bardtoob
Well-Known Member
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I was wondering how long it would be before the media picked up on Andrews' first name as a title grabber, in the same, cloying way they have with Gracie Gold.
At least the skaters have "it". I literally have only seen Starr's skating from practice clips from this week at Nationals, and her jumps are huge and she can do the second jump of 3-3 with hands a loft a la Rippon, Ito, and Manley and she has great speed and power as she moves across the ice. I think she is going to be the first American to challenge the Russian ladies for 1st place at international competition after the Olympics. She'll be able to construct her program like them, backloaded with every feature of a +3 jump and whatever else is a benefit under the IJS.
Eteri has said that when she has come to the US, the skaters she worked with worked harder than her own skaters. Furthermore, it seems to me that if this was a cultural problem, the US would struggle to have successful skaters in any discipline, which is not the case . . . I personally was extremely impressed with the crop of younger ladies I've been seeing at juniors and lower. Obviously there's no telling how they'll develop, but there's a lot of talent there.
The young skaters are IJS Native. Right now the top American ladies are doing programs that would do well under both the 6.0 system and IJS, as opposed to only meeting the expectations of the IJS native. The top America's are too ingrained with a "skating ethic" that says constructing backloaded programs is points grubbing and that rocking onto the outside edge while entering a 3Lz instead of from a long glide, step, or turn is wrong, etc.
They might as well put her in flannel and have her skate to "Orange Blossom Special" by Johnny Cash. At least the lumberjack skating would make sense in context.
I don't agree . . .


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