A CHEER thread for Mexico's Donovan Carrillo

Sylvia

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Donovan (and Andrea Montesinos Cantu) recently won the Mexican national championships (official results are not online, AFAIK):
 

CaliSteve

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Donovan (and Andrea Montesinos Cantu) recently won the Mexican national championships (official results are not online, AFAIK):

In his SP he landed a 4T (but fell on his 3A). He did a really nice 3A-3T in the LP.
 

aemeraldrainc

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Bumping because he’s currently in such good form and did really well at 4 Continents and he was so freakin close to reaching the minimum tech score for Worlds and now he’s getting a chance to do so by competing at Challenge Cup!! So freakin excited to see him doing so good!!
he finished 15th at 4 Continents!!
I can’t remember any other Mexican skater finishing that high.
 

CaliSteve

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Bumping because he’s currently in such good form and did really well at 4 Continents and he was so freakin close to reaching the minimum tech score for Worlds and now he’s getting a chance to do so by competing at Challenge Cup!! So freakin excited to see him doing so good!!
he finished 15th at 4 Continents!!
I can’t remember any other Mexican skater finishing that high.

I was so pissed at the judges. He missed the minimums by .20!

We all need to light candles for Donovan.
 

aemeraldrainc

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CONGRATULATIONS TO DONOVAN on officially earning an Olympic spot for Mexico with his 20th place finish at 2021 Worlds in Stockholm! :encore:

ETA link to Donovan's happy message today :): https://www.instagram.com/p/CNIOzruLwtL/
I’m loving how all these skaters (past and present) are being so supportive on Instagram. The figure skating community is truly tight-knit.
I’m proud and so happy for Donovan.
His hard work and sheer determination have brought him here and he deserves all the good things!
You got this, Donovan!
 

Sylvia

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Practicing quads :)
4S: https://www.instagram.com/p/CNTMy4XHTGu/
4T: https://www.instagram.com/p/CNf3xcgH9Ul/

Recent articles (first link includes an embedded YT interview):
 

Sylvia

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IFS article by Susan D. Russell (June 14):
Excerpts:
Carrillo and his coach have decided to keep last season’s free skate (“Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps” by Osvaldo Farrés and “Sway Mix” by Pedro Infante) but will rearrange parts of the program. “Because I love the songs I feel like I can still give so much more to that program,” said Carrillo. “For the short, we are going to collaborate with a choreographer whom I greatly admire. It will be something very different from what I have skated before but that challenge excites me a lot.” Though Carrillo did not name the choreographer, he is currently attending Benoît Richard′s summer camp in Courmayeur, France.
Nuñez said the technical content for his student′s programs next season has been decided: one quad in the short and two in the free. “Donovan is a very balanced skater, but I think there is always something to improve and that is why we will focus on improving the component part, and work mainly on his skating skills.”
Carrillo is excited about his Olympic opportunity for a number of reasons, but the fact that his parents are planning to go to Beijing to watch him compete outranks all others. “They have it in their plans, although we are still not sure whether events with the public will be allowed on that date. But I really hope so because my parents have never been able to travel with me to international competitions outside of Mexico. It would be something very special for me to know they are living my Olympic dream with me.” [...]
While many skaters will retire post-2022, Carrillo said that is not in his plans. He intends to continue competing as long as his body allows it and that he takes good care of himself “to be able to prolong my career as a skater for many more years.”
At the end of the article, his coach Nuñez mentioned he was planning for Carillo to start his season at the "Philadelphia Summer International in July" (they've competed there before), but since Philly will not be an international this year, perhaps they will consider attending the new Cranberry Cup senior international (August 12-15) near Boston instead?
 

