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OrangeBro spreads his legs for Coke, says figure skaters should wear helmets.

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Evan opens his happiness on his new billboard for Coca-Cola.

evancoke
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Evan tells TMZ he's had over 15 concussions.

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(in case you don't want to hurt your eyes/ears, Evan says he thinks figure skating should consider adopting a helmet rule, figure skating is really dangerous, he's seen some gnarly falls, figure skating is a really tough sport, you can snap your neck/lose a bunch of teeth from skating, did he mention that figure skating is really dangerous and tough?)

Superjavi to be Spanish flag-bearer, Ovie supports Plushy

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Javier Fernandez, European double champion for figure skating, will carry the Spanish flag at the Olympic Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, next month, the Spanish Olympic Committee said Tuesday.

Fernandez will be the Olympic flag-bearer in the upcoming winter Olympics, four years after snowboarder Queralt Castellet did the same at the Games in Vancouver, Canada.

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If Alex Ovechkin got to pick Russia’s flag bearer at the Opening Ceremony, it would not be a hockey player.

Ovechkin would tap three-time Olympic medalist figure skater Yevgeny Plushenko, he told Sovetsky Sport in an interview published Sunday.

“If Plushenko goes, then him,” Ovechkin told the newspaper. “That man is a living legend. But if [Plushenko] doesn’t go, there’s only one candidate: Ilya Kovalchuk.”


Ovechkin is up on his Russian Olympic news, knowing Plushenko has not yet been named to the Olympic Team. The official announcement on Russia’s lone men’s singles figure skating entry is expected after Plushenko skates in front of Russian officials this week.

At the 2010 Olympics, Ovechkin sent a message to Plushenko through the skater’s agent before he performed in the short program.

”It said the whole team is holding hands for you and watching you,” it read, according to The New York Times.

Plushenko, the 2006 Closing Ceremony flag bearer, won the short program and finished second to Evan Lysacek after the free skate in 2010.

Kovalchuk would also be a strong choice, as Vladislav Tretiak would attest. The former NHL All-Star, now in the KHL, is one of two Russians on their fourth Olympic hockey team. The other is team captain Pavel Datsyuk.

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time for an American princesses update

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princess

Gracie wants to do the long program in the Team event, gets through an interview without saying Soshi.
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Figure skater Ashley Wagner has changed the music and choreography of the long program she will perform at the Sochi Olympics after a mediocre performance that nearly cost her a berth in the Winter Games.

Wagner finished fourth at the recent U.S. championships after skating to “Romeo and Juliet” in her long program. She made the Olympic team only because the committee in charge of selecting the three-woman delegation chose her over third-place finisher Mirai Nagasu of Arcadia on the strength of her body of work.

Wagner, who lives in Laguna Beach, said Tuesday she will revert to the “Samson and Delilah” music she used last season, when she won her second straight U.S. title. She will keep portions of the “Romeo and Juliet” choreography because it has become familiar to her through repetition.

She said she had suggested to her coach, Rafael Arutunian, that she return to the “Samson and Delilah” program before the Grand Prix final but he discouraged it.

“I had mentioned it to him earlier in the season and he told me it was crazy, which it is,” she said during an interview at her training rink, East West Ice Palace in Artesia.


“When I step out onto the ice to compete ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ I don’t feel like a fighter. I feel very nervous and it’s very difficult for me to get into the mind-set for it. I think he saw that it was kind of getting harder and harder for me to compete as the season went on. So after nationals I sat him down and I tried again. I said, ‘Raf, I understand that this is insane but I really need to change this. If you want me to be able to train it the way you want me to, I need to change it.’

“He wasn’t happy about it but I think he was able to see that it wasn’t clicking with me…. He understands and he has been doing an awesome job working with me to get this program as comfortable and as familiar as possible.”

She is hopeful that having music she enjoys and portraying a strong character should help reinforce her confidence, which was dented by her performance at the U.S. competition.

“When I’m competing, I need to be strong,” she said. “I’m not a pretty princess and I’m aware of that, so I like music that is really intense, really bold, and characters that in a way almost have a dark side and are kind of evil because for me, that’s when I feel my strongest and fiercest, when I’m not necessarily the good girl. ‘Samson and Delilah’ just provided a sense of comfort and a style of skating that is much more natural to me. I felt that I was really forcing it this season with ‘Romeo and Juliet.’”
She said the new program “is a Frankenstein of a program,” in that it is pieced together from last season’s program, parts of her “Romeo and Juliet” program and some moves done at different stages than they were before.

“The general setup of it is ‘Romeo and Juliet,’ but we took pieces from ‘Samson and Delilah’ that I really liked, and I liked the character at those moments and we kind of placed them in methodically,” she said.

She plans seven triple jumps, including a triple flip-triple toe combination. “So far in training everything has been really comfortable,” she said.

Gracie Gold, who trains in El Segundo, won the national title and a ticket to Sochi. Runner-up Polina Edmunds of San Jose finished second and earned an Olympic berth.

Arutunian said he was aware she didn’t like the “Romeo and Juliet” program and that it was reflected in her skating.
“She always was telling me she doesn’t like music. It does not encourage her to get into the music,” he said. “I like her program a lot but she don’t like music and at last she said, ‘Please, just let me do it,’ and we just kind of make some adjustments and I think she loves it.”

He said he had never coached a skater who made so big a decision this late in the season but “she didn’t want to skate to that program,” and has been practicing the new routine well.


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Making major changes this late is bold but not unprecedented. Sarah Hughes, unhappy after finishing third at the 2002 U.S. championships, re-cut the music of her long program to enhance the drama, added speed, and revamped the ending. Her risk paid off when she won gold at Salt Lake City.

"Changed it right after nationals and it made a world of difference for me," she told the Chicago Tribune. "I liked the program a lot more. It was more fun to skate."

Wagner, who lives in Laguna Beach, said she doesn't want casual figure skating fans to remember her by her performance at the U.S. championships. She believes the new program will play to her strengths. "At nationals you don't want to peak, and I definitely didn't peak," she said.

She did find one positive to finishing behind Gracie Gold and 15-year-old Polina Edmunds at the U.S. competition.

"It might be a blessing in disguise that I'm not going in as the national champion and not going in as the favorite for the medal," Wagner said. "But I've accomplished a lot in the past couple of years and I think internationally I have established myself as someone to watch out for. That skater did not show up at nationals and I need to make sure that I am the athlete that achieved those titles and brought home the hardware and really show people that I deserve a spot on this team, which I fully believe that I do.

"So I think not going in as the champion will be a nice little breather for me."


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this is the right way to think. Olympic year national champions: Michelle Kwan. Sasha Cohen.
not National champions: Tara Lipinski. Sarah Hughes. Evan Lysacek. (of course Shizuka and Yags!)
although Ashley doesn't really have a shot at gold







When she was but 20 months old, her mother plopped her into a pair of figure skates, noting pointedly, "She could not follow directions yet."

At 2 1/2 years, she was taking lessons and, "She did everything the coach asked."

A dozen years later, no teenage rebellion here, she was slicing and dicing the competition at the junior level, posting six victories in 2013, including the U.S. junior championship.

Now, in Polina Edmunds' first year on the senior level, the high school sophomore from San Jose's Archbishop Mitty High School has made the U.S. Olympic team. Her brief career arc, if charted on a spread sheet, is a black arrow angled at 45 degrees and aimed squarely at Sochi, Russia.

At 5-foot-4, all pipe-cleaner arms and stork legs, Edmunds weighs just 98 pounds*cringe*, but a weakling she is not. There is a strength to her slim physique as she glides across a sheet of ice preparing to power into a combination jump that could earn her big points at the Winter Olympics that begin Feb. 6.

"Her natural feel for the ice has been set from a young age," said Edmunds' coach, San Jose native David Glynn. "She is a beautiful skater. She has the technical skill of the best ladies in the world. She skates with a maturity beyond her 15 years. She is light and delicate and balletic while doing the hardest technical elements in skating. That's a rare quality to have - to skate with power and speed and look delicate."

Those qualities carried Edmunds to a second-place finish in this month's U.S. Championships in Boston and landed her on the Olympic team with event winner Gracie Gold, 18, and the faltering but experienced Ashley Wagner, 22.

"I knew if I skated well I'd have a chance to get on the podium and make the Olympic team," Edmunds said following a practice session at Sharks Ice in San Jose. "I was very happy with my skating. After the short program when I ended up in second place, that was the moment I knew I had a shot and it wasn't a dream."

Edmunds fell once in her long program, four minutes of grace and grit and glamour choreographed by Marina Klimova and set to the music of "Swan Lake" and "Peer Gynt," but her personal best score of 193.63 was more than enough to put her ahead of everyone but Gold.

Like all skaters on the elite level, Edmunds' goal at the Olympics is to "skate two clean programs," meaning no falls or slips or wobbles or technical transgressions. When a clean program dovetails into a skater's artistic skill and expression, the result is surpassing to witness.
"I think for sure the technical difficulty in my program is really what helps me the most because I have two triple-triple combinations in my long program," Edmunds said. "What also helps me is my balletic skill. I've been taking ballet since I was 4 years old."

Edmunds went out of her way to thank her ballet instructors, the husband and wife team of Maggie and Javier Ferla, formerly of the San Francisco Ballet, for developing "my gracefulness on the ice. Ballet is such a huge part of my skating. They taught me to use my arms and emotions in skating."

Polina Edmunds is the result of an international romance that began in Russia and found a home in San Jose. In 1992, her American father, John Edmunds, was teaching English and business to Russian students in the town of Tver, located between St. Petersburg and Moscow.

Either the teacher noticed a particular student named Nina or the student took a liking to her teacher.
lol you don't say...Either way, they eventually married and have three children, with sons James, 17, and Daniel, 11, bracketing Polina.

John Edmunds is CFO of a computer software company in Santa Clara. Nina was certified in Russia as a coach. The family, along with Polina's best friend, Anna Fry of Willow Glen High School in San Jose, will join forces with Nina's family in Russia to support this skating sylph. best friend in tow...lol working those Tara comparisons hard I see.

"It's very special because I'm Russian, of course," Nina said. "I'll see my relatives and friends. It's great to be in the motherland."

Unlike other young elite skaters who build fortresses of isolation around themselves as they train full time, Polina is of the real world. She enjoys attending Mitty High School and developing friendships. She'll be away from school for three weeks while in Sochi for the Games.

