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30 biggest stories in skating of the icenetwork era:
http://web.icenetwork.com/news/2018/06/01/277963560
During the month of June, we will count down the 30 biggest stories in figure skating since the launch of icenetwork 11 years ago, as determined by our editorial staff.
30. Chan's coaching carousel
29. ISU allows lyrics in figure skating programs
28. Montreal's Gadbois Centre becomes ice dance capital of the world
27. 2015 Trophée Eric Bompard cancelled after Paris terror attacks
26. Evan Lysacek wins 2008 U.S. title in tiebreaker over Johnny Weir
25. Igor Shpilband and Marina Zoueva end professional relationship
24. A Spaniard becomes one of the defining skaters of his generation
23. 2011 World Championships postponed, moved after tsunami hits Japan
22. Ashley Wagner breaks United States' ladies medal drought at worlds
21. Arutunian becomes leading singles coach in U.S.
20. Kostner's late-career renaissance
19. Tara and Johnny become pop culture icons
18. Jason Brown's
Riverdance free skate becomes an internet sensation
17. Rochette wins Olympic bronze following the death of her mother
16. Kim ends professional relationship with Orser
15. Nathan Chen goes where no man has gone before
14. The redemption of Mirai Nagasu
13. Quad-less Lysacek defeats Plushenko to win Olympic gold
12. Savchenko wins Olympic gold on fifth try
11. Rippon becomes media darling, champion for LGBT rights
10. Wagner makes 2014 Olympic team over Nagasu
9. The rise and fall of Gracie Gold
8. Medvedeva leaves Tutberidze for Orser
7. Orser builds most successful skating program in the world at Toronto Cricket, Skating and Curling Club
6. Balance of power in world ice dance shifts from Europe to North America
5. Sotnikova upsets Kim to win Olympic gold
4. The reign of Queen Yuna
3. Yuzuru Hanyu wins back-to-back Olympics, achieves rock star status
2. The sustained dominance of the Russian women
1. The quad revolution transforms men's skating
Writers look back on favorite icenetwork articles:
http://web.icenetwork.com/news/2018/06/19/275961182
We asked icenetwork reporters past and present to pick out their favorite article they've written for this us and explain why it was so special to them.
Writer: Jean-Christophe Berlot
Headline: Rippon skates, choreographs with deep love of craft
Date: Nov. 22, 2014
Writer's words: I was standing at the exit of the Mériadeck rink in Bordeaux, where Trophée Eric Bompard, the French leg of the Grand Prix, was being held. It was about 11 a.m. on Nov. 23, 2014, and Adam Rippon was leaving the ice after a morning practice session.
I will probably never know how Adam made it through that interview, but afterward he hugged me very dearly (a move we, the French, are by no means used to). It took place at a turning point in his career: He had hit bottom a few months before, missing out on qualifying for the Sochi Olympics. There he was, starting all over again, not even knowing how long he would keep going.
During the interview, he said, "Being in the spotlight one day and nowhere the next is kind of a difficult pill to swallow, for sure. You feel that you are still going at the same pace, but at the same time…where are you going? You feel like…lost, in the middle of nowhere. For a while, I was the best next thing. I was a junior world champion twice. Then I grew up. Skating was changing tremendously at the same time; there was lots of pressure, I moved back from Canada to the U.S. When I look back at that time, I see that you do not know how to deal with such pressure when you are 20 years old."
From that point on, Adam's career took off. Figure skating is harsh in forgiving: Going upward is certainly much easier the first time than the second. Once you've fallen, it takes loads of effort to come back again. Adam did that, and in the most beautiful way possible. I wish during that meeting I could have opened a window into the future so he could see what a huge success he would become, particularly in these last few months.
Adam Rippon is a role model for anyone who feels like his or her career is going nowhere. Keep loving, he taught us all, and maybe -- maybe -- it will happen.
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Writer: Sarah S. Brannen
Headline: What's next? Skaters detail coping with retirement
Date: July 16, 2016
Writer's words: I started writing for icenetwork with Drew Meekins in 2008, as more or less a gossip columnist. The majority of our pieces were posted under the heading "The Inside Edge," and they focused on funny, weird or interesting stories, with a few celebrities sprinkled in and frequent references to fashion. With Drew, and eventually on my own, I reported on engagements, weddings and babies. I always enjoyed having relaxed, casual conversations with skaters about things that had nothing much to do with skating.