Sylvia

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Re-posting @BittyBug's link here from the 4CC entries thread (Donovan is no longer listed for the comp.):
... here’s an LA Times article on Carrillo. I had no idea he trained under such challenging conditions.
Defying the odds, a Mexican figure skater will compete in Olympics by BY KEVIN BAXTER (JAN. 11, 2022):
Excerpts:
All that could change next month in Beijing, where the 22-year-old Carrillo will become just the fourth Mexican figure skater — and first since 1992 — to compete in the Winter Games, the latest twist in a complicated, quixotic journey that began with an ice-fated, grade-school romance.
“People at the beginning were laughing at me,” he said. “But I’ve accomplished multiple things for me and for my sport and for my country. At some point, people are going to see that they were wrong.”
The Ice Sport Center, hidden in a corner of the Plaza Mayor mall, is as dark and dank as a coal mine, with a rink less than two-thirds the size of an Olympic-sized surface. Yet twice a day, Carrillo makes the 15-minute drive there from the house he shares in León with Gregorio Núñez, the only coach he has ever known, hooks a breadbox-sized speaker to his cellphone and skates to Santana’s “Black Magic Woman” and “Shake It,” the songs he will use in his 2-minute 40-second short program in Beijing.
Skating, it turned out, was a perfect fit. With its jumps and turns, the sport matched his personality and his lithe, graceful 5-foot-6 build. The body control and strength he developed through diving and gymnastics gave him a solid foundation for skating, while the musical interpretation provided something the other sports lacked.
As a child, he had natural rhythm and could dance to anything, from the romantic boleros of Luis Miguel to the bland pop-rock of boy bands such as the Backstreet Boys. Skating added that final element.
“I was missing the passion, the artistry,” he said. “With skating, I could use my whole package: my strength, my flexibility, my mind, my emotions.”
Núñez had long mentored his prize pupil for free, but as Carrillo progressed, expenses spiraled, threatening to end Carrillo’s career before it had really gotten started.
So three years ago, Carrillo launched an online crowd-funding campaign. Only then did the Mexican government step up with CONADE, the cabinet-level ministry responsible for promoting physical education and sport, making Carrillo the first winter sports athlete to receive its support for training.
But other than an equipment deal with Italian skate-maker Edea, Carrillo still has no major corporate sponsors, and the money he receives from the government is pocket change compared with what other athletes in more established sports receive. That’s forced him to get creative, as he did for the Mexican national championships in November, in which he wore a costume made by a group of mothers whose children take skating lessons from Núñez.
The country’s figure skaters have fared little better: the most successful of the three Olympians was Ricardo Olavarrieta, who in 1988 finished 27th in a 28-man field.
Even so, just qualifying for the Games places Carrillo among the standouts in the sport.
“Donovan has shown that despite how complicated it is, it is not impossible,” Núñez said. “When you dream something and fight for that something, and you believe in it, sooner or later life adjusts and you get that prize.”
 
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Sylvia

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zebraswan

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Whatever happens in the free skate, he's already accomplished so much just by qualifying. Unlike a lot of small country skaters, he's done all this with his original coach and hardly any training abroad apart from the occasional summer camp. It is a real testament to how motivated he is and how incredibly dedicated his coach is. I hope FS in Mexico becomes much more popular after this. There are more rinks in the country than you might think, but mostly in shopping malls and not the standard size.
 

Seerek

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Unlike a lot of small country skaters, he's done all this with his original coach and hardly any training abroad apart from the occasional summer camp.

My hope was once he moved up to senior was that somehow, he would have been able to secure more training time in Florida (or Texas).

It's unfortunate CONADE (the national sports body) hasn't been able to help more.

ETA having the ISU Junior Grand Prix in Mexico back in the early 2010s proved to be a fantastic idea.

 

CaliSteve

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My hope was once he moved up to senior was that somehow, he would have been able to secure more training time in Florida (or Texas).

It's unfortunate CONADE (the national sports body) hasn't been able to help more.

ETA having the ISU Junior Grand Prix in Mexico back in the early 2010s proved to be a fantastic idea.


I hope he doesnt go to Eteri.
 

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