"I'm probably going to be taking a lot of work with me and checking the Internet to see what assignments I need to be doing," she said. "Education is very important to my family. It's really good to go to regular school and have good interpersonal skills.  I couldn't imagine being home-schooled. I've made so many friends. I'm definitely thankful for all the support I get from school."


In short order, Edmunds has gone from schoolgirl to skating star, a role she has been preparing for all her young life.
"It can be a bit overwhelming at times," she said.

Get used to it, kid. It's only going to get more overwhelming as the Games draw nearer.

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At age 11, Polina Edmunds is young enough to carry a teddy bear for good luck, but old enough to be a veteran dreamer of an Olympic gold medal in figure skating.

Polina Edmunds at the U.S. championships. “My biggest dream would be to go to the Olympics and win,” she said.

On skates at 2, in formal lessons at 4, out of bed at 5 on most school days, on the ice six days a week, she finished an encouraging sixth on Tuesday in the novice ladies division at the United States championships.

The youngest of 12 skaters, Edmunds gave a balletic performance in her long program with only one major flaw, a fall on a triple toe loop. At 4 feet 11 inches and 70 pounds, she is poised, candid about the sacrifices required and frank about her own ambivalence toward a sport that can make enormous demands on a skater’s time, body and family pocketbook.

Nina Edmunds, Polina’s mother and one of her coaches, also spoke frankly about the balance that parents must strike between their own expectations and their children’s hopes.

David Glynn, who also coaches Edmunds in San Jose, Calif., said: “Skating is a business. You’re selling the dream. At the same time, you have to have integrity as a coach. You have to be honest, tell them when they’re progressing and when they’ve plateaued. There’s so much more to life than ice skating.”

He asks beginners what their goals are. Some want only to learn basic skills. Others want to be competitors. Nina Edmunds showed up with 4-year-old Polina and told Glynn, “We’re going to commit everything to it.”

If Polina seemed too young to commit, she was not. Not by skating standards, anyway. By 13, a skater aspires to compete internationally on the junior Grand Prix circuit. Tara Lipinski became an Olympic champion at 15.

“For a girl, at 4 or 5, you’ve got to start then,” Glynn said.

Nina Edmunds grew up in Tver, Russia. Her father was a hockey player, and she skated. She wanted ice sports to be in her children’s lives, as they were in hers. By 2, Polina seemed as coordinated as a 5-year-old.

“In the future, I don’t want to regret, ‘Oh I didn’t take enough lessons,’ and she’s not good enough,” Nina said.
Julie McDonough, is that you?

On Monday, Wednesday and Friday, Polina awakens at 5, skates from 6:30 to 7:45, then attends sixth grade in San Jose. Each weekday afternoon, she also skates from 3 to 5 p.m. and is in bed by 8. On weekends, she takes jazz, tap and ballet lessons. She also bakes and plays the piano.

“My biggest dream would be to go to the Olympics and win,” Polina said.

Could she be happy if she didn’t win a gold medal?

“Yeah, I think, if I win other things,” she said.


Forthrightly, Polina said she often thought, “Ugh, I don’t want to get up,” when the alarm rang. “I do it because I know I have to practice,” she said.

On winter and spring breaks, her classmates can sleep in while she must spend much of her time at the rink.

“I do want a break sometimes,” Polina said. “I’d like to go to a birthday party.”

Asked if she skated for herself or because others wanted her to, she replied, “I guess it’s half and half; sometimes I want to and sometimes I don’t.”

When she tells her mother she doesn’t want to skate, Nina sometimes replies, “O.K., don’t do it.”

“Then I think, O.K., I really want to do it,” Polina said.


The rewards: good results at competitions, travel, skating before crowds, learning new routines.

“It’s exciting,” Polina said.

Still, there is no way to sugarcoat it, Glynn said. Skating demands hard work from children. And the chances of anyone winning Olympic gold are slim.

Interests change, bodies change. Costs can reach $40,000 to $50,000 a year and deplete a family’s bank account. Obsession can bring eating disorders and injury. Lipinski compulsively repeated missed jumps and eventually needed hip surgery.

“The athlete who does it 100 percent out of their own self-motivation is few and far between,” Glynn said. “I believe you have to push a kid at a young age if you want greatness, if you want to look like Sasha Cohen or Michelle Kwan. I always say to Polina on her rough days, ‘You’re going to thank me later.’ ”

Nina Edmunds said she avoided the mistake that many parents made — demanding specific results instead of steady progress. But she added: “You should not talk with the child, ‘Do you want it or not want it?’ The child can start to manipulate.”

Asked if she would let Polina quit tomorrow if her daughter wanted, Nina laughed and said: “Probably not. I see her potential. For sure I would like that she continue and do her job. I think she can do it.”

On Tuesday, Polina pumped her fist when her marks were announced and seemed thrilled with the results. There was another reward, too. A week off.


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so about those skate-mom-from-hell rumors...

Here, have a Plushenchrist poast!

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The wise men took their seats in the hall where the public and the press were barred from entry.

Now was the time to decide, to nominate the chosen one.

In the outside world, true believers eagerly awaited news of the verdict. When it came, it was not via the white smoke of a Papal conclave, but a name uttered to a journalist by a trusted source: “Plushenko.”

Habemus athletam.

So ended one of the longest, bitterest and strangest sporting battles in recent memory, and all for the honor of representing Russia in the men’s Olympic figure skating competition.

The winner is Evgeni Plushenko, a veteran of three Olympics who battled injury and younger rivals to secure the nomination, although his chances looked dead and buried a month ago.

That was when fresh-faced lol no 18-year-old Maxim Kovtun flew across the ice to beat Plushenko at the Russian nationals, a competition where the older man had not finished lower than first for 16 years. After that, Plushenko said he would step aside for a "a young and prospective athlete," a clear reference to Kovtun.

A week ago everything changed. While Plushenko rested, Kovtun went to the European championships in Hungary and failed to cope with the pressure of being the Olympic favorite, repeatedly falling on his way to a fifth-place finish. After the competition, Kovtun blamed the failure on relentless infighting over the Olympic selection. “I go out there knowing that there are people who are pleased by every mistake I make,” he said.

Plushenko was called for a test skate in front of Russia’s skating experts in a hall outside Moscow, and by his own account performed admirably - certainly well enough that, within two hours, insiders were saying he was on the team for Sochi.

“I skated the program clean with all the elements,” he told RIA Novosti. “Everything is fine … I’m pleased, my team is pleased, we did a great and successful job.”

Dramatic as it may be, this latest turnaround is just the latest chapter of a stunning comeback by Plushenko, dating all the way back to the last Winter Olympics in Vancouver four years ago.

Undisputedly one of the greatest skaters in history, Plushenko won Olympic silver in 2002, gold in 2006 and silver in Vancouver, losing out on the gold to Evan Lysacek of the United States in contentious circumstances.

After that, a downward spiral began, as the Russian star first received a ban from competition for skating in unauthorized shows before injury after injury laid him low. The sole high point was a seventh European title in 2012, but when he tried to defend that title a year laid, a back injury ended his challenge.

As he spent most of last year injured, Plushenko’s Olympic dream appeared dead, the great skater reduced to a torrid months-long legal battle with a Russian TV commentator who accused him of faking his back problem.

Then came a return. It started with a win at a little-regarded event in Latvia against opponents little higher than club level, but it was a start nonetheless. But injury struck again, keeping him out of the Grand Prix in Moscow as Kovtun took silver, seemingly another nail in his older rival’s coffin. Then came defeat to the young pretender at Russian nationals.

All the while, behind the scenes, some among Russia’s skating experts were pouring poison in the ears of journalists, according to sources in the know. To some, Kovtun lacked determination, to others, Plushenko was a broken old man.

Then came last week, Kovtun’s failure in Hungary and Plushenko’s invitation to that fateful test skate. All that remains is the small matter of the Winter Olympics.

In this epic, you can take your pick of religious parallels. Is Plushenko the prodigal son returned to his fatherland? Lazarus risen from the dead? One reincarnation closer to Nirvana?

Certainly, to judge by the way Twitter lights up when his name is mentioned, he is something of a disciple to the passionate cult of figure skating fans.

Perhaps his story points at something deeper. If, as is sometimes said, sport has replaced religion as the opiate of the people, then Plushenko’s intoxicating epic is prime material for a modern gospel. After all, sport needs an audience as much as a religion needs a congregation, and both are packed with obscure rituals, so it’s only natural to look for parallels between them.

However, the last chapter of the Plushenko story is not yet written.

Now this Russian hero, prematurely an old man at 31 under sport’s laws, heads toward what may be the greatest test of his life. If he fails, he’ll be another ex-champion, good but not great. o rly now?

If he succeeds, he’ll join the pantheon.
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If figure skating star Evgeny Plushenko fails to win gold at next month’s Sochi Olympics, Russian sports officials should lose their jobs, leading nationalist lawmaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky said Thursday.

The Russian Figure Skating Federation this week picked three-time Olympic medalist Plushenko for Russia’s sole entry in the men’s competition despite his years of injury problems, preferring him to 18-year-old national champion Maxim Kovtun.

“If Plushenko loses, we’ll do everything to chase out the figure skating federation,” Zhirinovsky said in a typically brash outburst in parliament.

“I think it would have been better to send Kovtun. He’s the champion of Russia, and what’s Plushenko the champion of? He gets ill, operations. Why are we sending an injured athlete?”


It is a big ask of Plushenko to win his first global competition since collecting the silver medal behind Evan Lysacek four years ago at the Vancouver Games.

Zhirinovsky suggested federation politics could have been at play in the selection process, asking whether the decision had been made due to Plushenko’s “personal characteristics or the characteristics of his team, which has forced him into his final Olympics.”

Zhirinovsky, leader of the far-right Liberal Democratic Party of Russia, is known for making provocative statements, including a call earlier this month for his party comrades to have sex just "three or four times a year" as part of a healthy lifestyle push. He also supports weight limits for parliamentarians and has called for Russia to deploy nuclear weapons against various perceived enemies.

Kovtun is the first alternate for the Olympics, should Plushenko be injured. After finishing fifth at last week’s European championships in Budapest, the 18-year-old said he had been distracted by federation infighting and that he no longer cared whether he competed in Sochi. right...

The Olympics formally run from February 7 through 23, although the first competitive date for a Russian men's skater would be the February 6-9 team event, before the men's individual competition February 13-14.

