Chen's 3a is a disaster in competition. although I hear he hits great ones in practice. He should never attempt a 4a. Leave that to Hanyu.4A? I can't imagine how he could upgrade that 3A.
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Chen's 3a is a disaster in competition. although I hear he hits great ones in practice. He should never attempt a 4a. Leave that to Hanyu.4A? I can't imagine how he could upgrade that 3A.
Chen's 3a is a disaster in competition. although I hear he hits great ones in practice. He should never attempt a 4a. Leave that to Hanyu.
Nathan often has landed the 3A surprisingly well in competition when we may not be expecting him to. So yes, it hasn't been a consistent jump for Nathan, but it's not as if he can't do it well. That whole question of the jumps that give skaters the hee-bee jee-bees is so interesting. I enjoy hearing skaters talk about the jumps they are partial to and the ones they have nightmares about or just dislike for one reason or another.Sometimes, difficulty in landing certain jumps could be simply due to wrong chatter in one's head or over-thinking, or obviously technical miscues on take-off.
Which was your least favorite jump @Cleo1782? Which was your best jump?
I suppose Hanyu keeps the 4A in front of himself as his next challenge perhaps. I tend to believe a young-gun will be the first to land 4A some years down the road, although Hanyu obviously possesses singular determination. There are of course a number of skaters practicing 4A on harness who might be close to surprising the skating community. Had he been slightly younger and stayed in the competitive mix, Max Aaron seemingly had 4A in his crosshairs.![]()
I loved myself some edge jumps. 2a was my fave...I would do them one after another. Probably why I am so critical of axel technique. Hated the lutz. Could do it but always felt so much pressure to be on the right edge. I have seen some great video of Nathan landing the 3a. It just generally looks so messy in competition.
The double axel was my NEMESIS! I could land all my triples, but never had a consistent double axel. I started working on the it when I was about 12, and when I quit skating at 18 I still didn't have it consistent (except for a few months in the spring/summer when I was about 15/16). Oddly it had only taken me a few weeks to get my single axel, though. I don't know if it was the coaches or what, but none of the skaters at my club had good double axels.I loved myself some edge jumps. 2a was my fave...I would do them one after another. Probably why I am so critical of axel technique. Hated the lutz. Could do it but always felt so much pressure to be on the right edge.
Took me about 3 years to get it, but judges/coaches tell me it was a beauty-sounds like I am bragging. It's about the skid you hit into it. Loved the loop and sal...toe jumps were something I could land just not on a regular basis. I two footed a 3t and hit my head and John Zimmerman carried me off the ice..Might be my most famous moment. I am 5'8 and was 4'11 when I was 14. So I just grew up in the worst way. Would have loved to pairs but I was so tall.The double axel was my NEMESIS! I could land all my triples, but never had a consistent double axel. I started working on the it when I was about 12, and when I quit skating at 18 I still didn't have it consistent (except for a few months in the spring/summer when I was about 15/16). Oddly it had only taken me a few weeks to get my single axel, though. I don't know if it was the coaches or what, but none of the skaters at my club had good double axels.
For me, the triple loop was my favourite jump, but I also loved the flip. I was the kind of 'odd' skater who had no preference for edge or toe jumps (except the evil axel). I had an iffy edge entry into my double and triple lutz, so I tended to do a spread eagle into it to kind of hide the edge. I never went to any competitions that had replays (late 90s), so it made it harder for judges to catch in real time
As for the 4A, I don't expect to see it landed successfully in this or next season, but I won't be surprised to see half-decent attempts coming soon. I just hope that whoever works on it isn't doing so just to get a 'first', but does so because they have the actual ability for it.
Before the 4A, I think some skaters might have a better chance at successfully landing a quad/quad combination. I'd like to see that being tried...
Took me about 3 years to get it, but judges/coaches tell me it was a beauty-sounds like I am bragging.
John Zimmerman carried me off the ice..Might be my most famous moment.
There were some videos of Keegan doing 4A in harness
Heck, anyone who was or is a competitive figure skater deserves to brag, big time.
Oh my!What a dream moment to be in possession of, even with experiencing any pain from hitting your head. Did you think you were dreaming when it happened?
Ah, now that's really something to brag about. Or no, better yet, to hold close to your heart. John Z is a such a talented, caring, and handsome sweetie! He and Silvia Fontana seem made for each other.
Unaccountably, we seem to be in the wrong thread for this conversation.![]()
What a great story!I was 15 and super embarrassed and also probably slightly concussed, but still love him. He was already dating Silvia back then, but he still remembers the time I nearly killed myself in front of him. Not the greatest claim to fame, but at least he remembers me for something. I still get tongue tied with him. I said something stupid to him at Nationals last year about James/Cipres like I think they are going to medal at Worlds or something similar. I mean I was right, but it sounded really dumb. Again not the right thread, but I think Jonathan Beyer was standing next to me making a fool of myself, so kinda relevant?
The loop seems like a difficult jump for many skaters because of needing to master the proper rhythm curving into the take-off.
But Nathan’s 3A last night was just fine. Just fine, indeed.
100% true for me, back in the day. No assist at all for the loop jump. I was taught to do multiple traveling 3 turns to create the momentum. It seems funny to me that now those traveling 3 turns are considered as difficult steps into the jump. I actually find it more impressive when a loop is executed without steps, based on my own personal experience.
I usually don't watch any vid of TSL but I just came across this interview today. I was so much impressed by what Benoit talked. THANKS!
When Kwan joined Rafael she was already a champion and formed, the relationship was of an adviser/consultant. I was ref. to taking someone very young, building him/her from scratch, allowing Rafael teach as he did back in Russia, without restrictions of "western" practices and restrictions of "coach as an employee of skater's family" vs. creative Svengali.
Raf mentioned the differences between US and Russia on TSL, but it doesnt have to be one way or the other. There is a balance. He could start by setting expectations and rules, like no surprise jumping passes, etc.
So, as people have criticized Eteri, even Carroll's techniques couldn't save even Kwan from injuries. Interesting.
And this week he feels professional enough to discuss Gracie Gold's mental health with his know-it-all subtextal tone of "well we all know she's going to go to Russia and just bomb, so why is she evening bothering?"
Erm, maybe because it isn't all about what YOU think, Dave?![]()
They totally dismissed Mcnamara and Carpenter (refused to even mention their names), the ONLY Americans to medal at this event.