Japan takes men’s and women’s titles, Canada dance and China pairs at post-Olympic worlds

By Colleen Barry, AP
Sunday, March 28, 2010

Olympic-fatigued skaters bumble through worlds

TURIN, Italy — Olympic champion Kim Yu-na couldn’t wait for it to be over.

The fatigue from the long Olympic season showed in her unusually error-ridden performances at the World Figure Skating Championships. She ceded the world title to longtime rival Mao Asada of Japan on Saturday, settling for the silver just a month after dazzling the world with what many will remember as one of the best Olympic performances of all time.

But the end of the world championships did bring Kim one thing she coveted: relief from the unending pressure.

“I have been waiting for this moment, to finish this season. I am so happy right now I just finished,” Kim said after completing the long program that she won, despite falling on a triple salchow and scratching an axel.

And she wasn’t alone.

Skater after skater coming off the ice talked about how exhausted they were after giving their all at the Olympics, the pinnacle of the sport and an event they train their entire lives for, only to turn around a month later for the world championships. The men’s and women’s competitions were particularly sloppy, with few of the top skaters coming close to their performances in Vancouver.

Which raises the question: Is another major international competition so soon after the Olympics too demanding for skaters?

“If indeed the time between the Olympics and the world championships is not enough to recover and prepare adequately for the event, it is our duty … to pay attention to this fact,” International Skating Union President Ottavio Cinquanta said Saturday.

“We have a duty to administer this sport. But the skaters have the right to be treated properly,” said Cinquanta, a former speed skater.

Cinquanta stopped short of saying the issue would be raised at the ISU Congress in Barcelona in June, but he pointedly signaled the question to ISU council members sitting in the press conference.

World championships in an Olympic year have traditionally been a letdown. Many top athletes opt out — with good reason. There’s physical and mental exhaustion. And, more materially, the post-Olympic period provides a very short window during which medal winners can cash in on their achievement, long years of training and financial investment.

One needs to go back to 1992 for the last worlds where all of the Olympic medalists attended. And that year, all added a world gold to their Olympic gold: Kristi Yamaguchi, Victor Petrenko, Natalia Mishkutienok and Artur Dmitriev in pairs and Marina Klimova and Sergei Ponomarenko in ice dance.

This year’s worlds was more typical of recent trends.

Vancouver men’s champion Evan Lysacek skipped worlds, as did silver medalist and three-time world champion Evgeni Plushenko — who won the 2006 Olympic gold medal at the very Palavela where worlds were held. Pairs gold medalists Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo and Oksana Domnina and Maxim Shabalin, bronze medalists in ice dance in Vancouver and the 2009 world champs, also took a pass. Women’s bronze medalist Joannie Rochette, whose mother died suddenly during the games, took a much needed break.

Veteran coach Frank Carroll said the back-to-back Olympics-worlds was “business as usual,” but added “maybe they should separate a little. I don’t know, it’s an ISU decision.”

He said most skaters should know they will have only four or five days of rest after the Olympics before hitting the training hard again. But Kim said she had a very hard time doing that, and told South Korean media she thought she would do well “just because of what I have.”

While most skaters should be able to rebound, the exceptions are the champions, Carroll said. Lysacek, coached by Carroll, has been living the whirlwind, mingling with Hollywood celebrities and competing on “Dancing With the Stars.” Kim’s shocking performance in the short, where she flubbed basic elements like a spin and a spiral, is an argument in favor of Lysacek’s decision, Carroll said.

“That was a disaster. But she was the Olympic champion,” Carroll said. “Evan, coming here and doing all those talk shows and ‘Dancing with the Stars,’ what would he have done? It’s — for an Olympic champion — a risk to come here.

“They’d be fools not to take advantage of it, too,” Carroll added of the spoils that come with Olympic gold. “There is only a certain time of their lives when they can enjoy this level of popularity and fame — and money.”

While many champions stay away, that is not to say the world title is not coveted. Vancouver ice dance gold medalists Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir came to Turin to click off the world title box, which they did with usual elegant, emotional and technically superior skating.

And for some, the worlds are a chance for redemption after a rough Olympics.

Daisuke Takahashi didn’t need any after winning Olympic bronze, and he delivered even bigger in Turin by winning Japan’s first men’s world title. But Patrick Chan, an Olympic medal hopeful who left Vancouver empty-handed, can be pleased with his second straight silver at worlds, and France’s Brian Joubert vanquished a disastrous Olympic performance with the bronze, his fifth world medal.

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May 25, 2010: 1:23 am

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