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Here's a Russian documentary about Plush.

DREAMS OLYMPICS

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THE OLYS ARE UPON US, SO HOW ABOUT A GAME, _SKATING?

POST YOUR THREE DEEPEST, HARDEST TO ACHIEVE, IMPOSSIBLE DREAMS OR WISHES THAT YOU CAN SHARE.

THE ONLY RULE IS THAT ONE OF THEM HAS TO BE SKATING-RELATED.

BECAUSE, YOU KNOW, WHEN YOU WISH FOR SOMETHING HARD ENOUGH, THE UNIVERSE CONSPIRES ETC.

HERE'S MY PODIUM.

Oly podium

P.S."DRUNK POST" COULD BE A TAG.
P.P.S. I THINK THAT RIGHT NOW THE UNIVERSE IS CONSPIRING TO GET ME DRUNK ON DRY RED WINE.
P.P.S II, SON OF P.P.S. SORRY ABOUT THE CRAPPY IMAGE. ALL EXPLAINED IN THE TAGS.

LATER EDIT

HAVE SOME HAPPY SKATER GIFS. BECAUSE BRIAN AND EVEN MORE SO ALEXEI.

Brian World Champion

Yags Chopin Fierce

Bunny hops

OrangeBro to grace America with his Bro-Voice on the Today Show

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Evan Lysacek will be in Sochi after all.

No, he won't be defending his gold medal after injuries curtailed his comeback last year. Instead, the Vancouver Olympic champion will be "wearing many hats" in Russia, and he might be more exhausted after these games than he was after competing four years ago.

Lysacek will work as an analyst on NBC's "Today Show" for the men's and team figure skating events. He'll be involved with several of his sponsors, such as Citi with the "Every Step Of The Way" program in which he will raise funds for Figure Skating in Harlem, one of his favorite organizations.

Lysacek is aiding Procter and Gamble with its "Thank You Mom" campaign through which his mother "was able to get pampered, which she doesn't get to do too often," for the Vancouver Games. He'll "help out" with social media for Smucker's and will make appearances for Ralph Lauren and Deloitte.



After the Olympics, he'll serve as a sports envoy for the U.S. State Department, journeying to St. Petersburg to work with some Russian sports organizations.

The one thing he won't be doing is skating.

So keeping busy is a must.

"I am still focused on healing and processing that I am not competing in Sochi," the 28-year-old Lysacek told The Associated Press on Friday. "It is hard for me to watch Olympic commercials and hear athletes talking about it; it is all of the things I want.

"For the last three years I fully expected I would be the one talking about it and feeling that," he said.

He's not because Lysacek, who has not competed since winning the Olympic title, tore the labrum in his left hip last fall. After two months of aggressive treatment, doctors told him in December he was risking permanent damage by continuing to train.

That pain eventually will disappear as the injury heals. The emotional hurt remains, and Lysacek is uncertain when it will subside.

"My heart was broken and mostly because I was on the right track," he said. "In July 2012, I think I could have competed in the Olympics if they were then and done quite well. The way things spiraled downward from there was very hard to handle."

Lysacek is uncertain how he'll feel when he touches down in Sochi, saying "hopefully once I get to the Olympics my mind will go to Vancouver and it will be in a celebratory frame."

But he knows he will be plenty busy during the games.

Lysacek seems most excited about being part of the "Today Show." NBC has hired a slew of Olympic champions for Sochi, including Scott Hamilton and Tara Lipinski. It also has one of Lysacek's main rivals through the last decade or so, Johnny Weir, on its team.

"Their presence at the Olympics is so special," he said of the morning show. "A lot of athletes have such great memories of winning and appearing on the show the next day. I can go back to Torino and the next day after competing going on the show and talking to Katie Couric when she was still with them. It was really the first time I was able to relax and have fun.

"Fast forward four years, and my whirlwind after winning just really began with the 'Today Show.' "


After the free skate and the medals ceremony in Vancouver, Lysacek went to USA House and presented his coach, Frank Carroll, with his medal. Carroll has worked with some of the sport's greats through the decades, including Michelle Kwan, and Lysacek's win was the first at the games for a Carroll student.

Then it was straight to the TV set.

"We were on the West Coast, of course, so they would start to broadcast at 4 a.m.," Lysacek said. "As I waited to be interviewed, that was the first time to really sit and look at the medal around my neck and let that experience sink in. It was an incredible moment for me that continued on and on.

"My first stop — and I think a lot of athletes, too — had their first celebratory moments through the years on the show," he added. "America wakes up to the 'Today Show' and the folks on it are like family to Americans. And now I get to work with that show."


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CitiBank must be Vera Wang's preferred bank

YOU CAN LEAVE...YOUR SKATES ON!

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THE WEATHER OUTSIDE IS FRIGHTFUL...AND BLEAK AND DRIZZLY AND WET.

SO HOW ABOUT CRANKING UP THE HEAT A LITTLE BIT?



Bjou softcore porn

YAGS, PLUSH, BIJOU AND STEPHANE ARE ON IT!

Video won't embed, but the Quad Squad insist that you watch it.

LET'S START WITH SOME NICE WORKOUT ON THE ICE!

Rolling Gladiator

.GETTING A BIT HOT?

Arms unf

NO?

Black wifebeater fuckin unf

WELL, THEN, A DIFFERENT APPROACH IS REQUIRED.

Matrix

A  MORE DETAIL-ORIENTED ONE.

2010 Worlds Tongue

OH, BJOU!

The fuck are you doing

MAYBE YAGS HAS THE ANSWER TO THAT?



AND HE DOES. FROM 3:46 ON, BUT THE POWER OF THE QUAD COMPELS YOU TO WATCH IT ALL.

PLAYING COOL NOW, AREN'T YA?

My baby, you

WELL..THEY WOULD BE DISAPPOINTED IF YOU DID...

Yags Brian hand

...AND DELIGHTED...

Team Sexy Approves

...WITH THE CONTRARY.

SO, _SKATERS! POST PICS, GIFS, VIDS GOOD ENOUGH TO MELT YOUR BLADES!

OR THIS WINTER WILL NEVER GO AWAY.

Misha BB, I do not think it means what you think it means.

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Who are your Twitter/Instagram faves? I need to clean up my feed for Sochi because really, who has time to scroll through Tara & Johnny's matching manis/outfits when there are actual Olympians to care about?


4 days to go until the team event starts!

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princess




Gracie Gold becomes the new face of America

This weekend the sporting world is all about the Super Bowl — but next week it will all be about the Olympics.

Now that Lindsey Vonn is out of the Olympics, Gracie Gold has become America’s singular glamour athlete heading to Sochi. She is a Sports Illustrated cover subject this week, and NBC is promoting the figure skater as the face of these Games.

The only question is: Can the 18-year-old upstart deliver the way that the veteran Vonn did four years ago in Vancouver?

“I’m packing this weekend suitcases to go to the Olympics — it’s unreal,” Gold said. “To walk in the opening ceremonies, I don’t think my heart could be bigger. The closer we get to Sochi, the more and more I want to be going for a medal. I think it’s a realistic goal, and we’ll see what happens.”

There is a very good chance that U.S. audiences will get to see Gold skate four times at these Games, assuming she is chosen for the team event roster as America’s representative in the ladies’ competition. There was a time when Ashley Wagner was expected to assume that role, but Wagner finished fourth at nationals and immediately changed her program back to an earlier version.

“I remember a couple of years ago, I was watching my role models in the Olympics. And now to be that role model, it’s so wonderful,” Gold said. “You just remember why you do what you do. The passion in your sport is so important.”


Gold is ranked only 10th in the world by icenetwork.com, a long way from favored Mao Asada of Japan. But she can pull off triple-triple combinations, which is a requisite for any legitimate contender.

“I’ve learned that not everything has to be going perfectly for me to do well,” Gold said. “I’m a little better skater than I thought, I should trust myself more, control my nerves.”

Just last year, Gold changed coaches, to Frank Carroll, who mentored Evan Lysacek to the gold medal four years ago and worked with Michelle Kwan for most of her great career.

“Frank is one of the best coaches in the world,” Gold said. “He’s so full of wisdom, had so many champions, it just seemed the logical choice. You want an experienced guide on your journey.”

While other athletes have expressed concern for their own safety and that of their families, the Chicago native sounds unafraid in that regard.

“People already there told us how beautiful the arena is,” Gold said. “At the end of the day, ice is ice, but they said it’s a great arena, so big and open. The picture from the outside looks gorgeous.

“My dad, my mom, my sister, all three of them will come out to support me. We’ll be able to connect in the village. If they have the opportunity to go to the Olympics, they’re going to take it.”

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Ashley Wagner: I'm in this to be remembered"



In the final weeks before the Sochi Olympics, while the world’s top figure skaters were polishing their routines, Ashley Wagner was at a southern California ice rink, starting over.

Four years devoted to making the Olympic team after narrowly missing in 2010 resulted in emotionally fraught success: Wagner fell twice at last month’s U.S. championships and finished fourth, making her selection a controversy rather than coronation.

So Wagner took a hard look at herself and made a radical change. She scrapped her long program — the heart of her Sochi playbook, in effect — and started patching together an alternative.

“It’s insane. Absolutely insane,” Wagner said, conceding that champion figure skaters simply don’t overhaul their programs so close to a major event. Sarah Hughes, Shizuka Arakawa, anyone?

But in a sport of theatrical costumes and makeup, in which rigor masquerades as effortlessness, Wagner is as grounded in reality as they come. And she knew as well as the judges that her performance to Prokofiev’s “Romeo and Juliet” lacked conviction. Her disconnect with the music and the tragic personae of 14-year-old Juliet was palpable.

So she convinced her coach, choreographer and costume designer to update “Samson and Delilah,” a medal-clinching program she competed in 2012-13 that showcased the power of the Biblical temptress and a fully realized woman to be feared.

“Off the ice, I can be soft and I can be elegant and sweet. But on the ice, that’s not the kind of competitor I am,” said Wagner, 22. “I relate so much better and compete so much better as a stronger character who is a little bit, almost, evil. For me, when I feel like I’m out there tempting everybody into loving my program, that’s when I feel undefeatable.”

It’s a major gamble, rewriting the competitive script on the eve of an Olympics. Elite athletes draw their confidence from repetition — endless repetition that etches particular movements into the muscles’ memory so that when the pressure to perform is greatest, the body can do nothing else.

