Friday, February 24, 2006

Olympic Blog, Part 7

Pavarotti gave a wonderful performance of Nessun Dorma from Puccinni's Turnadot to close the Opening Ceremonies at the start of these Olympic Games. It was an outstanding performance that captured the spirit of the Olympic Games.

Thursday night at La Palavela, Shizuka Arakawa, gave an inspired and beautiful performance to win Olympic Gold and clench Japan's first medal of these Olympic Games! Sasha Cohen salvaged a Silver Medal and Irina Slutskaya squeaked out a Bronze Medal.

Sasha, who skated early in the final group, went down on her very first jump, Triple Lutz. She then stepped out of her next jump, the Triple Flip. After two costly mistakes, Sasha picker herself up and went on to land the remainder of her jumps cleanly. Sasha also kept a high performance level, not giving up on her choreography after the technical mistakes. After the performance she commented, "It's one night – four minutes and a piece of metal," she said. "It's more about the journey over the four years. It's not a one-night journey. In the process I learned a lot about myself and enjoyed it."

Arakawa took the ice next and seized the golden opportunity. Shizuka hit her first two combinations, Triple Lutz-Double Loop and Triple Salchow Double Loop with ease. After hitting a nice Triple Flip, she experienced her only flaw when she doubled her planned Triple Loop. She went on to complete 3 more triples including a second Triple Lutz. She delivered her entire program with a cool elegance that has become Arakawa's trademark. After her program she looked shocked when her scores came up...a new personal best.

Slutskaya skated last in the group. She looked tentative and nervous throughout her program, after the half-way point in the program a planned Triple Flip became a double and then she went down on her Triple Loop. You could tell on her face she was deeply dissapointed. As Shizuka and Sasha celebrated their medals during the medal ceremony, Irina stood, stone-faced and shell shocked. Her dissapointment mirrors that of Michelle Kwan's...after an Olympic Silver Medal she stuck it out 4 more years, came in as the favorite, and went home with Bronze.

Other notable performances on the evening inluded Fumie Suguri, who, in my opinion, deserved a spot on the podium. Americans Meissner and Hughes finished 6th and 7th with good performances in their first major international competition, and Joannie Rochette pulled way up from 9th to finish in the top 5 with a fantastic performance.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Olympic Blog, Part 6

Will the Russians sweep the Figure Skating Event in Torino...not if Sasha Cohen has any say in the matter! The ladies short program went down and what a short program it was! The top 12 ladies are all fantastic and the final two groups will be exciting!

Poor Sokolova! She's way, way, way down there in 18th place after missing her Lutz combo, and popping her Loop. I might add that her percentage on the Triple Loop over the past two years in competition...100% This is the first time she has missed it since late 2003. Carolina Kostner...all of Italy's hope for a ladies medal...most likely not gonna happen. She went splat on the Lutz combo...splatted right down to 11th place.

Kimmie Meissner and Emily Hughes had fantastic short programs! Kimmie sits 5th and Emily is 7th. Watch for them to have great free skates.

The Japanese are coming! The Japanese are coming! The Japanese are coming! The Japanese are coming! THE JAPANESE ARE COMING! Arakawa is currently 3rd, less the one point off the lead. Suguri is right behind her in 4th. Both had great short's.

The surprise of the evening was little Elene Gedevanishvili of Georgia. Nice Triple-Triple combo, good spins and a little smile...she makes the top 6!

The showdown will be between Slutskaya and Cohen. Cohen lead Slutskaya by...get this, .03. Yep, that's it! .03! So basically it's dead even between them and Arakawa is just barely behind that. What a nail-biter this one will be!

Olympic Blog, Part 5


Shall we dance? What a tremendous Free Dance. I must first send out my love for Canadians Dubrueil and Lauzon who had to withdraw after that nasty fall in the Original Dance...get healthy, get to Calgary, skate great, and if I may be a bit greedy...stick it out for 4 more years and win an Olympic Medal in Vancouver!

Tremendous dancing on the part of Russians Navka and Kostomarov. I really felt they delivered a great dance...and how about those Americans! Although they weren't without flaw, they were good enough for Silver...Silver 30 years in the making! As for the Bronze Medalists...boring! In my opinion the Lithuanians should have come flying up the standings, but Fusar-Poli and Margolio's ice drama got stuck in between!

What is clear is that the World Champiosnhips will be quite interesting for Ice Dance!