Sometimes, though, I had very serious conversations with skaters. They told me about the frustrations and pain of injuries, the heartbreak of failure, the sadness of breaking up with a partner. In 2016, I found myself wondering what it's like for successful skaters after they retire from competition and leave skating behind. I suspected that it might be quite difficult to navigate the years following retirement without the one thing that had played such an important role in these peoples' lives. The stories I heard were personal and moving, and I did my best to convey what it's like for someone to embark into the great unknown.
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Writer: Lois Elfman
Headline: Duhamel and Radford tops among Canadian pairs
Date: Jan. 22, 2012
Writer's words: While I've written mainly features for icenetwork, it is a competition story that stands out for me: My article on Meagan Duhamel and Eric Radford winning their first Canadian title in 2012. Nothing can rival the sheer joy and pride they felt in finally achieving a lifelong goal that both had thought they'd probably never reach. After they skated their final competitive performances at this year's Olympic Winter Games, I thanked them for letting me come along for the ride these last six years. While I felt very emotional seeing photos of them receiving their gold and bronze medals in PyeongChang, nothing rivals that January night six years ago when both were so raw and open with me. One of the best skating stories I've ever told in a long career of covering this sport.
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Writer: Philip Hersh
Headline: Dance background helps to enhance Chen's skating
Date: March 24, 2017
Writer's words: For years, I had listened to skaters talk about their having received ballet instruction, only to find out after further inquiry that for most of them that meant taking the occasional class. So I filed a mental note when Nathan Chen mentioned to me in 2016 that he had taken ballet lessons regularly for a number of years.
Hoping to find a fresh angle for a story about the sport's new sensation, I decided to look into Chen's ballet background. A Google search turned up newspaper stories about his having actually danced in productions as a boy. That was enough of a lead to follow, so I called several people who taught him (and danced with him) at Ballet West Academy in Salt Lake City.
One after another, the people to whom I spoke raved about Nathan's innate ability as a dancer and explained his particular physical and intellectual gifts for the discipline. All agreed that, if his emphasis were reversed, he had a chance to be as good a dancer as he was a skater.
The most illuminating piece of my research came from looking at old photographs of Rudolf Nureyev dancing
Le Corsaire, the basis of Chen's 2016-17 short program. Chen told me he and choreographer Marina Zoueva had closely studied the Nureyev interpretation, and you could clearly see parallels between the skater's leg and arm positions and those of the legendary dancer, who also had been a groundbreaker in his discipline.
Never did the story suggest Chen would have been a Nureyev had he chosen dance over skating. My goal simply was to write in more depth about a facet of Chen's background that previously had been given only cursory mention. If the piece (accompanied by
video of the 12-year-old Chen in
The Nutcracker) challenged some of the closed-minded shibboleths about Chen and/or encouraged people to learn more about Nureyev, so much the better.
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Writer: Klaus-Reinhold Kany
Headline: Secret's out: Virtue, Moir disclose program music
Date: Aug. 5, 2013
Writer's words: During my annual trek through North American training centers, I met with Tessa and Scott in Canton, Michigan, in July 2013. While at practice, I heard and recognized the pieces they were skating to, and asked them if I could file a report about it. They told me they were not ready to reveal their program music yet, and asked me to keep it a secret until two or three days before their first public performance, which was to be at the Quebec Summer Championships. I convinced them it was in their best interest to let icenetwork publish the music as early as possible to ensure nobody else used it -- and they agreed.
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Writer: Vladislav Luchianov
Headline: Czisny pursues skating, only in different direction
Date: June 19, 2014
Writer's words: In this interview with Alissa Czisny, the former two-time U.S. champion came off as more sincere, more open-minded, more thoughtful and, let's say, freer than any other athlete I've ever talked to.
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Writer: Nick McCarvel
Headlines: Courage personified: Radford stands above the rest;
Rippon on coming out: 'I wanted to share my story'
Dates: May 13, 2015; Oct. 27, 2015
Writer's words: I'm choosing two because they're close to my heart: Eric Radford and Adam Rippon's coming out stories in 2015. They had come out separately and prior to my writing these respective articles, but I loved getting the chance to share their stories and hear how they arrived at their brave conclusions. It was such an honor to get to write about Eric as the "Person of the Year" in 2015. After the story about Adam, I remember thinking to myself how proud I was of these fellow queer men not shying away from being themselves in the public eye. That's what real champions do -- always stay true to themselves.
