Browning not surprised quads took so long to become factor
Source: |
AP News |
Date: |
February 27, 1997 |
Author: |
Barry Wilner |
Copyright 1997 the Associated Press. -- All Rights Reserved
It is March 1988, one month after the
epic Battle of the Brians at the Calgary Olympics. The final
installment of that figure skating drama is playing out at the
world championships in Budapest.
In the background behind Brian Boitano and Brian Orser stands
Kurt Browning, whose Olympic medals chance will come in four years.
Then, leaping out of the background comes Browning, landing the
first quad in competition.
Amazingly, nine years later, the four-revolution jump has not
been a major factor in the sport. No worlds or Olympics or even
national titles of significance have been decided by the quad.
That could change this week at the Champions Series final, where
the best Olympic-eligible men's field since the Lillehammer
Olympics is gathered, chock full of qualified quadders.
''I think basically the quad is an attitude,'' said Browning,
who won four world championships and currently is performing in
Discover Stars on Ice. ''And now the attitude is that it is part of
your arsenal and everyone knows, where it was once the secret
weapon.
''For years, everyone was trying to get it consistent, but it
takes another generation for a jump like that to take hold.''
It apparently has taken hold for two-time world champ Elvis
Stojko, who nailed one recently at the Canadian championships in
combination. Olympic gold medalist Alexei Urmanov of Russia has hit
four quads, but none since 1992, and he didn't try it or need it at
Lillehammer. Like Urmanov, countrymen Ilya Kulik and Alexei Yagudin
also failed to land quads at the European championships.
Of the top men's contenders this week, only defending world
champion Todd Eldredge doesn't do a quad in competition. Eldredge
said earlier this month at the U.S. nationals, which he won for the
fourth time, that he keeps working on it, but isn't comfortable
with the jump yet.
Browning thinks Eldredge would be wise to ignore the quad and
concentrate on the things that helped him unseat Stojko at the
worlds in Edmonton last March.
''I still think if, say, Todd does absolutely everything, with
two or three triples in combination, and he does them in a
beautiful program like last year at worlds, the strength of program
will still win,'' said Browning, the current world professional
champion.
Technically, Stojko is the most accomplished of the six men who
made the finals, which are worth $50,000 to the winner down to
$5,000 for the sixth-place skater. He has landed four quads, twice
doing them in combination, and even is tinkering with a quad toe
loop-triple toe loop combo.
But Stojko doesn't have the artistry particularly the spins
and footwork to match Eldredge, Kulik or Urmanov, who suddenly
has become a force in the sport after indifferent performances in
1995 and '96.
''It is really difficult not to try the quad because the level
of technical ability is so high from these guys,'' Browning said.
''There's not always a time in the program to show your skating, it
is so much concentrated on all the triple jumps and triples in
combination. I remember what that's like; I did it too.''
This week's winner will get an added boost for the world
championships in Lausanne on March 17-24. Eldredge seeks to become
the first American man to repeat as world titlist since Scott
Hamilton finished his run of four straight in 1984.
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