Just to the North, Another Skating Rivalry Fascinates a Nation
Source: |
Washington Post |
Date: |
January 31, 1994 |
Author: |
Anne Swardson |
Copyright 1994 The Washington Post
Tonya and Nancy, you could learn a few things from Kurt and Elvis.
Like Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan, Kurt Browning and Elvis
Stojko are the top figure skaters of their gender in their
country. But the similarity ends there.
Even before the infamous attack on Kerrigan, for which Harding's
former husband and three others have been arrested, there was no love
lost between the two American rivals. Browning and Stojko, on the
other hand, both say their years of dominating Canadian men's figure
skating have made them friends and close teammates.
As the Lillehammer Olympics approach, Browning and Stojko are
arguably the world's best and second-best men's figure skaters, though
not necessarily in that order. The Kurt-and-Elvis show, as the duo's
competition has been dubbed in Canada, has been avidly followed in
this country; now it will be seen by the rest of the world.
Though they are neck-and-neck, Browning, 27, and Stojko, 21, are
of different generations. Browning, a four-time world champion, is
expected to retire from competition after Lillehammer; Stojko, world
runner-up last year, hopes to compete in the 1998 Olympics.
The changing of the guard was there for all to see at the Canadian
national championships in Edmonton in January. Browning skated a
disastrous technical program, and came back to finish second with a
slightly shaky free-skate. Stojko fell when he attempted a quadruple
jump in the free skate, but still easily took his first national
title. Browning had been national champion the four previous years.
The national championships also showed the friendly feelings that
characterize their rivalry. As Stojko was being interviewed by
Canadian television after his victory, Browning approached and, on
camera, gave him a hearty handshake and congratulations.
"It really showed the spirit of sportsmanship," Stojko said
recently during a break in practice here, about an hour north of
Toronto.
The two present contrasting images. Browning is lithe and pretty,
an elegant figure who does his free-skate program in a Bogart-style
tuxedo to the music of Casablanca. Stojko, short, muscular and a
martial-arts enthusiast, skates to the music from the movie "Dragon:
The Bruce Lee Story." He says Bruce Lee is his hero because "he went
against everything and proved that his way worked."
Stojko for years was better regarded for his jumping ability than
for his artistic interpretations. But today, with the help of
martial-arts study and a Philadelphia-based choreographer, he has
pulled the artistic side together as well. And Browning has taught him
to make contact with audiences during his performances.
Even in jumping records, the two parallel each other. Browning was
the first man ever to perform a quad, in which he revolves four full
times, in competition. Stojko was the first to do it in combination
with a second jump.
Their finishes have been close for years. Stojko has been second
to Browning in the Canadian national championships three times. In the
1992 world championships, Browning was second and Stojko was third. In
the 1993 world championships in Prague, Browning was first and Stojko
second.
Stojko's finish in Prague came after he skated a very weak
technical program. His distress afterward was plain to see. Browning
left the group of people he was talking to, took Stojko into a room
and gave him an hour-long pep talk.
"He said, 'I want both of us on that podium.' The next day, Elvis
came out and he was pumped. I give Kurt credit for some of that," said
Susan Heffernan, an international judge and a team leader for figure
skating.
Neither skater has performed well at the Olympics. Browning,
skating with a back injury, was seventh at the 1992 Olympics in
Albertville, France. Stojko, 19 at the time, was sixth. Browning has
made it clear that Lillehammer is his last opportunity to shine before
turning the throne over to Stojko.
Canada's next skating idol is an affable young man whose mother
emigrated from Hungary in 1956 and immediately fell in love with the
music of Elvis Presley. Stojko's father, an immigrant from Slovenia in
what was then Yugoslavia, also was a fan; it seemed only natural to
name their son after the King.
Stojko and Browning face tough competition at Lillehammer from
Ukrainian Viktor Petrenko and Americans Scott Davis and Brian
Boitano. But despite their friendship, the Canadians also know they
must fear each other.
"I've always played down how strong the rivalry was between Elvis
and me, but it's been awesome," Browning said during the national
championships. "He's aggressive and he has an image."
And Stojko now says he goes to Lillehammer in a stronger position
because he's already defeated Browning.
"I didn't want to be handed down the championship, I wanted to
take it," he said. "We're good friends, we're teammates. But there can
only be one number one, and may the best man win."
|