Canadian shine at Sears Open
Source: |
Globe and Mail |
Date: |
December 1, 2000 |
Author: |
Beverley Smith |
Hamilton - Canadian skaters almost swept the Sears Figure Skating
Open Friday night, even against all odds.
Canadian star Kurt Browning, 34, just lost out on the judges' 4-3
split and finished second in the men's event to world champion Alexei
Yagudin of Russia, 20.
Yagudin doubled a triple loop, and his performance seemed a little
flat. Browning stumbled out of a triple Axel, but easily landed a
combination of a triple toe loop and triple toe loop. But the jumps
didn't necessarily determine the winner of the interpretive program,
something that professional competitors have more experience
with. Browning didn't move with as much speed as the powerful Russian,
but he's an expert at interpreting music.
In the audience were Browning's wife, Sonia Rodriguez, a principal
dancer with the National Ballet of Canada, and his father,
Dewey. Browning brought more elements from home in Alberta, too. His
costume had both his grandfather and father's brands embroidered on a
hip and the pant legs.
"It's hard for me to compete against Kurt, because he is an
artist," said Yagudin, who is heading home before coming back to
Canada for a Holiday Festival of Ice in Sarnia on Dec. 6. He will also
take part in the Canadian part of the Stars On Ice tour.
Yagudin says he enjoys skating in Canada because the fans are so
knowledgeable. Canadian fans gave him a standing ovation last month
when he won at Skate Canada. "In Canada, they don't really care who
you are," he said. "If they like you, they stand up."
The biggest surprise was the victory by Jos=E9e Chouinard, a
three-time Canadian champion who is now 31, twice the age of the
youngest competitor in the field, Sarah Hughes, 15, of the United
States.
And Canadian champions Jamie Sal=E9 and David Pelletier won the
pairs event and earned a 6.0 from a Russian judge to boot. Canada's
other pair in the event, Kristy and Kris Wirtz, finished second with a
top effort.
The men's competition was the marquee event of the night, with nine
of the past 14 world titlists on deck. Browning got a standing ovation
for his western routine to Don't Fence Me In.
Todd Eldredge of the United States finished third and attacked his
13th Warrior program with a vengeance.
The other standing ovation went to two-time Olympic silver medalist
Brian Orser, who will be 39 in a few weeks. Orser, skating to Against
All Odds, was magnificent, showing off wonderful footwork and
expression, good enough to finish fourth.
He got three marks of 5.8 from the judges for presentation. "The
old guy's still got it," he said.
Canadian silver medalist Emanuel Sandhu finished fifth, but
astonished everyone when he landed a combination of a quadruple toe
loop and triple toe loop. Things came unravelled a little afterward,
although he landed three triples in an event in which the men were
allowed to do no more than four. When he was finished, he lay down on
the ice.
But Chouinard was the biggest surprise. Promoters haven't knocked
on her door at all in the past year; she hasn't competed since she
staged an upset to win last year's event. Her win Friday night was an
even bigger score. She toppled three-time world champion Michelle Kwan
of the United States; Chouinard never won a medal at world or Olympic
Games.
Although Chouinard fell on a triple Lutz and Kwan was error-free,
four of the seven judges rated the Canadian skater best in the
interpretive program, which puts less emphasis on jumps than a
traditional long program and more on use of movement to music. A
Hungarian judge even rated Kwan third behind Hughes, who won the
bronze medal with a program that was choreographed last weekend.
It's a pity that the Sears Open will be Chouinard's only
competition of the season. Her routine, a mime, was charming from
beginning to end. Chouinard is the consummate pro.
Sale and Pelletier skated to La Vie En Rose and enchanted the
judges, even though it was only their second pro-am event. They
competed last week in France and have been home only long enough to do
their laundry, Pelletier said. Going home will be a relief. "It will
be good for us because we haven't trained since Oct. 17, with
back-to-back competitions," Pelletier said.
The Wirtzes won the silver medal with a well-skated routine with
only one mistake: Kristy was a little off balance on a double
Axel. But they showed off an interesting death spiral with an unusual
handhold.
The couple moved up from third after the short program, outskating
Americans Kyoko Ina and John Zimmerman after Ina fell on a throw
triple Salchow.
|