But Wagner, daughter of an Army officer, who moved seven times before her family settled in northern Virginia when she was 10, is entirely at ease amid flux, accustomed to adapting on the fly. And as a competitor, she’s a fighter to the core — at her best when battling from behind.

“I am in this to be something,” Wagner said the day of her controversial selection to the 2014 U.S. Olympic team. “I’m in this to make a name for myself. I’m in this to be remembered. And I’m so prepared to do whatever I can to get onto that medal podium.”

As music from Camille Saint-Saens’ “Samson and Delilah” filled the East West Ice Palace here last month, Wagner’s coach, Rafael Arutyunyan, skated backward alongside her, barking commands, eyes fixed on the blades of her skating boots. Wagner repeated each element until Arutyunyan was satisfied. And the longer she worked, the more she attacked each passage — every bit the modern-day Delilah, determined to get what she wants.

“The claws are out,” Wagner declared upon launching into an interview after practice ended. “I’m ready to go!”



‘I was viciously competitive’

Eric and Melissa Wagner hopscotched around the country as his Army postings dictated when their children were little. And much of that time, he was out of the country on special assignments, off to Bosnia, Cambodia, Laos, Australia and elsewhere. It was during her solo-parenting stint while in Eagle River, Alaska, that Melissa, a former college rower, offered 5-year-old Ashley a choice between ballet or figure skating.

Refusing to wear pink shoes, Ashley chose skating. And Melissa bought a tiny dance outfit, found a seamstress to sew on enough sequins to make it pass for a figure-skating costume and strapped a helmet on her daughter.

Today, Wagner has two distinct memories of that Learn-to-Skate class: Being so excited to do what all her friends were doing and wanting more than anything to be the best skater of them all.

“From a young age, I was viciously competitive,” she said with a laugh.

She progressed nicely under new teachers in Kansas City, Tacoma, Wash., and Portland, Ore., where she studied under Tonya Harding’s former coach, Dody Teachman, as a third-grader. But it was in Alexandria that Wagner blossomed into a skater of national consequence, working with Shirley Hughes at Mount Vernon Ice Arena.

After six years of impressive results with Hughes, Wagner felt she’d hit a plateau and moved her training base to Wilmington, Del., to work with Priscilla Hill, who had coached Johnny Weir. So Melissa rented an apartment nearby, and she and the two children (Ashley’s younger brother, Austin, followed her as a competitive skater) lived in Delaware during the week and came home to Alexandria on weekends.

All too often, the price of being a world champion in ultra-demanding sports such as women’s gymnastics and figure skating is paid in total immersion and arrested development — not just physically, but emotionally and socially.


That wasn’t the daughter the Wagners reared. Once she turned 18, Ashley believed it was time to find out if she was competing for herself or her parents, so she declared her financial independence. Her figure skating results had improved, and she took over paying for her training, equipment and travel, helped by the New England Skating Fund and a part-time job selling jeans at American Eagle.

For her mother, it was time to let go.

“Some of these kids live inside the rink; I’ve always let my kids live,” said Melissa James, now divorced. “They’re going to grow up. They need to know what’s out there. They need to make mistakes. Yes, I’d like to have a safety net underneath them. But if I didn’t let her go when she was 18, she never would have been where she is today.”



‘I needed to be pushed’

Wagner missed the 2010 Olympics by 4.08 points, paying on a small scale for one fall in her short program at that year’s U.S. championships and on a larger scale for the fact that the United States’ international status had slipped to the point where it had just two Olympic berths. In the aftermath, Wagner thought about quitting and joining her friends headed to college, but the impulse passed in less than 24 hours. Instead, she doubled down on her training and dubbed herself figure skating’s ”Almost Girl,” having spent so much time on the periphery of greatness.

She moved back home and struggled through a miserable 2011 season, plagued by excruciating muscle spasms.

At such crossroads, many elite athletes consult sports psychologists. Wagner followed her father’s advice instead: “Don’t be a wimp.”

And she started looking for a coach who would demand even more.

“I needed to be pushed. I needed to be uncomfortable,” Wagner said. “I definitely wanted somebody who wasn’t going to mother me. I’m such a strong-headed person and so stubborn, I don’t need someone to be sweet to me. I needed someone to say, ‘This is how it’s going to be, and this is how you’re going to do it.’ ”

The search led to the venerable John Nicks, then 82, who had molded such Olympic medalists as Peggy Fleming and Sasha Cohen. Wagner flew to southern California to introduce herself.

“Immediately what I saw was a potential that she hadn’t reached, for whatever reason,” Nicks recalled. “She was extremely athletic, strong and determined. She had a lot of the characteristics that are important for a competitive skater.

“I told her I was not going to be her friend or father or grandfather or great-grandfather. I would be her coach. She seemed to understand and appreciate that.”

Moving from East Coast to southern California upon turning 20 represented a more profound declaration of independence. Her father couldn’t help when Reba, Wagner’s ancient Jeep Grand Cherokee, broke down and died on side of a freeway in Mission Viejo.

But in time, Wagner forged her own life on the West Coast, which consists of visits to a favorite coffee shop and the requisite juice bar, walks on the pier and jogs along the beach and plenty of practice.

She also assembled a surrogate family, which includes an eight-toed cat, Dexter, and best friend Adam Rippon, 24, a fellow skater who plays multiple roles: brother, father, cheerleader, confidante, sounding board and “boyfriend without having to be my boyfriend,” as she puts it.


Under Nicks, Wagner made significant strides in the artistic aspects of her skating and learned to be a more professional competitor. He stressed the importance of winning over audiences, mindful that judges are swayed by standing ovations, regardless of what the rule book says. He also instilled the importance of behaving like a champion each time she stepped onto the ice, including practice, which judges attend to form impressions of skaters.

In short, he helped Wagner re-introduce herself to the sport and re-set her aspirations in judges’ eyes. And her marks reflected his polish, with Wagner winning the U.S. championships in 2012 and defending the title in 2013.



‘It has not been easy’

Just when everything seemed to be falling in place for her Olympic season, with Sochi nine months off, things started going wrong.

Nicks, who had threatened to retire for 20 years, informed Wagner in April he could no longer travel to competitions at age 84, having logged 110,000 air miles the previous season. Her parents’ divorce, though not necessarily a surprise, was finalized in May. She had parted with her longtime choreographer, couldn’t find a piece of performance music that thrilled her, was struggling with costumes and, once again, in need of a coach.

“You imagine your Olympic season, and everything works out perfectly. Dream come true, you know,” Wagner said with a smile. ”It has not been easy.”

At Rippon’s suggestion, she contacted his coach, Arutyunyan, only to get an awkward silence in reply.

“I don’t think I’m much to write home about,” Wagner said, “but he had no idea who I was on the phone. He said ‘Who?’ ”


Born in Tblisi, Georgia, Arutyunyan competed and coached under the former Soviet system before coming to the United States roughly 12 years ago. His expertise is jumping technique, and that’s precisely what Wagner needed to master the high-risk, back-to-back triple-jump combination from which she had shied away.

To have any shot at an Olympic medal, Wagner knew she needed to perform the triple flip-triple toe she’d been practicing. As she bluntly put it, she’s not innately talented enough to overcome with artistic marks what she’d surrender in technical scores without it. I love that Ashley openly admits this.

“She have no other choices,” Arutyunyan conceded, “because it’s the lowest limit for today. You cannot go lower than that.”

Entering last month’s U.S. championships in Boston, Arutyunyan knew she hadn’t had a chance to properly prepare. The rink in Artesia had been too crowded with recreational skaters and lessons over the Christmas break. And Wagner, a left-hander who skates and jumps the opposite direction from right-handed skaters, spent too much of her run-throughs dodging others.

“It’s like a Ferrari on the road with trucks. Doesn’t work,” the coach said.

Wagner was tentative in her normally brassy short program, scaling back her triple-triple to a triple-double but staying upright. The ungainly falls came two nights later, when instead of defending her U.S. title she finished fourth, a stream of mascara following a river of tears down her face.

After the interviews and drug test that followed, she couldn’t bear to walk through the lobby of the event’s official hotel, knowing it would be teeming with agents, sponsors, fellow competitors and former champions. So she hopped a cab from TD Garden to the Residence Inn just across the Charles River, where her mother was staying.

It was nearing 1 a.m., and the desk clerk paid no attention to the young woman with puffy eyes lugging a plastic sack of teddy bears and bouquets into the lobby. Most of the guests had retreated to their rooms; all that remained were Wagner’s mother and brother, waiting by the gas-log fireplace meant to simulate the warmth of home.


She tried explaining the nervous meltdown that threatened to scuttle her Olympic dream: How her legs had turned to lead the moment her name was called, how her mind fogged over when she fell the first time and suddenly, it was as if she was reliving the U.S. championships of 2010.

“I wish I hadn’t done this,” Wagner told them.

And because tough love and truth-telling are family values, Melissa James didn’t tell her daughter it would all work out. Instead, she reminded her that skating wasn’t her life. There was nothing to do but wait.



‘Mentally tough as nails’

At noon the next day, Wagner was named to the Olympic team, her selection unassailable based on U.S. Figure Skating’s criteria, which heavily weighs skaters’ international results over the previous season. By those measures, Wagner crushed all challengers. Still, the decision flummoxed many who watched Mirai Nagasu skate circles around Wagner and finish third a night earlier, only to be left off the Olympic team. And the perceived injustice triggered a social-media uproar.

At the moment when 17 years of effort and ambition were rewarded, Wagner found herself forced to defend her credentials. She fielded journalists’ questions for nearly an hour afterward about what had gone so horribly wrong, why she felt she deserved to represent the United States in Sochi and how she planned to avoid a similar collapse with an Olympic medal at stake.

“I was overwhelmed from the big lights, the big show and everything being at stake at once,” Wagner said. “I’m not that skater that everyone saw last night. I’m a fierce competitor; I’m mentally tough as nails.”

The United States dominated women’s figure skating from 1968 to 2002, winning five of the 10 Olympic gold medals. The last American woman to win an Olympic medal was Cohen, who claimed silver in 2006, and the United States hasn’t medaled in any of the world championships since.

