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It seems like in even the bigger feds like USFS almost everyone is a volunteer or retired, and they actively expect everyone else to be that way. Even if you are an expert you have no voice if you're not willing or able to make time. One of the biggest things I've found with USFS is the shock and confusion at them not finding volunteers or judges - meanwhile they make it impossible for anyone with a job to be a judge, and very difficult for anyone with a job to volunteer for stuff like competition organization. And if you don't hold one of those positions you have no power.I would also add that it's an uphill battle for volunteers with full time day jobs to push against the forces of inertia and resistance to change, even where they want to apply the same due diligence as they do in their full time professions.
I think the cultural aspects around Katya are:Training your whole youth in a community that gives you no job prospects seems very normal in Russia, and that's why its skaters succeed. A lot of US and Japanese/Korean skaters do the same, but many have things outside of skating or plans for what to do after. It seems like Katya was uniquely isolated even compared to other skaters: thousands of miles from home and the few family she had left, in a country whose language she didn't speak well and whose culture she wasn't familiar with, with little training or prospects outside of skating... I always wondered about that, but now I wonder more how right it was, especially given that more and more Russian skaters are leaving their country in hopes of a success story.
Yagudin and Urmanov came from families with struggling single moms. Plushenko's family wasn't well off at all. Zagitova's family was so poor she had trouble getting to the rink because they couldn't afford bus fare. Evgenia Tarasova moved to Moscow by herself at 14 to learn to skate pairs. Berezhnaya left her family (single mom raising 2 sons and 2 orphaned nephews & a niece) to train in Moscow at age ten because her hometown rink shut down. She was alone in a dormitory with other athletes from all sports and age ranges. And when she moved to St. Petersburg to start pairs, we all know how that next chapter goes... These are all situations that are much more rare in the West. Skating is just so freaking expensive! And it's not really a cultural norm to ship off your kids either.Actually, I wonder how many Russian skaters are under stress like Katya's in a need to succeed sense?
We know none come from poverty per se, but we also know that a fair amount of them come from means well below that of many North American, Japanese, Korean, and Western European skaters.
Hektor seems to be pretty sensible and a nice person. I have communicated with him on his Insta related to ISA stuff.I just hope Golubeva and Harley's new partner are being taken care of better. I don't know anything about them, and I know Katya had a lot of personal tragedy even before going to Australia, but Golubeva and Chernyshova are in their mid-teens too.
I seem to recall that he also speaks some Russian? If that's correct, it will be a big help for them both.Hektor seems to be pretty sensible and a nice person. I have communicated with him on his Insta related to ISA stuff.
I'm not sure it's that different. But I hope the ending will be, and there's at least a small chance the documentary will help remind people of recent history and not let it repeat.I am guessing that the story behind finding, bringing and training the Russian-born, current Australian JGP Pairs champion, Moscow-born 16-yr-old Anastasia Golubeva, is very different.
Yeah, that is my hope. Smile on the face of Golubeva…on ice, the Kiss&Cry, etc.I'm not sure it's that different. But I hope the ending will be, and there's at least a small chance the documentary will help remind people of recent history and not let it repeat.
ETA what @peibeck & @manhn wrote in a thread in OTBT:The Australian documentary about Harley and Katya is now on Netflix: https://www.netflix.com/au/title/81716867?s=i&trkid=260108134&vlang=en&clip=81718166
Not a series, but the documentary "Harley and Katya" about the Australian pair skating team is on Netflix. Definitely not upbeat: a reminder of how brutal this sport we love can really be, beneath the rhinestones and snarky commentary.
I just watched it too. I knew nothing about them. I was even at that Skate America in Vegas and I don’t remember that free program whatsoever. So sad.
Yeah same here kinda. Not the skaters fault or anything. I had a really tough time watching what happened in the women’s final but I’ve never spoken about itJust finished this, complete gut punch. I find myself less interested in the sport since the 2022 Olympics and this is just another thing.
that was rough and nearly killed my love for the sport.Yeah same here kinda. Not the skaters fault or anything. I had a really tough time watching what happened in the women’s final but I’ve never spoken about it.
Unfortunately in some countries sport is the only way out. There are not many opportunities especially for young adults who gave their all life to sport and have not achieved top top results. That all they can do usually.What Nina Moser said is just disgusting. I mean, for good results, athletes have to come from a family with problems. Katya, who was already traumatized by the death of her father, was told that sport was the only way out for her in life. What was she supposed to think about when things didn't work out? And when she was told that she would no longer be able to skate?
Yes, sport is a social lift for many. But this is not the only way in life. Children's and junior sports should not be focused on quads, but on a healthy attitude towards sports.
And it disgusts me to read many comments about the Grand Prix final in pairs. Especially in juniors. How can you call them mediocre losers and belittle their talents simply because someone does not like the level of their skating. Are all the achievements at the cost of injuries really worth it? Even when it's kids?
Athletes are people, not machines that can be thrown away when they break.
Yeah it was heartbreaking and horrifying at the same time. The Russian girls being used like that.that was rough and nearly killed my love for the sport.
But since the Russians are not competing anymore, the competition is so much more joyful and wholesome. Give it a try again. I found my love for skating again now that the Russian girls are gone!
It seemed to me that Windsor’s attitude was not particularly helpful either. The things he was saying in the documentary, that completely put me off him. For example, he said “I think the language barrier helped us a little, especially in the first year. When we get too angry at each other, it stopped us from being too verbal.” So he has a 15 or 16 year old girl, completely isolated, her only means of communicating with her surroundings are through Russian coaches who can speak both Russian and English, and he doesn’t see that as a problem, he sees it as a positive because at least they can’t argue? WTF! He also couldn’t really understand why it would be a problem for Katya to live with her coaches who spend every training screaming at them. Him telling his sister that Katya is constantly angry…who wouldn’t be? Windsor came across as a selfish, self centred, arrogant prick.To me it seemed as if everyone was passing the buck - saying that someone else was responsible for katya’s challenges and eventual death. And that’s a sorry comment on both our society and our sport
He was pretty young when he said those things though. And his parents did set him straight. (I liked his parents a lot from this.)It seemed to me that Windsor’s attitude was not particularly helpful either. The things he was saying in the documentary, that completely put me off him. For example, he said “I think the language barrier helped us a little, especially in the first year. When we get too angry at each other, it stopped us from being too verbal.” So he has a 15 or 16 year old girl, completely isolated, her only means of communicating with her surroundings are through Russian coaches who can speak both Russian and English, and he doesn’t see that as a problem, he sees it as a positive because at least they can’t argue? WTF! He also couldn’t really understand why it would be a problem for Katya to live with her coaches who spend every training screaming at them. Him telling his sister that Katya is constantly angry…who wouldn’t be? Windsor came across as a selfish, self centred, arrogant prick.
He was four years older than her, so when she was 15-16, he was 19-20. He was legally an adult but he behaved like a selfish prick. And she died in 2020, so the documentary was done when he was at least 24. How can he say something so ridiculous (that it was a good thing that they couldn’t understand each other because at least they couldn’t argue) at the age of 24? Surely by then, considering that when it was filmed he already knew the outcome, he couldn’t be seriously thinking that it was a good thing?He was pretty young when he said those things though. And his parents did set him straight. (I liked his parents a lot from this.)
I have other issues with him but not that. Today's Harley seemed to understand more. He talked about how the coach couldn't be a coach and a parent, for example.