Yamaguchi, Browning lead after technical program
Source: |
Associated Press |
Date: |
December 12, 1997 |
Author: |
Joseph White |
WASHINGTON (AP) Strictly by the numbers, Kristi Yamaguchi was twice as
good as anyone else.
With a program that would probably contend for the gold medal if she
were still an Olympic skater, the defending women's champion scored 99.0
out of a possible 100 points Friday night to take the lead after the
technical program at the World Professional Figure Skating
Championships.
The 1992 Olympic champion and three-time world pro champion kissed her
way through a medley of Louis Armstrong songs, including "A Kiss to
Build a Dream On,'' "Kiss of Fire'' and "It's Been a Long, Long Time.''
She landed four clean triple jumps, while no one else among the women
landed more than two.
Yamaguchi's only significant stumble was an extra step between a triple
flip and a double toe loop, and she received 12 scores of 9.9 and two of
9.8.
"Traditionally I've always done something classical for the technical
program,'' Yamaguchi said. "After five years, we decided to do something
a little more lighthearted.''
Two-time defending champion Kurt Browning, who scrambled all week to put
together two routines for the event, edged Rudy Galindo to take the lead
in the men's competition on a night when many skaters seemed to have
problems with the soft ice inside the new MCI Center.
Browning landed three triples and earned 9.9 artistic scores across the
board as he skated to "Antares'' by The Tragically Hip. For Saturday
night's artistic program, he will reprise his funky rendition of the
Commodores' "Brick House,'' which he used to win the title here two
years ago.
"Due to a series of injuries and events and trouble and blah, blah,
blah, I don't have very many numbers this year,'' Browning said. "So
we've been juggling numbers a bit since we've arrived.''
Radka Kovarikova and Rene Novotny were tops among the pairs, while Renee
Roca and Gorsha Sur led the dance competition.
The artistic programs, which count 50 percent of the final score, will
be held Saturday night. This is the first time the event has been held
over two nights, and it showed in the attendance. After years of sold
out crowds at US Airways Arena in the suburbs, only 11,540 came Friday
night to the downtown Q and very warm Q 20,000-seat MCI Center.
"The ice was a little bumpy from being wet,'' Yamaguchi said. "It can
cause you to skate a little slow.''
Ekaterina Gordeeva, in one of her best performances since becoming a
singles skater, performed a warm but technically less demanding routine
to "Smile'' to place second behind Yamaguchi with 97.5 points.
Nancy Kerrigan and Denise Biellmann tied for third, ahead of Josee
Chouinard and Oksana Baiul, who seemed close to tears as she took to the
ice for her first major competition since an automobile accident in
January.
Baiul skated slowly and had trouble virtually every time she attempted a
jump, but managed a smile at the end.
"She did seem upset,'' Yamaguchi said. "But I don't know what had
happened.''
Baiul was unavailable for comment.
Rudy Galindo, wearing shiny and metallic silver pants, gyrated his way
to second place behind Browning with a routine to Billy Idol's "Dancing
With Myself.'' Galindo was sharper on his jumps, but was beaten out by
Browning in the artistic marks.
Six-time champion Brian Boitano, who wobbled between two different
combination jumps, was third, ahead of Victor Petrenko and Eric Millot.
In pairs, Kovarikova and Novotny took the lead after the technical
program despite Kovarikova's nasty fall during warmups. She slipped and
crashed into the boards with a hard thud.
"I went so strong and fast and slipped and couldn't stop,'' Novotny
said. "It sounded worse than it was.''
Kovarikova and Novotna scored from 9.7 to 9.9 for a classical,
flirtatious program to "Un Sospiro.'' Isabelle Brasseur and Lloyd Eisler
placed second, and Elena Leonova and Andrei Khvalko third. Defending
champions Elena Bechke and Denis Petrov withdrew because of Bechke's
nagging groin injury.
The only 10s of the night were in the dance competition. Four went to to
Roca and Sur for their dramatically romantic routine to Neil Diamond's
"If You Go Away.'' Maia Usova and Alexander Zhulin received one 10 and
placed second, well ahead of Amy Webster and Ron Kravette third.
|