South Korea’s Kim Yu-na and Japan’s Mao Asada, the reigning Olympic gold and silver medalists, set the current standard of grace and technical precision. Each 23, they’re the favorites entering Sochi. Russia’s 15-year-old jumping phenom, Julia Lipnitskaia, is also deemed a medal threat, along with Italy’s elegant Carolina Kostner, 26; and recently crowned U.S. champion Gracie Gold, 18.

Wagner, who has finished among the top five in the past two world championships, will be in the mix, too — not a vulnerable Juliet but a formidable Delilah.

“A lot of figure skating in recent years has been about the porcelain-doll look, but I feel like I’m someone who you can sit down and have a conversation with over coffee,” Wagner said. “I have fought for everything I’ve gotten. It wasn’t like I was an entitled little girl who Mommy and Daddy just paid for everything and treated her like a princess. I had to earn everything I got. And that developed the way that I compete. I’m scrappy.”

“Ashley Wagner?” she replied. “Two-time national champion?”

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Polina Edmunds Goes for Gold, Good Grades in Sochi



When Polina Edmunds isn’t performing triple Lutzes in the upcoming Olympic Winter Games, the champion figure skater will be reading about the Cold War and studying gene abnormalities for biology class.

The 15-year-old has asked her teachers at the top-ranked Archbishop Mitty High School in San Jose for all her homework assignments so that she can complete them during the three weeks she’ll be skating in Sochi.


And, if the past is any indication, Polina will return from the Olympics – perhaps with a medal in hand – and turn in her assignments and take her makeup quizzes without fanfare or ever asking for an extension.

“I definitely still have to do schoolwork,” Polina told NBC Bay Area last week. “I don’t know exactly how it’s going to work yet, but I’m probably going to be taking a lot of work with me and checking online when I’m there.”

Polina’s teachers want her to keep up with her studies, but they also realize that traveling to Russia – the birth country of her mother, who also doubles as her skating coach – is a teachable moment in itself.

“I want her to find someone who speaks Spanish, an athlete, a coach or whoever and interview them,” said Leslie Zambo, Polina’s Spanish teacher. “I want her to come up with the questions and talk to the class about her experiences. Her classmates would just love it.”

The skater's U.S. history teacher, Anthony Rojo, is also sending Polina off with readings on World War II and the Cold War, a topic that is sure to be of interest to her as her mother, Nina Edmunds, is a native of Tver, Russia.

Polina’s teachers said they would be lenient if the slight blonde skater with a wide, toothy grin and a quiet confidence needs extra more time to complete her assignments.

But she’s never been late or asked for special favors in the past, including when she juggled her coursework with major competitions in Japan, Belarus and Boston. Each time, she asked for her assignments before she left, checked the school’s online calendar on her iPad, downloaded the work, and taught herself the subject matter, all without a tutor or much of her parents’ help.

“She came back from Boston and I fully anticipated she would ask for an extension on her test,” Rojo said of the teen's recent silver medal performance in 2014 U.S. Figure Skating Championships. “But she didn’t. She took the exam the next day and got a B. She is very responsible and diligent. She has never used skating as an excuse not to get her work in.”


Zambo added: “She simply has not missed a step. She’s really low-key and has asked for no special favors.”

Polina’s friend, Elliott Picone, 16, of Hollister, said Polina is dedicated and driven – both on the rink, where she has been since she was 20 months old – and off.

“She doesn’t go to a lot of social events,” Elliott said. “And people admire her for it. When she’s not on the rink, she spends a lot of time in the library.”

Elliott said despite the stress of competing on the world stage, Edmunds has never complained.

"Never. Not once," Elliot said. "She chooses the life she’s living. She just has so much drive.”

Another friend, Emma Chew, 15, of Saratoga, said she had no idea Polina was Olympic-bound until earlier this year.

“I thought it was just a hobby,” Emma said. “She’s very humble. She’ll talk about skating if you ask, but she never brags. I really have no idea how she does it.”

Polina is the third Olympian from Archbishop Mitty, a campus ranked in 2009 by Sports Illustrated as having the top athletic program in California and the third best in the country: Volleyball star Kerri Walsh and soccer champion Brandi Chastain also call the school their alma mater. But, unlike Polina, they went to the Olympics after graduating.

“We draw people who are highly competitive,” Principal Tim Brosnan said. “And Polina’s such a nice kid, who handles the pressure well, without letting it go to her head.”

Polina’s mother, Nina Edmunds, studied at the Lesgaft Academy in St. Petersberg, Russia, and ended up marrying Polina’s father, John Edmunds, who was teaching English and business to Russian students in the early 1990s. The Edmunds also have two boys, James, 17, and Daniel, 11, both of whom are ice hockey players – a tribute to their maternal grandfather.

John Edmunds, CFO of Inphi Corp. in Santa Clara, said he tried to impart on all his children that school is important, and after the Olympics, "Polina will need a day job." He gave a lot of credit to his wife, who is "disciplined and organized" and always sets aside time for their daughter to study.

Polina is a regular kid, though Edmunds joked. It's not like his teenage daughter always "jumps right up" to do her homework. Sometimes, he acknowledged, it stacks up a bit.

Still, he said, the homework can often be a helpful diversion for Polina. That was the case in Boston, he said, when she took second place at the nationals and earned a spot on the Olympic team.

"The homework was good for her," her father said. "It kept her distracted from worrying about her skating programs in between events."


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Newsweek: The Surprising Truth Behind The Olympics' 'Gayest' Sport



This is a long article, so I cut some stuff out.

...The common assumption that male figure skaters are gay - and the latent and often blatant hostility behind it - is the sport's deep and dirty secret. It colors the attitudes and actions of skaters, coaches, judges, officials and even the fans.

That sniggering stereotype has been prevalent for decades, even though few elite skaters have come out publicly, and only one, Rudy Galindo, came out during his Olympic-eligible career. This closet door is locked tight because skaters - gay and straight - know that so many of the people judging them, from judges to sponsors to TV viewers, want the female skaters to be "pretty ladies," and the men to be, well, men...

...A former competitive figure skater and Olympic-level judge who requested anonymity because s/he is still active in the sport, put it this way: "The average person would think it's one of the most accepting sports in the country, because they watch it on TV and see so many gay men... But the mold that U.S. Figure Skating wants to project does not include it. They're looking for that typical manly, masculine, powerful jumper who can be graceful without being feminine." (Some of the people interviewed for this story didn't want to be named or only spoke on background because they feared retribution.)

William Bridel, 41, is a former national- and international-level skater who later worked as director of athlete development, among other roles, at Skate Canada, that country's figure skating governing body. He was also a judge. When he was 17, he came out to his coach. "The first thing my coach said was, 'It's okay, I already knew.' But there was the caveat that it's okay because you're a very straight gay. There's that connection between gender and sexuality, masculinity and sexuality," says Bridel, who is a professor of sports sociology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

"I remember sitting in meetings at Skate Canada, which I think is very progressive," Bridel explains. "This was 10 years ago. I was listening to people talk about having to get a skater 'man up' before we could send them out on international competitions."

...Sports and sexuality have always been tempestuous bedfellows. There is an assumed and often swaggering heterosexuality that comes with playing certain sports (ice hockey, football), just as there is an effeminacy attached to others (figure skating, gymnastics). Just think of the insults most prevalent in sports - male athletes berate each other by slinging words and phrases associated with femininity. From the elementary school playground to Madison Square Garden, men routinely call each other "sissy," "wuss" and "pussy" or tell each other, "you throw (or run) like a girl." Belittling a female athlete is to call her "butch," "manly" or a "beast."

Compounding that superficial, global "bias" is the very nature of figure skating: It is predicated on making the seemingly impossible look easy - leaping high in the air, landing triple and quadruple jumps, spinning at dizzying speeds, and doing it all with grace and emotion. Yet the subjective, artistic nature of figure skating means that it is often perceived to be a "softer" sport. A more graceful sport. In other words, a sport for girls. When female skaters perform, wearing sparkly, rhinestone-studded costumes, their hair and makeup flawless, that image lines up with our cultural norm of what it means to be female. Generally thin and attractive, and dressed in body-hugging costumes, these women appear suggestive without being overtly sexual. When men don sequins or rhinestones - and spin and twirl and artfully dance to music - what we see does not line up with the cultural definition of manliness.

"You get typecast," says Jennifer Kirk, a former American figure skater who was the world junior champion in 2000 and a three-time U.S. world team member. She is also co-creator of the popular figure skating blog The Skating Lesson."You are either the athletic skater, which is another word for the straight guy, like Max Aaron and Elvis Stojko, who aren't very artistic. Or you're the artist, like Johnny Weir, and immediately you think, homosexual."

This friction is precisely why figure skating has an identity crisis, and a festering image problem. Not surprisingly, the USFS downplays the importance of skaters' sexual orientation. "I have never heard one of them speak about their orientation, be it straight or gay," Barbara Reichert, a USFS spokeswoman, said in an email. "It's just not an issue with this generation. They genuinely focus on their skating."lol ok.

However, former skaters, former judges, skating insiders and experts suggest otherwise. "I did feel pressured to portray myself as more masculine," says American figure skater Matthew Savoie, 33, who finished seventh in men's singles at the 2006 games in Torino, Italy. He came out as gay after retiring. "There are modes of behavior that are deemed more acceptable than others."

American Doug Mattis won the 1985 national junior men's title, and held his own at top-level international competitions. He came out in 1992. At the 1994 U.S. Open Pro Figure Skating Championships, he emulated Tonya Harding and Peggy Fleming before stripping off his long-sleeved black shirt to finish his artistic program in a shiny sleeveless vest.

"Back in my day, me and my compatriots were actively told to keep [being gay] a secret," says Mattis, who went on to have a successful professional skating and coaching career. "Skating officials said it was in our best interest. The reasons why were never fully defined.... Some posed it as, Skating's reputation has a hard enough time being accepted by the public anyway. We want to increase our marketability, so boys, butch it up."

The stereotypes trap male and female skaters. "We're stuck in the 1950s with these beautiful housewives on ice," Kirk says. "We have to act a certain way. Our hair and makeup have to look a certain way. And the guys have to be regal and dapper. They can't wear too many sparkles. We have to be Ken and Barbie, but the reality is that Ken is dating Ken and Barbie doesn't always want to look like Barbie, or at least act like Barbie..."

