PATTINAGGIO DI FIGURA
Transcription
PATTINAGGIO DI FIGURA
CYANMAGENTAYELLOWBLACK PATTINAGGIO DI FIGURA FIGURE SKATING Weird, wild stuff Johnny Weir doesn’t shy away from controversy, outlandish wardrobe choices or his competition. By HAL HABIB Palm Beach Post Staff Writer Here’s Johnny, as outrageous and funny as Jack Nicholson peering through that splintered door in The Shining, and a bit like a club striking Nancy Kerrigan’s knee, only not as subtle. Go ahead, call him Johnny Weird if you like. Johnny Weir doesn’t care. As long as Weir is skating well and pleasing himself, his coach and his mother, he doesn’t care about much. Mainstream America, you’ve been warned. This is the disclaimer that comes attached to Johnny Weir as he steps onto the stage that is the Turin Olympics, and the fact that he does so in the proper sport of figure skating is but another terrifically incongruous fact about a terrifically incongruous athlete. He’ll probably arrive in Italy in a fur coat, a perfectly scripted tan, perhaps blue streaks in his hair and probably a scarf that you must never, ever refer to as a boa. He’ll most assuredly say something outrageous that will be circulated worldwide, get scolded by the authorities, then say something much more outrageous. Recent topics at his news conferences have included cognac, cocaine, wife-beating and his mother getting caught smoking in the girls’ bathroom in school. All within a 48hour span. “I’m not going to sugarcoat anything or change the way I speak about others or certain things in the world just because I’m a figure skater and I have to appeal to these people,” Weir says. “That’s not why I figure skate. If I appeal to myself and my mother, I’m happy with that. I don’t ‘front,’ as they say.” With all the attention Weir, 21, has received for such speaking performances on podiums, it’s easy to overlook the performances that place him up there. He’s clearly the best skater the United States has, a three-time national champion who nevertheless might not be a threat to Russia’s Yevgeny Plushenko. Likely, no one is. Weir says to simply end up on the podium would be “phenomenal,” especially given how he arrives in Turin. Weir is coming off a forgettable season in which his programs received tepid reviews by judges. He was told his elements weren’t difficult enough under the new scoring system, meaning even if he performed flawlessly, he probably AMY SANCETTA/The Associated Press Johnny Weir has had to revamp his long and short programs, which, under figure skating’s new scoring system, didn’t use a high enough degree of difficulty. wouldn’t score well. Weir and coach Priscilla Hill had 10 days to strip down and revamp his long and short programs. Meanwhile, Weir was going through personal problems that he declines to detail. “I think in any profession it’s difficult to balance personal life with your work life,” he says. “How many high-powered businessmen come home and beat their kids or beat their wives because they’re cranky because it isn’t going so well? It’s difficult, especially when you’re in the public eye, like Britney Spears. I can see her carrying teddy bears around until she’s 80 because she’s never had a chance to grow up.” Got all that? Good. In truth, Weir saw lots of teddy bears in St. Louis last month. They were tossed on the ice in appreciation of his national-championship performances that led to Olympic berths. His quick rebound conjured up memo- ries of 2002, when he splattered into the boards and quit at the U.S. Championships in Dallas, drawing criticism and ridicule — then followed by winning his first U.S. title two years later to “shut everybody up.” “I like to think of myself as the hero for the kids that want to say what they want but they can’t, or the ones who just feel a little bit different or stifled,” he says. Weir has skated to a different beat from the day he began, which comparatively speaking was the day before yesterday. Although many peers began in their kindergarten days, Weir started at age 11, skating around frozen cornstalks on his family’s farm in Quarryville, Pa., near Amish country. “We’re country bumpkin people,” Weir says. Weir describes his father, John, as “All American in football, soccer, baseball — one of those jock-type guys. And both of his kids are skinny and can’t play football. I can’t catch things. I can’t bat things, so he got a figure skater.” Johnny’s brother is named Brian but they call him Boz, after Brian Bosworth. Except Boz plays soccer, not football. Got all that? “He’s very proud of us,” Weir says of his father. “He got kids who are polar opposites of what he was.” Johnny’s mother is Patti, except Johnny doesn’t call her that, or Mom. He calls her Pasha. All this name hopscotching aside, the thing to remember is how Pasha always told her sons to be themselves. “She’s my friend as well as my mom,” Johnny says. “We can talk about sex, drugs, rock ‘n’ roll and everything. She told me stories about when she was kid. I think parents lose sight of the fact that they were children once. They just want you to not make the same mistakes as them, but they won’t tell you why. My mom is very cool. She always treated my brother and I like adults.” Weir doesn’t share the same feelings toward another authority figure, U.S. Figure Skating. Perhaps scarred by what he perceives as slights after he skated off the ice in Dallas, Weir seems to delight in ruffled feathers beyond the type that adorn costumes. “We have talked to Johnny,” David Raith, the federation’s executive director, says of Weir’s drug references. “Johnny is a flamboyant guy. He makes certain analogies. There are some that are more appropriate.” Having coached Weir from the start, Hill knows Weir as well as anybody and has seen a side the public has