Since we’re sort of on the topic, I always thought your dominant hand determined what direction you spin, jump, skate, but Maia Shibutani said she’s right-handed but naturally spins clockwise. I wonder what is the dominant factor that determines it. Is it one of those things that is unknown but tends to go hand-in-hand with which hand you dominantly use?
My understanding is that rotational preference is primarily about eye dominance . . . which usually matches handedness but not always.
I have no links to support this, however.
Well then again, we get back to violin players. Cello players. Speed skaters. Should they be allowed doing things to their natural direction? No? Why not?
Doing things in groups (orchestras, races or practices with more than one skater on the ice at a time), it does make a difference.
For solo performances it shouldn't bother anyone else to be bowing with the opposite hand. But it would mean learning different fingering and bowing techniques right from the start.
This reminds me of 6th grade orchestra class when the kids thought it was funny to swap instruments when we had a substitute teacher. The first one to get caught was a drummer who was left handed and was quickly smoked out of the violin section when he was holding the instrument and bow in the wrong hands.
It seems to me the allowing/not allowing clock wise skaters develop depends on whether they start practicing individually or in a huge group. In a huge group you can't have one kid skating in an opposite direction. If it's just you and the coach on the ice - why not?
Exactly.
I can only think of skaters from USA, Canada and Italy being clockwise. Which would make Japan a rule, rather than an exception.
I can think of some others, but none from USSR/Russia or Asia, aside from some Americans or Canadians skating for other countries.
Susanna Poykio comes to mind as another European example.
My freestyle coach is from Eastern Europe and identifies as a clockwise skater, although she says some of her jumps she did counterclockwise (probably including double lutz IIRC -- in her era only Denise Biellmann, also clockwise, had a triple lutz).
For a long time, the only clockwise triple axels I'd ever seen by a non-North American were from a couple of Slovakian guys around the turn of the century:
Robert Kazimir and Jurai Sviatko (can't find video)
I don't count David Liu because he learned to skate in the US and as far as I know only tried the 3A in competition once, not coming close.
Then this year on the JGP we got
Andrey Kokura UKR
I was going to write there is a skater who can do all the jumps up to 2A in both directions, so it must be possible. But then that skater is Lambiel.
And Rohene Ward.