...Efforts to protect (and project) the macho reputation of male skaters have been under way for decades, and skating clubs and organizations tried to lure boys by playing up the masculinity of the sport and virility of its athletes. Of course, the irony is obvious today. "Lots of boys sign up for skating because they want to wear sparkly costumes," says Adams. "Then they find out when they get older, 'Let's try to keep the sparkle down, because that's feminine and then they'll think you're gay.' And of course, they're saying that to some boys who are gay."

It is impossible to say exactly how many elite figure skaters are gay, since so few have come out publicly. Former figure skater and judge Jon Jackson wrote in a 2006 piece for The Advocate, "at least seven of the 14 male Olympic figure skating medalists from the past 20 years are known in certain circles to be interested in other men. In fact, in at least five countries the entire men's singles figure skating team is made up of gay men (albeit some 'teams' are exactly one man)." That same year, figure skating expert Lorrie Kim wrote, "Unofficial insider estimates range from 25 percent to nearly 50 percent. But unbelievably, in 2006, Galindo remains the only top-level skater to have come out while Olympic-eligible."

"Everyone in skating understands the legacy that male figure skaters have grown up with," says Kim, who for many years ran Rainbow Ice, a popular website for gay issues in figure skating. "Closeted skaters will police other closeted skaters and try to keep them in the closet because of that shared sense of risk.... This can be puzzling to people who live in the real world, who don't understand how hard it can be."

...The media's treatment of Weir, who somewhat controversially took sixth place at the Vancouver games (fans thought he deserved a higher finish), underscored the unspoken tensions around sexual orientation in men's figure skating. While Evan Lysacek was often portrayed as the athlete, Weir was the artist - "ornate," "unapologetic" and "flamboyant" (code for "gay"). Broadcasters made derogatory comments about Weir's skating and costumes, questioned his gender and wondered if his flamboyant image might damage the sport. In 2010, after representing the U.S. in Vancouver, he was left off of the post-Olympics Stars on Ice skating tour, although he finished first in an online poll asking fans who they wanted to see in the tour. Reports quickly surfaced that he was excluded for being "not family friendly" enough...

Like most top figure skaters, Jennifer Kirk spent her childhood, teenage and young adult years in the competitive skating world. Born in Newton, Mass., she trained with famed coaches Evy and Mary Scotvold at the Skating Club of Boston and, later, Richard Callaghan and Frank Carroll. "Growing up as a young girl in the sport, all my guy friends were gay," she says. "There was a lot of acceptance in the community, but at a higher level, when you go to the nationals, you see people who are really comfortable in your local rink suddenly putting on airs to seem more heterosexual."

Kirk dated skaters who were either "out of the closet or out on the down low," she says. "To see so many of my friends struggle with this issue.... " she trails off. "One friend said, 'I'm wearing my straight clothes today, when we went to a competition.'"

There is a profound difference between being out at one's local skating club - among friends, family and coaches - and being out to the international media. "Many gay skaters are out everywhere but the press or publicly," says Adams. "There are openly gay people in skating, and this wouldn't be news to anybody who's involved in skating... As a sport, the national governing bodies like USFS and Skate Canada, they are still closeted."

Unpacking exactly why figure skating, as an institution, is closeted - and why insiders deny it - is a complicated task. "You have a culture that's almost entirely about very fem girls, and since it's a grassroots sport, the politics reflect whatever neighborhood the rinks are in," says Kim. "That can get extremely conservative - conservative in the way that makes other countries wonder what's in the American water..."

..."With any judged sport, there's some level of subjectivity," says Lindsey Green, an Olympic sports writer whose work has appeared in New York magazine and Deadspin."The issue with figure skating is the judge/athlete environment and relationship is completely uncontrolled and chaotic... There is no other sport where the judge holds so much power outside of the arena, and the relationship with the athletes and coaches can seemingly affect the overall outcome of the competition. Figure skating judges offer input on costumes, personal life, hair and makeup, music choice. With so much interaction, impartiality becomes increasingly challenging."

While Mattis disagrees, arguing that "a lot of judges and officials in power now are former skaters from my era, so let's just say that there are gay people on both sides of the bang boards at the ice rink," he says the biggest unknown, when it comes to coming out or not, is how marketable one will be. "If you hit it big and become a big star in skating, is Madison Ave. going to want to avoid you if you're an out gay skater? That unknown is what drives most of the fear. Am I hurting my appeal? If I'm an out gay male, does Speed Stick want me in their commercial?"...

Read the full article at the source





Buzzfeed: Why is the world's gayest sport stuck in the closet?


This is a long article, so I cut some stuff out.

When I ask figure skater Jeremy Abbott how athletes should respond to Russia’s anti-gay laws, his eyes widen. “Um,” he says, and stops. He shrugs a little and glances over at the U.S. Figure Skating (USFS) handler who’s standing nearby.

“You don’t have to answer that,” the handler reassures him.

Abbott takes in a breath, glances down. “Yeahhh,” he sighs, almost inaudibly. Then — “I’m going to walk away from that one.”


We’re backstage at the 2014 U.S. Figure Skating Championships, which serve as an unofficial qualifier for the Olympic team, and Abbott’s a favorite. He’s 28 years old, planning to retire at the end of the season and cautious; he was criticized last year for comparing Russia’s laws — which have motivated the rape, torture, and murder of gay men and women — to bad interior design. (“I’m not going to go into somebody’s house and be like, “Um, the way you decorate is hideous.”) A bunch of athletes had been cornered on the topic, and the less media-savvy skaters hadn’t yet mastered the art of expressing compassion while sidestepping responsibility. Abbott just happened to come up with a particularly inept metaphor.

Later, when I pass him in the hallway, he apologizes twice.

To outsiders, men’s figure skating is widely perceived as the Gayest Sport Ever, the butt of endless jokes — consider last weekend’s SNL cold open about the “U.S. Men’s Heterosexual Figure Skating Team.” The direct action group Queer Nation has recently protested figure skaters Brian Boitano and Johnny Weir for not speaking up against Russia’s anti-gay laws. One of the group’s representatives, who asked to not be named, tells me, “Everyone assumes all male skaters are gay. So what? … I have a hard time believing that figure skating is a particularly homophobic sport. I don’t understand this impulse, particularly from figure skaters, to hide their sexuality. You can’t tell me that if Jeremy Abbott came out as gay that it would affect his standing in the skating world.”...

...So what exactly is male figure skating — which has the potential to be a gay haven in the world of sports — so afraid of?

...Across town, the junior men — the second-highest level, eligible for some international competitions but not the Olympics — compete in the short program......Off the ice, a cluster of male skaters in slim-cut jackets keep a running commentary, snapping their fingers and rolling their eyes at one another. “That’s my baby!” they shout. “Who run the world?!” They call the men on the ice “Princess” and “Beyoncé,” as in, “I love you, Beyoncé!” Gracie Gold, soon-to-be-ladies champion, watches nearby, and someone yells to her, “Gracie! They’re not red enough!” Then, to his friend, “her lips.” When one guy wears fingerless gloves and performs to music with the sound of engines in it, they snort with laughter: “What is this, the Cars soundtrack?”

If you’ve heard anyone talk about skating, you’d be forgiven for thinking that there are two kinds of skaters: athletic and artistic. But these are coded butch/femme terms, ones appropriate to an activity that still can’t decide where it falls on the gendered spectrum between art and sport. For male skaters, athletic means manly, muscular, stoic; artistic means elegant, graceful, showing emotion. Athletic means tight T-shirts, fists, and military beats; artistic, flowy shirts and delicate fingers. Athletic seems straight. Artistic seems gay. Never mind that some of the best skaters are both athletic and artistic, by standard definitions: In men’s skating, as in any high school locker room, a drop of femininity will negate any quantity of testosterone. That’s why some skaters are considered artistic even if their technical abilities are higher than their competitors’ — and why others are considered athletic, even if theirs are not. For ladies, of course, the pattern runs in reverse, with athletic reserved for muscular, less-than-ultra-feminine skaters, or, often enough, women of color.

To the outside world, the idea of a butch male skater may seem ludicrous. In a 2010 story for New York magazine called “The Less Flamboyant One,” “athletic” skater Evan Lysacek models a bejeweled snake in Vera Wang’s showroom. But the characterization belies an odd truth. In addition to outwardly policing outfits — say, forbidding men from wearing tights — the world of skating has created its own hierarchy of masculinity, which is subtle to the point of being near-indiscernible from the outside. For instance, twirling is masculine but arm-flapping is not. Sheer sleeves are only dangerously feminine if they come to a point at the wrist. Sequins are fine. Cutouts are not fine. Lunges are more macho than spirals. Fewer feathers are manlier than more feathers. It’s a clever, unspoken system, based on the premise that it’s a lot easier to prove a skater’s manliness by comparing him to another skater than by comparing him to some other kind of athlete.

I’ll note here that without exception, the parents I spoke to at nationals expressed pride and support of their boys’ achievements in the sport. But I noticed something else too. Almost all the parents, including those whose sons were “living the dream” as international competitors, offered a list of other sports their sons participated in: hockey, lacrosse, soccer, martial arts, hockey, gymnastics, running, downhill skiing. Offered proudly, as if amazed by their children’s breadth of achievement, as if compelled to justify their sons as real athletes — not just the most elite skaters in America.

If the skating world is particularly cautious of its reputation at the moment, it may be because the sport as a whole is in trouble....

Some blame the sport’s gay reputation for its drop in popularity, despite the fact that that reputation is nothing new. One senior coach and former Olympian, who requested anonymity, thinks he knows the problem: “No straight man wants to see a man in sequins or crap like that,” he explains. American figure skating, in his opinion, is skewing artistic. “Europe has more masculine-type skating. Even Japan has a little more” — he makes a fist — “power.”

...“In the past we had a couple [top skaters] that were so out, flamboyant … especially [Johnny Weir], he was bad for the sport, really, because for a while he was, you could say, the face of the federation. I’m talking about mainstream America.” He laughs. “I literally know like 50 people who would not turn on the TV and watch it because of that. That’s a problem.” His own top skater, he tells me proudly, is “a true-true guy. The straightest they come.”

The thing about skaters who seem gay, the coach points out, is that they attract a gay audience, whereas straight skaters “attract everybody. Entertaining, fun, man. Women like [them], straight men can look and say, ‘Hey, that’s cool.’ Everybody’s OK.” He smiles. Problem solved.

