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Live, from Prague, the Kurt-and-Elvis show
Source: |
Maclean's, v106 n11 p42(4). |
Date: |
March 15, 1993 |
Author: |
James Deacon and Mary Nemeth |
Abstract: |
Canadian figure skaters Kurt Browning and Elvis Stojko are favored to win medals at the 1993 World Figure Skating Championships in Prague, the Czech republic. The two Canadians are part of the strongest team ever, according to team officials. Other members are profiled. |
Full Text COPYRIGHT Maclean Hunter (Canada) 1993
Kurt Browning is a lithe and easy-going Albertan who performs, on ice or on
camera, like a natural. Elvis Stojko is a squarely built and intense Ontarian
who, while not as outgoing as Browning, has learned to cope with his celebrity
because that is a requirement of his sport. Dissimilar as they seem, the two
Canadian skaters are united by the excellence that both bring to their
craft--and their determination to be the very best. Browning, the 26-year-old
veteran from tiny Caroline, southwest of Edmonton, has won three world titles
and goes into this week's World Figure Skating Championships in Prague, the
Czech Republic, as the favorite to capture a fourth. Stojko, 20, from Richmond
Hill, outside Toronto, is rated a close second--so close that a single slip
could determine the outcome. But the would-be titans of skating insist that
they go to Prague not as opponents, but as teammates. "We'll compete against
the rest of the world," Stojko said. "We'll cheer each other on."
Despite their efforts to downplay it, Browning and Stojko's all-Canadian clash
for No. 1 has been the dominant topic on the road to Prague. In fact, the duel
has been the subject of speculation since Browning and Stojko finished second
and third, respectively, behind Ukrainian Viktor Petrenko at the 1992
championships in Oakland, Calif. Petrenko has since turned professional. But
the two Canadians hasten to point out that there are other top skaters vying
for the vacant title. Among them are rising American star Scott Davis,
reigning European champion Dmitri Dmitrenko of Ukraine and Philippe Candeloro
of France. And in a notoriously political sport, up-and-comers will be seeking
a high placing in Prague to position themselves favorably--in the judges'
minds--for next winter's Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway. But regardless
of rank before the event, said Browning, "you still have to go out there and
skate."
While obscured by the glare of publicity surrounding the men, the remaining
Canadian skaters left for Europe brimming with confidence. Team officials
quietly predicted that the current group could be the country's best team
ever. Good performances by Josee Chouinard of Laval, Que., the national
champion, and runner-up Karen Preston of Mississauga, Ont., could put both in
medal contention. And veteran pairs skaters Isabelle Brasseur of
St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., and Lloyd Eisler of Seaforth, Ont., enter their
competition determined to improve on last year's Olympic and world bronze
medals.
Together, the skaters have attracted the attention of an increasing number of
Canadians. The five-day national championships last month in Hamilton, Ont.,
drew 116,786 fans, more than twice last year's then-record total in Moncton,
N.B., and the 17,125-seat Copps Coliseum was sold out for the men's free skate
final. At the same time, A. C. Neilsen reported that nearly two million adults
watched the CTV telecast of the men's final, up from 1.15 million in 1992. "It
felt like the Worlds there, what with the hype," Stojko said. "It was intense,
and it was tougher there because it was the first time that Kurt and I had
been pitted against each other." Overall, said David Dore, director general of
the Ottawa-based Canadian Figure Skating Association, "I think the sport is in
very good shape right now--there's a lot of competition among all of our
skaters, and that makes it more interesting."
If Kurt Browning had had his way, there would be no imminent showdown over who
is the best skater in the world. Instead, Elvis Stojko would be the odds-on
favorite to win the 1993 world title; Browning would not even be competing.
Going into the 1992 season, Browning planned to skate in the nationals, the
Olympics in Albertville, France, and the World Championships in Oakland.
Beyond that, he had set his sights on a farewell skating tour with his close
friend, American skater Kristi Yamaguchi, and a long and prosperous
professional career. But that did not happen, because that scenario was based
on his assumption that he would win an Olympic medal. "I thought that a
hurricane would have to hit me to not finish in the top three at the Olympic
Games," he said in a break from training in Toronto recently. "Well, a
hurricane did hit me."
That hurricane took the form of a back injury that stole about eight weeks of
critical pre-Olympics training time. The injury was only partly rehabilitated
by the time he got to France. "The fight was just to get healthy enough to go
to Albertville," he said. "There was nothing left to take me that one step
higher." The three-time world champion and favorite for Olympic gold stumbled
through his short program and free skate, and fell to sixth. "Even if I had
lost and finished second in some wild finish, that would have been okay," he
said. "But it was just nothing. It was like there was no ending to the story."
