Yazmeen
All we are saying, is give peace a chance
- Messages
- 5,845
IIRC, Debi was asked prior to the games about the difference between her Carmen and Kat's, and she answered, "Mine doesn't die..."
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Was dumb luck though? Witt was a ballsy competitor. She used to come out and watch the other ladies programs. I wouldn't put it past her to hear that Debi picked Carmen and then Kat picked it too, to unnerve Debi.I read somewhere that Debi wanted to skate to Carmen, because one of her skating idols was Linda Fratianne. Fratianne had skated to Bizet's opera in 1980, and Debi wanted to use the music too in the Olympic year.
That her biggest rival chose the music too, was blind dumb luck. But it made great media reportage.
Was dumb luck though? Witt was a ballsy competitor. She used to come out and watch the other ladies programs. I wouldn't put it past her to hear that Debi picked Carmen and then Kat picked it too, to unnerve Debi.
I remember..IIRC, Debi was asked prior to the games about the difference between her Carmen and Kat's, and she answered, "Mine doesn't die..."
I remember..and thought to myself "yeah.. the Disney Carmen, like the Little Mermaid who marries the Prince, when in the real story she dies". Well the real Carmen won..
![]()
Was dumb luck though? Witt was a ballsy competitor. She used to come out and watch the other ladies programs. I wouldn't put it past her to hear that Debi picked Carmen and then Kat picked it too, to unnerve Debi.
The “real” Carmen was an exercise in too much makeup and ridiculous dramatics in lieu of skating. She was damned lucky Debi went headcase that night. The only performances that exceeded Katarina’s “death scene” were the plethora of tiresome stomach-clutching endings that defined Oksana Baiul’s pro career. Katarina was an excellent skater but she too often relied on her sex appeal instead of technique. Greatest skater even at the time? No. But greatest competitor? Hell, yes, knowing how to psyche out her opponents and only do exactly what she needed to do to win, especially if she skated after them.
Whatever it was, our East Block beat and is beating your West Block...They both struck me as pretty headstrong, but when it was skated clean, I preferred Thomas' Carmen over Witt's. Oh well.
delete
Forgive my typos and reposts. ANL has big fingers and isn't used to using iPad. Lol
We had such a wealth of ladies skaters at the time - Kwan, Cohen, Nikodinov - that Hughes definitely got overlooked a little. She did medal in almost everything, with one SA 4th and a few Worlds appearances without hardware. The underscoring was probably for the UR.The Sarah comparison. Is interesting. I think Sarah medlalled in everyhting she did. Or that's al least how I think of her... I also she think Sarah at times was underscored... her elements were amazeballs. Her layback was to die for. Y'all know ANL LOVES his layback. She only had that bent knee in her spiral... which I think was just her natural body line.
No, I didn't meant Carmen as a choice per se. I mean since Katarina had made the same choice as well. The comparison between skaters is made in the competition per se. So, why add more into it by comparing the same program. I know, it's not the same choreo, but you get my point.
Although, I don't remember how it worked back then. If skaters new beforehand about the choices of other skaters. And if there was enough time to change the programs, even if they wanted to.
I don't remember in early 90s at least, that changing programs was often practiced.
I remember..and thought to myself "yeah.. the Disney Carmen, like the Little Mermaid who marries the Prince, when in the real story she dies". Well the real Carmen won..
![]()
I think it's pretty exciting that the US Ladies field is wide open heading into nationals. I think there's an extreme likelihood of surprises and upsets. The results have been a bit disappointing, score-wise, so far. So there's really a chance for someone very young and/or unexpected to medal.
Top 10 ISU scores for US senior ladies so far this season:
Tennell (206.41 Autumn Classic)
Bell (188.97 Nebelhorn)
Lin (181.21 Nebelhorn)
Cui (172.74 JPG Czech Skate)
Wessenberg (170.33 Skate America)
Glenn (166.25 Lombardia)
Hicks (164.58 USIC)
Wang (160.99 Finlandia)
Kalyan (160.60 JPG Bratislava)
<Izzo (159.86 JPG Canada) staying junior>
Andrews (159.76 Asian Open)
Tennell, Bell, Hicks, Wang, Andrews will be seen again on the GP, and Lin has a Challenger assignment in November.
Still to skate before nationals: Chen (will she skate at RC?), Gold (is she ready?) and anyone who is assigned in December to Tallinn Trophy or Golden Spin.
Also, there are a couple of scores worth mentioning from Regionals:
Alysa Liu (186.08 CP1)
Elizaveta Kulik (164.04 SWP1)
Alysa Liu experimented with her quad lutz at regionals; hence her relatively low score. Her season high is 198. I expect her to be the favorite for silver at Nationals.
Depends on whether the caller is as strict as the ones at Skate America.
I agree that they won't push Liu this year, since she is not even eligible for Junior Worlds. As such, she will need to overcome about an 18-20 point combined PCS deficit to beat Bradie (34 vs 28 SP and 71 vs 58 LP). However, if Liu lands and rotates her 3A's and 4Lz and/or Bradie falters, all bets are off.Maybe USFS set up a JGP in Lake Placid on behalf of ALL of team USA, which is likely to include JGP medalists like Nguyen & Kolesnik, the Greens, Gropman & Somerville, and Andrew Torgashev?
I don't think they'll push her at Nationals as she's not old enough to compete elsewhere. Plus, it's a whole different level of competition. It's not like USFS pushed Nathan right up to the top, now is it? And most of the time athletes need the experience before they do their best at senior nationals.
But she could rotate her jumps. She earned credit for a clean 3A2T at the Asian Open this summer.