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Writer: Amy Rosewater
Headline: Years later, Lavenstein still affected by concussion
Date: Feb. 8, 2016
Writer's words: I have been fortunate enough over the years to interview many of the top skaters in the world, but one of the most memorable interviews, for me, came from a woman named Savannah Lavenstein. A longtime competitive skater, Savannah bravely opened up to me about her battles with concussions for a piece I wrote in Fabruary 2016. At the time, concussions in skating was a topic that wasn't talked about very much, but with her willingness to share her story in such a frank and honest way, Savannah allowed readers to put a face and a name to this very important issue. I'd like to think this piece made skaters, parents and coaches more aware of the perils of concussions in a sport in which the inherent physical dangers aren't widely reported.
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Writer: Lynn Rutherford
Headline: Sun never sets on Japanese figure skating fans
Date: May 10, 2017
Writer's words: I knew figure skating was hugely popular in Japan, but until I reached out to dozens of Japanese fans, I didn't realize how much it truly meant to many of them. Two-time Olympic champion Yuzuru Hanyu, in particular, goes far beyond matinee idol status; to a sizable number of supporters, he touches all kinds of inspirational chords. Not to be overlooked is the monetary benefit of the Japanese fans' unflagging devotion to the sport, which translates to a healthy amount of much-needed revenue.
Writers select favorite programs of icenetwork era:
http://web.icenetwork.com/news/2018/06/25/276107538
We've seen some incredible skating over the last 11 years. We asked our writers tell us what their favorite performances were since the launch of icenetwork in 2007.
Writer: Jean-Christophe Berlot
Performance: Patrick Chan's The Four Seasons/Concerto Grasso free skate at 2013 Trophée Éric Bompard
At the 2013 Trophée Éric Bompard, Patrick Chan skated a beautiful short program to take a three-point lead over Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu. The true challenge for the brilliant Canadian, however, would be the free skate, which that season was the program that gave him the most problems. No matter: Chan rose to the occasion with what may have been the best skate of his career. Watching it now, that performance showed Chan at the peak of his powers; his score of 196.75 was, at the time, the highest ever recorded for a men's free skate. That day, Chan touched perfection -- and put his audience in a state of grace.
***
Writer: Sarah S. Brannen
Performance: Jason Brown's Riverdance free skate at the 2014 U.S. Figure Skating Championships
The first time I saw Jason Brown's Riverdance program, in the summer of 2013, I told him I thought it was going to be a classic. I love traditional Celtic music, and although the Riverdance music may be a tad overproduced, I'm a sucker for it anyway. Brown's program, choreographed by Rohene Ward, combined elements of Celtic step dancing with Brown's signature flexibility and joie de vivre.
His free skate at the U.S. championships in Boston in January 2014 encapsulated what I love about skating. An underdog has the performance of his life, hitting every element perfectly. The crowd rises to its feet, roaring with joy, before the program ends. The skater is rewarded with stellar marks. Goosebumps.
***
Writer: Lois Elfman
Performance: Meryl Davis and Charlie White's Scheherazade free dance at the 2014 Olympic Winter Games
In the years I've spent covering figure skating, I've seen so many talented U.S. ice dance teams not get their due. Then came Meryl Davis and Charlie White. I remember waking up early the morning of the free dance of the 2011 World Championships and watching it live on icenetwork. Seeing Davis and White win the gold that year in Moscow and fulfill the dreams of generations of American ice dancers was deeply poignant. It was almost like disbelief: The moment for U.S. ice dance had finally arrived. Three years later, they made another, even greater moment. Watching their free dance performance at the 2014 Olympics, I was brought to tears. When I named them my icenetwork People of the Year for 2014, fellow U.S. ice dancer Kim Navarro said Davis and White had crossed the finish line for all the teams that went before them. I will always remember that magical day in February 2014 when those two kids from Michigan made history.
***
Writer: Philip Hersh
Performance: Yuna Kim's "Concerto in F" free skate at the 2010 Olympic Winter Games
The greatest performance I have seen in the icenetwork era also is by far the greatest performance I have seen by a female singles skater in the 11 Winter Olympics I have covered, beginning in 1980.
What made it special? Doing it on the sport's biggest stage, of course, as well as the extraordinary national pressure on the athlete who did it.