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Olympic Blog, Part 4


So the rule of thumb for the Original Dance is...don't fall and your in the top 5! I have never seen so many tumbles in the OD ever! And on fantastic performances to boot! First the Lithuanians take a fall on footwork, darn! Then the Italians Faiella and Scali take a nasty little fall, shoot! Then the Canadians Dubrueil and Lauzon take a horrible spill on a rotational lift and Marie-France is off to the hospital, ouch! It's not even over...Fusar-Poli and Margolio...surprise Italian leaders after the Compulsory Dance...plop down on the ice, geez!

All the falls did something interesting...it reset the field. The standings after the Compulsory Dance were crazy...the standings of the top six following the Original Dance...exactly the same order they were in at the 2005 World Championships.

Also...I continue to have criticism of this new judging system. Belbin and Agosto are in second place with, in my opinion, the strongest and technically most difficult dance. However, 4 teams (ranked behind) beat Belbin and Agosto in the technical mark. Get this...two of those teams are among those that went down. I'm confused???

Olympic Blog, Part 3


I found it all so very anti-climatic. I can't remember a more boring Men's Final. I mean, honestly...I think this judging system should be reevaluated. I have such a problem with the second mark...the component mark. I think Plushenko delivered the Gold Medal performance, do I feel his component score should have been that high...NO! When I take Plushenko's skating skills, transitions, choreography, performance, and interpretation and hold them against others (Savoie, Sandhu, Weir) in the field he doesn't come close to being as solid. David Pelletier said it best; "I find Plushenko's skating to be phony. I don't buy it." Plushenko deserved to win this title...but on the strength of only his technical mark, not both marks.

The American's didn't get it done. One because he had a terrible short program, one because he had a terrible free skate, and one because he was terribly underscored! Lysacek blew it early, Weir blew it late, and Savoie was calmly consistent...but not given credit. I hate that Savoie was penalized for not skating with a calculator in his hand. I appreciate Evan's comeback performance, that was one of the highlights of the evening. I'm officially sick of Johnny Weir. He's always critizising everyone else...guess what, you have weaknesses too!

Way for Lambiel to win Olympic Silver...without even landing a Triple Axel! I think 1992 was the last time that happened. Did Paul Wylie hit a Triple Axel in his free in Albertville? What about Orser in 1988 or 1984? Maybe we have to go back even further? And what about Buttle's bronze...boring. I just couldn't get into it! Maybe I'm crazy but it seemed to me all the exciting skaters faltered...Takahashi, Sandhu, Dambier, Lindemann...what a shame.

Maybe Ice Dance can pull me out of my slum.

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Olympic Blog, Part 1


So during the Olympic Games I will blog on the going on's of the ice! Today was the first full day of competition and already there has been drama!

Michelle Kwan has withdrawn...I am so sad but am certain that she has made the correct decision. Her body just isn't cooperating the way it should be since arriving in Torino. Emily Hughes now gets an Olympic shot. I wish Michelle all the best in her recovery, she will be missed more than any other athlete could be. Good luck Emily!

I've officially branded him a traitor! Dick Button is doing Olympic commentary for NBC...and what a delight it is! I'm happy that, for this competition, Dick has jumped ship and joined this crew. Dick Button follows these skaters intensely because of his extensive coverage with ABC/ESPN (the usual home of Figure Skating, with the exception of the Olympics) and it is nice to know that someone knowledgeable is there to call this event. I also like that Scott Hamilton is back, he's a great commentator too. Sandra Bezic...I don't like her! That's just an opinion though...

How many times can we discuss the Salt Lake City Pairs Scandal...I counted 13 times it was brought up during today's various Olympic broadcasts. Even more crazy...they have David and Jaime running around Torino following Pairs Teams. I love them to death but it is really becoming overkill!

Okay...the competition! Pairs short program took place and what a program it was! The top 8 are separated by just about 8 points. 8 points! 8 points, all the credit Rena Inoue and John Baldwin got for a gorgeous, perfect, textbook throw triple axel! The base value for that particular element is 7.5, and I can tell you it deserved a +3 to the grade of execution (see new judging system here)because it was brilliant. However, the international panel, whose marks we cannot match with the judge because it is still anonymous, only saw fit to give it a +1. Just the same they are within striking distance of a medal in 6th place with total points of 61.27. Leading after the short program is (no big surprise) Russian's Tatiana Totmianina and Maxim Marinin. They delivered a flawless performance and clearly were the class of the field. They currently have 68.64 points. Chinese upstarts, the Zhang's are in 2nd after a powerful performance and the #2 Russian team Maria Petrova and Alexei Tikhonov are in 3rd. China continued to show dominance, Pang and Tong are in 4th and somehow (torn achilles or not) Shen and Zhao are in 5th! The free skate promises to be exciting as so many teams are in contention for a medal!

Full Results for the Pairs Short Program can be found here