Browning is not one to dwell endlessly on misfortune. "I got over it," he
said. "I went out that night, partied with my family and friends, went skiing
the next day, went to a hockey game the next night." But the disappointment of
Albertville did force him to reassess his future. The first task, he said, was
to continue his rehabilitation and improve his standing at the next month's
Worlds. He did: despite some lingering back pain, he finished second. And last
summer, he decided against turning professional in order to keep training for
the Lillehammer games--which, under the new staggered Olympic calendar, were
less than two years away. But in doing so, he opted to leave his longtime
club, Royal Glenora in Edmonton, and coach, Michael Jiranek, and move to
Toronto to train under Louis Stong at the tony Granite Club. "Because of the
assumption that I was turning professional, I was psyched to change my life,"
he said. "So when I decided to stay amateur, the thought of going back to the
same bench that I had sat on for 11 years, I just thought, `I can't do this.'
I just needed a change."
The jury is still out on life in Toronto. He talks longingly about friends,
family and coaches in Alberta, and he admits that he is still somewhat of an
outsider at his new training home. In Edmonton, he said, he was just plain
Kurt; at the Granite Club, he is Kurt Browning. But competitively, he added,
the change has done him good. "We wanted to avoid comparisons with what he had
been doing before," Stong said. "I mean, he was a three-time world champion,
so it would be a bit silly for me to step in and criticize his previous
training regimen." Among other things, Browning began training with weights to
build his upper body strength. "In Edmonton, I didn't do much off-ice
training," Browning said. "I didn't feel that it was necessary. But with the
injury, I got a crash course in the body, and how to keep my back loose and
relaxed."
Browning says that he gained a lot of confidence from his win in Hamilton. He
performed the two new routines he will skate in Prague, a short program
choreographed to drum music and a free skate that he calls Bogie, set to the
theme from the Humphrey Bogart classic Casablanca. Stong, who coached Barbara
Underhill and Paul Martini to a world pairs championship in 1984, said that
both of Browning's programs are scripted to exploit the skater's abilities as
a performer. The free skate includes a minute-long stretch of pure acting that
ends with a triple Axel jump, as if to remind the audience that the
performance is about skating. After a run-through in practice recently,
Browning looked out towards the rink and said confidently: "The program I did
out there today would have won the Worlds in Oakland."
The Annandale Recreation Centre in Barrie, 90 km north of Toronto, has two
rinks. On one, crowds of kids skate wobbly oblongs to piped-in music. On the
other, about a dozen elite figure skaters work out under the watchful eye of
Doug Leigh and the other coaches at the Mariposa School of Skating. On this
day in late February, the ice temperature and softness have been adjusted to
match exactly the conditions at the Sports Hall in Prague. Leigh is doing
everything he can to prepare his star student, Elvis Stojko, for the challenge
that lies ahead.
It is easy to pick Stojko out, even among so many good skaters. In white
sweatshirt and red skating pants, he is the one making triple jumps appear as
simple as stepping over a low curb. He is Air Stojko, soaring above the crowd,
coiling into tight spins before unravelling into seamless landings. A banner
at one end of the building reads, "You're in Quadruple Country," a place where
Elvis, without doubt, is king. Stojko is the only skater ever to have landed a
quadruple jump in combination with another jump in competition. "Growing up, I
was always consistent with the jumps," he said. "They didn't just come to
me--I worked hard at them--but I enjoyed doing them, so that made it easier."
But leaping is not solely what has made Stojko a serious challenger for a
world title. After all, at the 1991 Worlds in Munich when he landed that first
quad-combination (a quadruple toe loop followed by a double toe loop), he
finished sixth. Stojko attributes his breakthrough to maturity, and to
improving the overall quality of his program. With choreographers Michelle
Leigh and Uschi Keszler, he has "filled in the blanks" with a skating style
that is as precise as Browning's is graceful. Stojko trains three to four
hours a day, five days a week, and approaches practice with the same intensity
that he gives to his competitive performances. "I guess I just want to be the
best," he said. "It's the same with the other things I do, like the martial
arts or motorbiking. Some days I get bored with training, but that's when I'm
not looking for new things to do. I have to set new goals all the time, higher
and higher, better and better."
For a long time, Stojko said, he looked to Browning for inspiration. "It was
great when I was younger to sit in Kurt's shadow and learn from what he was
doing and not take so much pressure," he said. "Now, it's a matter of us being
side-by-side. I'm not behind him any more. I'm out of his shadow and I'm now
taking my own place." But he admitted that he is venturing into new
competitive territory. He is acutely aware that he must control more than just
his skating in order to realize his world championship dream. "It's a mental
thing, a matter of putting it out on the ice when it counts. There's more
pressure, and that's the toughest part." But he added: "Now, there is the
possibility of finishing first. I can almost taste it."