Others have argued that skating is less gay than it appears. Scott Hamilton, a 1984 Olympic champion who has been criticized as homophobic, explains to me later on the phone that skaters aren’t necessarily gay — they just seem like it. “I think that at times, guys in skating may or may not take on some feminine characteristics because the people they’re with are girls.” He sounds apologetic. “That has happened in the past.”

According to Lorrie Kim at Outsports, “unofficial insider estimates” place the number of gay skaters at roughly 25% to 50%. But, notably, a number of gay men have claimed the percentage is much lower — perhaps because, in being out, they feel alone in their communities...



...Junior skater Chase “Beyoncé” Belmontes has a style some would call artistic. ...When I ask him why skaters won’t talk about Sochi, he nods. “They’re scared that they’re going to say the wrong thing and offend their fan base. The USFS could get involved if they say too much.” And some of the skaters might be worried about their own safety, going from a stereotypically gay sport into a homophobic country. “In the inside world,” Belmontes explains, “everyone loves male skaters. Men's is always the most exciting discipline.To the outside world, they think it’s the epitome of femininity in men. People think if you become a good skater then you lose part of your masculinity forever.

...Some of skating’s current homophobia stems from the early ’90s, when a number of top skaters died AIDS-related deaths. The media took off with the story, aligning the sport with HIV, and, by extension, the “high-risk group” of gay men. “AIDS Deaths Tear at Figure-Skating World,” announced the New York Times. One story in the Calgary Herald, by Michael Clarkson, was titled “Skating’s Spectre” and claimed that over 40 skaters and coaches had already died; as sociologist Mary Louise Adams points out in her book Artistic Impressions, “It is not entirely clear whether the ‘spectre’ of Clarkson’s title was HIV or gayness itself.” Brian Boitano called the story a “witch-hunt.” Meanwhile, skating officials struggled to distance the sport from the stigma of the disease — “trying to protect their product,” as David Dore, the head of the Canadian Figure Skating Association, described it.

At the same time, skating’s macho side was re-emerging. Skaters like Kurt “Cowboy” Browning and Elvis “The Terminator” Stojko became media and fan favorites, providing visible reassurance of masculinity in a time of crisis. Not that their strategies always worked: As Adams describes it, “In the 1990s, when some skaters tried to mark their masculinity in an aggressive fashion by sporting tight black T-shirts, studded wrist cuffs, and (fake or real) leather trousers, they were simply trading one set of gay signifiers for another.”

Since then, various individuals and groups have tried to make the skating more manly, perhaps most notably in Skate Canada’s planned 2009 “Tough” campaign, which aimed to rebrand the sport by getting skaters to emphasize the difficulty and danger of their stunts — and, in one case, to pose for photos on Harley-Davidsons. After public outcry deemed the campaign homophobic, Skate Canada retracted its efforts, denying that the campaign had ever existed (“…there is no and never has been any ‘tough’ campaign … There is no interest at Skate Canada in making the sport more macho … As for a skater’s personal life, Skate Canada gives no direction”). The conflict highlights one of skating’s emerging challenges: presenting a facade of straightness for a public that increasingly condemns homophobia even more than it condemns homosexuality.

...And in a prejudiced setting, much of skaters’ reluctance to come out stems from a honed sense of self-protection — one of the same reasons that non-skaters may be reluctant to come out. When Doug Mattis turned pro, he was warned that coming out would compromise his financial viability; when Brian Orser was outed by a former lover during a palimony suit, he worried that his career was over. Rudy Galindo was skipped over multiple times for international competitions, once even when he was first alternate and an assigned skater dropped out — he’s claimed that he had to skate twice as well as other skaters to win. Today, when officials advise skaters not to come out, their warning is couched in a rhetoric of concern: If an athlete reveals too much about his personal life, he could be attacked on the internet. (Never mind that skaters could be, and are, attacked for plenty of other things, ranging from the shapes of their bodies to their choice of music and costume.) However it’s framed, the warning keeps them in the closet; when an athlete receives advice from the same officials who make selections for coveted international competitions and events, he’ll probably follow it.

One former medalist, who also requested anonymity, suggests another reason that so few skaters come out: “Most skaters start when they’re younger than 10, and immediately their sexuality is a topic of discussion, even before they’re sexual. Adults would say, ‘You’re such a great skater, but I’d never let my boy figure skate.’ Hockey players look down on us for being faggots. We didn’t know what it meant at all, we just knew our peers thought it was bad, so we didn’t want to deal with it. That becomes an ingrained reluctance to bring it up even as we get older.”

Some of the pressure, he says, comes from girls at the rink, who vastly outnumber the boys and can be outspoken in evaluating their rink mates as potential boyfriends; some of it comes from skaters being homeschooled, often living at home until they’re done competing, so they have fewer points of contact with the outside world. “When you treat an issue one way as a young teen, you do the same when you’re older,” the former medalist explains, especially “in the bubble of figure skating, where everyone is making an issue of sexuality. At this point, gay skaters don’t want their sexual lives to be a topic of conversation because it’s been a topic of conversation since they started skating.” He adds, “One of the reasons I went into [perceived masculine industry] is because I wanted to compete with all the douchebags who had criticized my skating my whole life, and I wanted to beat them at their own game.”

Finally, coming out may be too risky, with too little possible reward. As this former medalist puts it, “You can choose to almost disappoint the audience by confirming if you’re gay, and if you’re not, you can potentially earn some points by being straight. The majority of the audience is female, so if you’re straight it’s in your interest to articulate that, because you can garner more female fans.”

And articulate they do, because straight skaters are often rewarded with not just fans but corporate sponsorships, favorable TV commentary, and an extra boost in competitions. Consider seven-time Canadian and three-time world champion Patrick Chan, who holds the world record for highest points despite a tendency to wobble under pressure, and who has inspired a new word: Chanflation. He’s also publicly straight. A few seasons ago, he even skated a short program about picking up girls in bars, in which he pantomimed elbowing someone, taking a drink, and running on his toes with his arms spread. At one point, he lifted his arms to the side and drooped his head, like a jazzier version of Rudy Galindo’s move, in his 1996 AIDS remembrance exhibition program, where he mimed hanging on a cross. But no: Chan had draped his arms around the shoulders of two invisible females, and in another moment he reeled, punched by a jealous boyfriend. It’s playful! It’s funny! It’s heterosexual! Good thing no one understands the new scoring system, because surely that’s worth half a point.ok but how many women are actually lusting after Chiddy besides the one ONTDer who changed her mind?...



...When Jeremy Abbott and Jason Brown make the Olympic team, with bronze-medalist Max Aaron falling behind, there are murmurs about the wisdom of sending two artistic skaters to represent the U.S. in Sochi. But others are pleased. “The team is pretty darn pro-gay, pretty darn loving of LGBT issues,” says Doug Mattis. “It wouldn’t be surprising to me if after they compete, after they come home, you’ll hear them lend their voice in support of LGBT issues.”

Read the full article at the source.
pic source: 12





It's the fierce 2014 European Figure Skating Champion Julia Lipnitskaia!


source

Also, a good New York Times article on the rise of Russian women's skating.



I'm sure everyone's already read the Newsweek and Buzzfeed articles but I'm cross-posting this to ONTD and am too lazy to change it.

unofficial USA and RUSSIA team event rosters!

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@AshWagner2010 and @jeremyabbottpcf definites for short programs in team event.@usatoday reported @GraceEGold and @jasonbskates for free

— Philip Hersh (@olyphil) February 4, 2014

USA Today

Russia Team event:
Pairs: Volosozhar/Trankov SP; Stolbova/Klimov FS
Men: Evgeni Plushenko
Dance: Bobrova Soloviev SD; Ilinykh Katsalapov FD
Ladies: Julia Lipnitskaia
source

I'm happy Russia is finally rewarding Julia's consistency.
If Russia wins the team gold, Julia will be 5 days younger than Tara was in Nagano. Tara will still have her youngest individual Winter OGM record but still, pretty neat.






I'm a little surprised to see this from Scoot:

Sochi's Most Wanted: Have You Seen These Skaters?

Sochi Team Mens SP and Pairs SP Watchpost!

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MENZ @ 7:30pm local / 10:30am EST

STARTING ORDER:
Great Britain - Matthew Parr
Italy - Paul Bonifacio Parkinson
Ukraine - Yakov Godorozha
Russia - Evgeny Plushenko
USA - Jeremy Abbott
Germany - Peter Liebers
China - Han Yan
France - Florent Amodio
Canada - Patrick Chan
Japan - Yuzuru Hanyu

LIVE RESULTS

PAIRZ @ 9:10pm local / 12:10pm EST

STARTING ORDER:
Japan - Narumi Takahashi/Ryuichi Kihara
Great Britain - Stacey Kemp/David King
Ukraine - Julia Lavrentieva/Yuri Rudyk
Germany - Maylin Wende/Daniel Wende
China - Cheng Peng/Hao Zhang
USA - Marissa Castelli/Simon Shnapir
France - Vanessa James/Morgan Cipres
Canada - Meagan Duhamel/Eric Radford
Italy - Stefania Berton/Ondrej Hotarek
Russia - Tatiana Volosozhar/Maxim Trankov

LIVE RESULTS

STREAMS
http://www.hahabar.com/20140206/v--741728-52f31da94981a9.24891759.html
http://www.hahabar.com/20140206/v--741876-52f3a8a19b91a5.61315366.html (Russian)
http://www.hahabar.com/20140206/v--741878-52f3a8a2a650c6.28985080.html (English)
http://www.bbc.com/sport/live/winter-olympics/25812674
http://olympics.cbc.ca/videos/live/video/figure-skating-team-event-men-short-program-and-pairs-short-program-webcast.html
http://live.russia.tv/
http://news.sportbox.ru/Vidy_sporta/Events/Sochi2014/spbvideo_NI430135_Figurnoe-katanie-Komandi
http://stream.nbcolympics.com/figure-skating/winter/15417/ (if you have a NBC subscription)

I'm using http://hola.org to get around geoblocking. It's easy, just add it to your browser and change it to whichever country the site's stream is in (UK, Canada, Russia). I'm in the U.S. and I was able to have the BBC, CBC, and Russia1 working in separate tabs at the same time for skiing quals earlier. You can also pay $5 for http://tunnelbear.com.


post in comments if you find any more streams

a Tara Lipinski post. does anyone care?

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On her health habits -- then and now:
I was so young when I was competing that I wasn't as focused on my diet. I was a kid -- I ate a lot, and I worked out a lot. But as I get older, I definitely want to be healthier. I have a really bad sweet tooth. It's a problem!