not. Weir grew so fond of Hill’s Chihuahua that he received a Chihuahua puppy on his 21st birthday. But last fall, Hill learned her dog was fatally ill. “The next thing I knew, there was Johnny standing there,” Hill says. “He went through the whole thing with me. That’s just the type of person he is.” If you wouldn’t expect that from a rebel who compares performances to sipping cognac or using cocaine, well, that’s how it goes. Preconceived notions and Johnny Weir don’t go together. If Olympic viewers don’t know that now, they’re about to find out. Johnny Weir has a penchant for making memorable comments while sitting in front of a microphone. Here’s a sampling: After it was reported he was wearing a boa in St. Louis: “It was a scarf. No feathers. Lots of dead chinchillas.” On his outspoken nature: “I’m me. I don’t put on a face. I don’t make statements just to make them. I mean every single word I say, regardless if it’s offensive or mean-spirited or whatever.” On concerns of U.S. Figure Skating officials about his comments: “I can understand, because there are young people that watch the sport and I don’t want to offend anyone that might give some money to the federation or anything like that. Pardon me for saying crazy things. They reprimand me and I let it go in one ear and I think about it before I say things. Like I won’t make any drug references today. Today. Precisely.” On the timing of skating’s new scoring system: “I think it was a little silly, going into the Olympic Games and changing the system so close to that event, because whatever figure skating audience we still have — it’s very possible that someone they’ve never heard of is going to win the next Olympics and we’ll lose everyone. . . . There are so many good things and so many bad things and I’m going to stop now because I’m doing run-on sentences and it doesn’t look pretty in the newspaper.” PalmBeachPost.com/ olympics ■ Photos, map of the figure skating venue ■ Interactive guide to figure skating A [email protected] Living on the edge Five athletes to watch In the world of sports, figure skating always has been unique, with athletes awarded for things like style. Unlike most Olympic events, the margin of victory cannot be expressed in goals scored or in precise measurements of time or distance. Instead, routines are followed by tense moments and upward gazes as the judges’ scores are tabulated. Sasha Cohen (Corona del Mar, Calif.) Aspiring model, fashion designer, chef — you name it. Says her goal for Turin is simply “my personal best” and she’ll let the medal situation take care of itself. Event: Women’s singles Skating in style All technique elements – steps, jumps, spirals and spins – require great accuracy and concentration to appear effortless. Irina Slutskaya (Russia) Two-time world champ overcame a disease that made it difficult for her to move her legs. She’s favored in part because reigning world champ Mao Asada of Japan didn’t turn 15 until 87 days after the age cutoff for Olympic skaters. Event: Women’s singles Michelle Kwan (Los Angeles) Is this finally the year for the 25-year-old, five-time world champion? She has won silver and she has won bronze — and she won a petition for an Olympic berth while recovering from a groin injury. Event: Women’s singles This move – in which the woman rotates parallel to the ice while holding her partner’s hand – is a required element of the pairs’ short program. This toe-pick assisted jump is named for its inventor, Alois Lutz of Austria. Referee Oversees the judges to make sure they follow the proper procedure. Technical specialist Identifies each element as the skater performs it. Yevgeny Plushenko (Russia) Technical controller Three-time world champ is so dominant that American skater Johnny Weir says everyone else is skating for silver. Plushenko saw a student named Maria Ermak driving a convertible in St. Petersburg, followed her, and eventually married her. Event: Men’s singles The Palm Beach Post A required element in the ladies’ and men’s short program, the jump was invented by Norwegian skater Axel Paulsen. Lutz Judges – The new system is designed to allow judges to focus on the quality of each element performed and the five program components. It also eliminates the scoring of skaters in relation to other skaters. Current world champion received a congratulatory call from Swiss tennis ace Roger Federer. With the Australian Open recently concluded with another Federer title, the phone bills between these two could skyrocket. Event: Men’s singles Double axel Death spiral A new way to figure Stephane Lambiel (Switzerland) February 9, 2006 Weir’s world Supports technical specialist. Assistant technical specialist After the notorious judging controversy of the 2002 Olympics, the International Skating Union introduced a new scoring system intended to shift focus away from the judges and onto the skaters. Program components* •Transitions • Interpretation • Choreography/composition • Skating skills • Performance/execution PalmBeachPost.com Sum of points awarded for each of five components; points given on a scale from 0.25 to 10. Grade of execution Awarded on a scale of up to plus or minus three points Base value Each technical element has a pre-assigned base value * Ice dancing uses a sixth component score for timing Sources: International Olympic Committee; Turin Organizing Committee; International Skating Union; ‘Sports: The Complete Visual Reference,’ Francois Fortin l Program component score* Technical score Each element performed receives a base value plus a “grade of execution.” Total score Nine of the 12 judges are randomly and anonymously selected by computer. Scores of the other three Judges are thrown out. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Page 5