Browning gets last laugh: Four-time world champ thrills fans and judges
Source: |
Calgary Herald |
Date: |
December 6, 1998 |
Author: |
Canadian Press |
Copyright 1998 Southam Inc.
Kurt Browning had the last laugh.
Impersonating a clown, Browning had a capacity Memorial Auditorium
crowd of 5,800 giggling all the way through his free-skating routine at
the Sears Open figure skating meet Saturday night.
He also had the judges scribbling high marks. Four of them awarded
him a perfect 6.0 for artistic impression, and Browning left laughing
with a $ 40,000 US first-place cheque.
"I was really nervous," he said of performing his new routine for
the first time in front of judges. "But the character is so much fun."
Wearing baggy pants with patches, and with a red ball attached to
his nose, the four-time world champion from Caroline, Alta., who now
lives in Toronto, showed why at age 32 he still is considered among the
very best showmen in the sport.
He fell on purpose during the comical number. He skated backwards,
jumped onto the judges' table, and sat there for a few seconds while the
crowd roared. It was unconventional. It was Browning at his best.
"The real test will be when I'm not in Canada," he said of the
Sandra Bezic-choreographed piece. "If people laugh in the United States
and in Europe . . . No rules. It's great."
American Michael Weiss finished second and Brian Orser of Toronto
was third.
The crowd had been in a much different mood at the end of the ice
dance event. Russians Maya Usova and Evgeny Platov were declared the
winners after Canadian champions Shae-Lynn Bourne and Victor Kraatz were
penalized for a time violation and placed second. Boos filled the arena
as the dance panel departed.
Nicole Bobek of the U.S. won the women's title followed by Josee
Chouinard of Laval, Que. Germans Mandy Woetzel and Ingo Steuer won the
pairs, with Kristy Sargeant of Alix, Alta., and Kris Wirtz of Marathon,
Ont., second.
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