But the best way for me to explain why Yuna Kim's free skate at the 2010 Olympics is my ne plus ultra is the way I described it in the Chicago Tribune on Feb. 26, 2010:
VANCOUVER - They already called her "Queen Yuna" in South Korea.
And Yuna Kim spread her dominion to an absolute reign over the women's figure skating world after the Olympic women's figure skating final Thursday night.
Skating a stunningly difficult program without an error, floating like a feather in the wind to the airy, jazzy rhythms of Gershwin's Concerto in F, unflinchingly bearing the weight of her country's hopes, Kim crushed her rivals with a performance for the ages...
...The South Korean national hero may have been a little tight on some of her early jumps, but she nailed them all: triple lutz-triple toe loop combination, four other triple jumps, all with highly positive grades of execution.
"If this was track and field, we just watched an 8-second 100 meters," said Jamie McGrigor, a skating analyst doing in-house radio commentary.
***
Writer: Klaus-Reinhold Kany
Performance: Gabriella Papadakis and Guillaume Cizeron's "Piano Concerto No. 23" free dance at the 2015 World Championships
I saw parts of this program for the first time during my summer visit to Montreal in August 2014. The program was not ready yet, and Gabriella and Guillaume and their coaches let me watch practice only if I promised to keep the music a secret until their first competition. I thought it would be a fantastic program, once it was ready. It was different from other teams' programs: Despite being set to a conservative Mozart piece ("Piano Concerto No. 23"), it showcased a very modern style. The team's big breakthrough came at their first Grand Prix, Cup of China, where they beat the reigning world champions, Anna Cappellini and Luca Lanotte, but it wasn't until their second Grand Prix, in Paris, that I was convinced they had something special. They continued to wow audiences with their astounding free dance during the rest of the season, which included their first career titles at the European and world championships.
***
Writer: Vladislav Luchianov
Performance: Julia Lipnitskaia's team event free skate (to Schindler's List) at the 2014 Olympic Winter Games
To me, Julia Lipnitskaia's free skate in the team event at the 2014 Olympic Winter Games went beyond perfection. It was so deeply emotional, so moving -- the kind of performance that opens up your mind to the possibilites that exist within the pre-established boundaries of a sport. It was, to put it simply, a work of art.
***
Writer: Nick McCarvel
Performance: Jason Brown's Riverdance free skate at the 2014 U.S. Figure Skating Championships
2014 was actually the first U.S. Figure Skating Championships I covered in person as a journalist, and I was rinkside for Jason's free skate. You could feel the momentum building with Jason that weekend, and it all culminated in this performance. As the program went on, TD Garden roared to life, and a full 10 seconds before he was done, the entire arena was on its feet. It wasn't the perfect skate, but in an Olympic year, with all of that pressure, it was as close to perfect as a skater can ask for. It was spine-tingling. It still is.
***
Writer: Amy Rosewater
Performance: Patrick Chan's "Élégie in E flat minor" short program at the 2013 World Championships
Patrick Chan, to me, is the quintessential skater, the one who can blend quality edges and artistry with magnificent jumping ability better than anyone. When he is on his game, he's the best. Make no mistake, there was "Chan-flation" over the years, but he was quite truly masterful at many points in his career.
At the 2013 World Championships in London, Ontario, Chan had the pressure of not only defending his world titles from the previous two seasons but skating in his home country of Canada. He came out in the short and was absolutely brilliant, performing a perfect program on his way to earning a score of 98.37 -- three points better than the previous record, set earlier that season by Japan's Yuzuru Hanyu at the NHK Trophy.
"Going into my last spin, I just felt this surge from the ice going through my boot and through my body," he told reporters afterward. "I was so excited because I finally did it on the day that counts in front of my home crowd. The world championships will never be this amazing during the rest of my career."
***
Writer: Lynn Rutherford
Performance: Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani's "Fix You" free dance at the 2016 U.S. Figure Skating Championships
Maia Shibutani and Alex Shibutani always had beautifully crafted, demanding programs, but after the siblings won a third U.S. silver medal in 2015, they knew they needed a change. That off-season, they took creative control of their material, threw caution to the wind and dug deep within themselves to produce the cathartic "Fix You," a technical and emotional tour de force that propelled them to their first U.S. crown and set them on a course to the Olympic podium two years later.