics, but the World Professional Figure Skating Championships is taking a few steps to gain more respect as a serious competition.

Kristi Yamaguchi won the women's title for the fourth time Saturday night, while Kurt Browning took the men's crown for the third consecutive year. The difference this time is that it took them two days to do it, skating a technical program Friday and an artistic routine Saturday.

In previous years, the whole event was crammed into a one-night marathon that took its toll on skaters as well as fans. The new format reminded Browning and Brian Boitano of their Olympic days.

"I like two nights, even though it puts more pressure on you," said Boitano, who finished second to Browning. "When you have two numbers in one night, you have a tendency to not get so serious about the second number. You go, 'OK, I'm tired.' When you have a whole day to prepare, it gets a little more intense, but I think it's better for skating."

There were other signs that the 24-year-old world championships is trying to distance itself from made-for-TV, pseudo-competitions that seem to pop up every other week.

There was a bigger pool of judges, and those judges consistently valued content over reputation. In the dance, for instance, Renee Roca and Gorsha Sur had the most technically demanding program and earned two perfect 10s to upset heavily favored Maia Usova and Alexander Zhulin.

"I never expected that," Roca said. "It's really nice because it didn't go in the predictable order that it usually goes in. It's really a big surprise."

Still a problem is the television lag time. This year's competition won't be on NBC for another six weeks, but promoter Dick Button said there are serious talks broadcasting next year's event live.

"If it went live, it would be great," Browning said.