I'm in tune with my body. Whether I'm skating or Spinning or doing barre, I just feel better working out [regularly]. I don't know if it's because I've done it forever that it feels strange not to, but I really do believe that if you try to eat healthy and you work out, it starts your day off good.

On how she dealt with the Olympic-sized pressure:

It was so stressful! Looking back, when you're in it, you train for [stress], and that is almost your comfort zone. And then there's those moments when you get that feeling, where you do know that this is huge, and you have so much pressure on you, and there's so many people relying on you, and the rest of your life is riding on four minutes.

There's really no way to deal with that pressure. You just keep training, and you try to find ways to trick your mind into getting in the right mindset. I've worked with sports psychologists. You have to train your mind just as much as you train your body.

In skating, it's 90 percent mental and 10 percent physical when you're at this level. All of the skaters are good. Everyone has the tricks. It's just who can handle the pressure during those four minutes.

On how she deals with everyday stressors:
I'm really grateful for having the career that I did, because it gave me some perspective. Whenever I start to feel stressed, I compare it to what my life was, and it doesn't seem so stressful anymore. I'll never experience those types of nerves as intensely again, which is nice! I love competing, but it's nice to not have that stress anymore, as I get older. I always reflect back on that, and it makes me feel better because I know if I can get through that, this is cake.

On the importance of sleep, both then and now:
Nine hours. I needed nine hours [when competing], and I still do. Seven hours I can sort of work on, but once we're below seven, I'm in a fog.

I had to travel a lot, and I wasn't really allowed to understand what jet lag was. My coach said, "You're here, you skate. It's 10 a.m. here." I got so used to tricking my body, so when I got on the plane I'd sleep.

On her own Olympic experience and her advice for the Sochi athletes:
I did everything. I was a little kid in a candy shop, and I wanted to experience everything. And that's the one thing I'm glad I did. I didn't just make it another competition.

A lot of skaters hole themselves up in hotels and focus -- and that's great, and that may work for them. But for me, having the Olympic experience was as great as winning the medal. I have so many memories of living in the village and meeting other athletes, seeing other sports and feeling the energy. It's so magical.

That would be my advice: Take it all in. You never know if you're going to go back. You should feel so happy and proud that you're representing the U.S. and try to take in as much as you can.

There's so much energy, and you realize it's so much bigger than just your performance or your sport. You really get the vibe of what the Olympics are all about: everyone coming together, and all of these elite athletes that are the best in the world in one compact area.

source








source


I'm happy this comm has started to awaken from the dead!

Really, this is an actually nice Evan post!

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Ok I love to hate on Evan, but this is utterly adorable! The fun he's having in this video is pretty contagious, might I say. It's such a departure from his monotone bro-voice interviews. We haven't seen this Evan since 2007, I thought he was lost to the world for good...not so!

BRIAN JOUBERT ON HIS LAST OLYMPIC EXPERIENCE + PICTORIAL EVIDENCE OF HIS WISE WORDS

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Graphic proof
A very patriotic procedure he's undergoing there omg.

French interview translated by yours truly

Brian Joubert : ‘I want to profit from enjoy the Games’

The Olympic Games “have always been a failure” for Brian Joubert. This year, the French skater approaches things differently and hopes to enjoy what will be his “last challenge”.

It's your fourth Olympic participation. At this stage, are there still things to learn?
There are always things to learn. I’m 29, I learn new things about my sport and my personality every day. Now, the Games have always been a failure. Often you learn the most from failures, so I have learnt a lot from my previous participations. I know the mistakes I have made in the past and I want to avoid making them again this season.
Such as?
I want to take advantage of make the most of the Games, which I haven’t done until now. I was prone to locking myself inside my bubble. I wouldn’t go to the opening ceremonies, or to the Olympic village. I would put too much pressure on me. I would make a mountain out of the Games, whereas they are a competition, certainly one more present in the media, but similar to the others.
With your experience and at your age, are you calmer in your approach of the 2014 edition?
Certainly, I am surprised not to feel any stress, any pressure. Moreover, I am content that this edition is taking place in Russia, where figure skating is a popular discipline and where I am quite well-known by the public. All this is reassuring.
In this context, what could your ambitions be?
It will be my last challenge, so I want to finish on a positive note. A medal is possible, but it will be very difficult, it will take an excellent competition.
Your last competition? Meaning that you will retire after the Sochi Games?
Yes, after Sochi I want to turn over a new leaf. I am thinking about joining a pro circuit, doing galas, professional competitions, but no longer amateur ones.
Do you feel like the leader of French ice sports?
I consider myself one of them, but other athletes can lay claims to a medal, too. Nathalie Péchalat and Fabian Bourzat in ice dance or Florent Amodio, who can hope for something in Sochi, he is still young. So I consider myself as one of the leaders, but I am not the locomotive of French ice sports.
Do you have the impression that by your participation you have to highlight ice sports?
Yes, but I think that it will take a medal to do it, that would give a bit of a boost to ice sports, to figure skating. It would offer us good publicity. The level is still very high, but there is no reason not to succeed. Even more so as now we have the team events, in which a bronze medal is conceivable. We will have to be all-attacking and not give up.
Speaking of which, tell us about this team event.
We have already tested it during the Worlds Championships, which take place every two years. [wtf] Often it goes well, as there is less pressure and we enter it to have some fun. The Games will be different, since the stakes will be higher – an Olympic medal.
Viewing last year’s results in winter sports, skiing, as well as biathlon, have aced it. Compared to alpine skiing, which is the torch-bearer, isn’t it difficult to coexist?
I think that there isn’t much of an imbalance. Obviously, alpine skiing is the main discipline of the Winter Games, but figure skating is not sidelined. I am not complaining about our situation, as we are present in the media, but not too much, which allows us to maintain a certain tranquility. I find ourselves privileged. It’s something that works fine for me.

Source here


Please excuse the crappy formating, it's my umpteenth attempt to post and I'm at work in a hurry.
Also, the little vid is nice, although Brian looks kinda tired.

Edited to correct an embarrassing mistake and to bold a few things. Thank you, lullabylily




:

Opening Ceremony

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Canada Uses Humor to Support Gay Rights

Sochi Team Day 2 Watchpost! Dance SD, Ladies SP, Pairs FS!

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1 Russia - 47
2 Canada - 41
3 USA - 34
4 Italy - 31
5 Japan - 30

DANCE SD @ 6:30pm local / 9:30am EST

STARTING ORDER
China - Huang/Zheng
Ukraine - Heekin-Canedy/Dun
Japan - Reed/Reed
Germany - Zhiganshina/Gazsi
Great Britain - Coomes/Buckland
France - Pechalat/Bourzat
Italy - Cappellini/Lanotte
Russia - Bobrova/Soloviev
Canada - Virtue/Moir
USA - Davis/White

live results


LADIES SP @ 8:10pm local / 11:10am EST
STARTING ORDER
Canada - Kaetlyn Osmond
China - Kexin Zhang
Great Britain - Jenna McCorkell
Ukraine - Natalia Popova
Germany - Nathalie Weinzierl
France - Mae Berenice Meite
USA - Ashley Wagner
Russia - Julia Lipnitskaia
Japan - Mao Asada
Italy - Carolina Kostner

live results

PAIRS FS @ 10:05pm local / 1:05pm EST

STARTING ORDER
Japan - Takahashi/Kihara
USA - Castelli/Shnapir
Italy - Berton/Hotarek
Canada - Moore-Towers/Moscovitch
Russia - Stolbova/Klimov

live results

STREAMS
http://www.coolsport.tv/nfl-live-streaming-5.html BBC
http://www.tvpc.com/Channel.php?ChannelID=55 BBC
http://www.tvpc.com/Channel.php?ChannelID=48781 BBC
http://www.tvpc.com/Channel.php?ChannelID=26369 NBC SPORTS
http://www.tvpc.com/Channel.php?ChannelID=42490 NBC SPORTS
http://www.feed2all.eu/watch/238411/1/watch--figure-skating:-team-ice-dance-short-dance.html
http://www.hahabar.com/20140208/v--743081-52f5a87f774537.29057880.html
http://www.hahabar.com/20140208/v--743722-52f638d84eae44.12547739.html BBC
http://www.hahabar.com/20140208/v--743083-52f5a88237df78.52758954.html
http://www.hahabar.com/20140208/v--743085-52f5a8855c0f95.81152505.html
http://olympics.cbc.ca/online-listing/channel=webcast03/index.html
http://www.bbc.com/sport/live/winter-olympics/25818599
http://live.russia.tv/
http://2014.rt.com/live/
use Hola to get around geoblock

Will Ashley Wagner be Sochi's McKayla Maroney?

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Check out Ashley Wagner Face.

The American figure skater was all waves and smiles following a good performance in Saturday's team figure skating event in Sochi. Wagner sat down with the rest of the U.S. team and her reactions suggested she was fully ready to receive a score worthy of a good rebound from her poor national championship showing.

The posted numbers, however, left much to be desired. Even though Wagner helped the United States team advance in the event, her fourth-place score of 63.10 left her disappointed.

At least, we're pretty sure she was disappointed.

Though the look on her face said it all, Wagner later relayed the same message to reporters.

“I know what I’m capable of and what this program is capable of,” Wagner said in Sochi. “I don’t agree with the marks, but that’s what the individual event is for.”

Wagner's look of disgust is so distinct we could see it becoming a meme of these Winter Games.

And given the viral sensation that was McKayla Maroney's unimpressed turn in the 2012 Summer Games, we just couldn't help combining the two.












source

Superjavi's thoughts on interior decorating: When in Sochi, keep the closet door shut.

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Gay rights groups in Spain criticised the country's flagbearer, the men's figure-skater Javier Fernández, before yesterday's opening ceremony after the two-time European champion said gay people should "lie low" during the Games. In an interview with the Spanish newspaper El Mundo, Fernández said: "The Games are about sport and not politics. I have my opinions and I don't get involved in what others think, but I think whether we like it or not, we have to respect the laws of the countries we visit. It's not such a big dilemma. It's better that homosexuals lie low a bit during the Games and then afterwards they can get on with their lives."

source
original Spanish interviewsorry my high school Spanish isn't good enough to translate it for _skating, but he doesn't really say anything else interesting

I think I'll be paying close attention to Borser's demeanor in the kiss & cry.
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