I came up with a half dozen of the happenings at this year’s
Skate America that I found the most noteworthy. (Actually I came up with a
longer list, but whittled it down for your sake and mine! Here’s what I’ve got,
in no particular order:
+ East Coast Chen. There was
plenty of noise made (at least on Twitter) about Nathan Chen’s mighty
head of hair, but it’s just as well that Kevin Reynolds proved once
again he forever wins that contest. For of course it was Chen’s jumping prowess
and marvelously constructed/executed programs that deserved the most attention.
His efforts at SkAM were about what I’d have counted on IF he was still
training on the west coast, and IF he hadn’t fared poorly at Japan Open a few
weeks ahead of SKam. But he’s Nathan, so I’m learning to expect the unexpected.
+ Fifth Place ??
I’d picked Vincent Zhou to win bronze at SkAM, and IMHO he did at least
that well. But as anyone knows that was watching, the newly-turned 18 year old
got dinged HARD for jumps that were deemed underrated as per new standards laid
down by the ISU. Despite landings that commentators and spectators alike insisted to be “clean”, Zhou got UR
calls on SIX different jumping passes total (2 in the SP; 4 in the FS) and most
calls came on his biggest point-getters. The result was a finish that was .06
away from 4th, and .69 away from 3rd. Yes, it’s only SkAM
and not Nationals or Worlds, but in terms of racking up points in hopes of
making the GP Final? He probably can’t now. No matter how well he might do at his
next event (NHK), the likelihood of making the Final with a 5th—worth
only 7 points compared to 11 for a 3rd and 13 for a 2nd—is
pretty low.
+ Now Hiring: One pairs coach. As
SkAM unfolded we learned that current U.S.
champs Scimeca-Knierim/Knierim had parted ways with Aljona Savchenko,
who’d begun coaching them over the summer. How much that affected their overall
performance is a matter of opinion I suppose; on the other hand, it’s a matter
of fact that Cain/LeDuc were the U.S.
team on the podium this time.
+ Podium so close… Senior GP
rookie dance team McNamara/Carpenter finished only .05 (!!!) behind SkAM
Bronze Medalists Zahorski/Guerreiro.
+ And podium so close… until it
wasn’t. While it’s a shame that Julian Yee had a classic case of Coming
Undone After Doing So Well—3rd in the SP, but 9th in the
FS and 7th overall—it’s exciting to know so early in the season what
he’s capable of. He’ll get another chance to represent Malaysia
to new figure skating heights at Rostelecom Cup in a few weeks.
+ Last but not least, some Notes
of a Musical Nature…
-- The Good: Kaori Sakamoto’s SP, which is titled “From My First
Moment” but is actually Eric Satie’s Gymnopedie #1 with lyrics and
vocals (the latter courtesy of Charlotte Church). Can you name a U.S.
champion figure skater that utilized Satie’s instrumental during her
competitive career? (If so, leave a comment)
-- The Bad: Alexei Bychenko’s “Requiem for a Dream” FS. Because
honestly, I could have gone the rest of my life without hearing that in
competition again.
-- The HUH?: Michal Brezina,
with a free skate that started with Spencer Davis Group’s “I’m a Man” but
jumped all too soon into ACDC’s “Thunderstruck”… definitely an oil/water
combination to me, even though he came away with his first GP medal in four
years.
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