Kristi Yamaguchi's Long Goodbye to Ice Skating
Source: |
The Virginian-Pilot |
Date: |
November 28, 2001 |
Author: |
Tom Robinson |
Copyright 2001 Landmark Communications, Inc.
It's going on 10 years since figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi left
the kiss-and-cry of competition for the meet-and-greet of ice shows
and corporate schmoozing.
That's a full third of a life that Yamaguchi, 1992's Olympic gold
medalist, says will change when the latest "Stars on Ice" tour ends
next April.
It's her farewell tour, at least for now.
"After 10 years, I want to change my focus onto my family life and
personal life more," says Yamaguchi, 30. "We'll see what happens."
Yamaguchi visited patients and staff at Norfolk's Children's
Hospital of The King's Daughters on Tuesday morning on behalf of an
Olympic sponsor. It was a rare day without skates for Yamaguchi, who
has more or less trained constantly since she was 6 back home in
Northern California.
It has paid off handsomely for the tiny woman who, dressed
head-to-toe in black, appears almost frail. That, of course, belies
the steeliness it took for Yamaguchi to win one national championship,
two world titles and Olympic gold in Albertville, France, by the time
she was 20.
Albertville was it, however, for Yamaguchi the competitor. Two
gold medals would have been nice, but one is the holy grail. It etched
Yamaguchi's place in history. And it secured a calm, lucrative future
for her on the ice-show scene, as opposed to the pressure she would
have endured to repeat her Olympic victory.
"In skating, very few people have gone back to defend," Yamaguchi
says. "So much changes, so much goes on; there's no guarantee. I had
put my time in. It was time to move on and do something different."
Ice-show skating is a different set of sequins. The challenge
becomes not winning a medal, but winning over crowds again and again -
60 times, in four to five cities a week, from Christmas through April
during the upcoming tour.
Now, much of figure skating's passionate audience would swoon if
Yamaguchi did five minutes of toe loops and blew kisses. It takes more
than that, though, to sell tickets for a decade.
It takes year-round training, for one, even as she splits time
among Minnesota, San Francisco and Fort Lauderdale with her husband
Bret Hedican, a defenseman with the NHL's Florida Panthers.
Taking off months at a time would erode her skills, Yamaguchi
says. That's a real concern when the promoter expects seven solo,
pairs and group performances from her every night.
"The challenge has always been an artistic challenge," says
Yamaguchi, whose closest local "Stars on Ice" dates this tour are
Dec. 29 in Landover, Md., and March 20 in Raleigh.
"You want to give the audience something interesting every
year. It's a challenge to come up with the right music and
choreography and put together a performance that will be memorable,
hopefully.
"I work with different choreographers and take suggestions for
music from everyone - family members, friends, fans, whomever. After
10 years it gets pretty hard to keep re-inventing the wheel."
Maybe that's some of what Michelle Kwan is going through. Kwan,
21, has won five national and four world championships. But in search
of her first Olympic title, Kwan recently stunned the skating world by
firing her longtime coach essentially on the eve of February's Salt
Lake Olympics.
Yamaguchi, who says she'll be a goodwill ambassador at the Games,
will watch the fallout with more than casual interest.
"No one really knows how their relationship was and how it was
affecting her on the ice," Yamaguchi says. "It's really hard to judge
from the outside whether this was the right move or not.
"I had a good relationship with my coach, so I couldn't imagine
going to the Olympics without her. On the other hand, Michelle is much
more experienced than I was in '92. She's kind of been through it
all. I think if anybody's proven herself over and over again, it's
been her."
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