In a sense, many of the Canadian skaters are victims of timing: they happen to
be competing in the era of the Kurt-and-Elvis show. But Isabelle Brasseur and
Lloyd Eisler are stars in their own right. And after a disappointing Olympic
year, Brasseur, 22, and Eisler, 29, appear poised to challenge for gold. At a
national team simulation of the Worlds in Toronto last month, they skated a
lyrical performance, nailing the side-by-side double Axels that were their
bane in 1992. Tracy Wilson, a former Canadian dance champion with Rob McCall,
who died of AIDS-related cancer in 1991, said Brasseur and Eisler's simulated
skate at Maple Leaf Gardens was perhaps their best-ever performance. Now a
skating analyst for CBS, Wilson observed that the Canadian pair is a match for
the top European team of Russians Marina Eltsova and Andrey Bushkov. "If they
skate in Prague the way they did at the Gardens," she added, "I think they
will win easily."
Eisler and Brasseur say that they rekindled their confidence by learning to
ignore the expectations of others and, instead, just to skate for themselves.
They attribute that change partly to their on-ice disappointments last year,
but more to how they coped with the death of Isabelle's father last fall.
"When my dad died, Lloyd went through many of the same things that I did,"
Brasseur said. "He knew my dad well, and he was there when I found out." In
Hamilton, the pair skated with greater emotion and intimacy than in the past,
and they now contend that they are capable of making a mark on the sport. Said
Eisler: "We want to be one of those teams that other skaters look back on and
say, `Yeah, Brasseur and Eisler, they were something."
Though their aims may not be so lofty, Josee Chouinard and Karen Preston both
feel capable of breaking into the top three. Both had somewhat disappointing
Olympic results--Preston finished eighth, Chouinard ninth. But the women's
event is wide open thanks to the retirement of Yamaguchi and the inconsistent
records of front-runners Nancy Kerrigan of the United States and Surya Bonaly
of France. Chouinard, 23, said that she has gained confidence from an improved
training regimen and a personal-best at the Nationals in which she landed all
six of her free-skate triple jumps. That performance helped her regain the
Canadian title she lost to Preston in 1992. "The way I look at it, this is my
year to perform," Chouinard said at the team's send-off luncheon last week.
Preston, 21, said she felt the same way, but admitted that, after all the
training and anticipation, "it all comes down to whose day it is."
For international skating organizers and Canadian team officials, the nearest
thing to disaster occurred during the team's Toronto run-through. Browning,
the last to skate, caught his toe in a rut while setting up for a triple jump
and landed in apparent agony. The audience, made up of the skaters' family and
friends, fell silent as Browning was whisked into the training room for tests.
Minutes later, officials announced that he had pinched a nerve in his hip, but
was not seriously hurt. The crowd sighed audibly. As well as curtailing his
training for the next week, Browning said that the incident reminded him that
skating is a precarious pursuit. Some days, he said, it seems effortless, like
"leaning over the pool table and knowing even before you take the shot that
the ball is going in." Browning, Stojko and the others can only hope that such
magic will be with them in Prague.
As they prepare for the next Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, young
skaters may be hearing echoes of another era, strains from the hauntingly
seductive opera Carmen. That was the music to which German skater Katarina
Witt performed a flawless, gold-medal-winning routine at the Calgary Games in
1988. A year later, as a four-time world champion and double Olympic
gold-medalist, the sultry queen of figure skating retired from amateur
competition. Since then, Witt has made a handsome living as a professional,
performing in ice shows in Europe and North America. But now, under a new
International Skating Union (ISU) rule, she and others have won reinstatement
as amateurs to compete at the next Olympiad.
The ISU agreed last June to allow pros a onetime chance to resume their
amateur status. Three reinstated ice dancers will be competing for the United
States this week at the World Championships in Prague: Renee Roca, Susie Wynne
and Gorsha Sur. Others who have either declared, or are rumored to be
considering, an Olympic comeback include American Brian Boitano, the 1988
Olympic champion, Ukrainian Viktor Petrenko, last year's Olympic and world
champion, and Russian ice dancers Sergei Ponomarenko and Marina Klimova. Tracy
Wilson, a Canadian ice dancer who won bronze in Calgary, says that the new
rule will increase the intensity of competition. "This is going to be the most
incredible Olympics," declared Wilson, now a CBS skating analyst. "It's going
to be so exciting--and the winner will be the best of the best."
Not everyone is so enthused. Some skating officials express concerns that
returning pros could bump hard-training young skaters from national teams,
undermining morale in amateur programs. And ISU secretary general Beat H*sler
cautions that many pros may not be up to Olympic calibre. "When they are
competing, skaters practice four-to-five hours a day," said H*sler. "Once
they're finished, it's more like two-to-three hours a week--you can see it in
the shows." Even the 27-year-old Witt, he said, may have trouble winning a
spot on the powerful German team. "She has a strong will," he said. "But if
that's enough, I don't know."
Some former stars, like Canadians Brian Orser and Elizabeth Manley, who both
won Olympic silver in 1988, say they are unlikely to attempt a comeback. "I
have a mortgage, I have a car payment, I have a normal life now," said Manley,
as she toured with an ice show in Western Canada. "To give up my income would
be very hard." She added, "Everybody has such a wonderful memory of me in
Calgary." That memory would be tarnished if she tried, and failed, to repeat a
medal-winning performance--a risk that any returning star will have to take.
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