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Source: |
Associated Press |
Date: |
November 13, 1994 |
Author: |
Christine Hanley |
Copyright 1994 The Associated Press
Oksana Baiul fell twice. Nancy Kerrigan completed only one triple
jump. Ice Wars didn't exactly bring out the best in the 1-2 finishers at
the 1994 Winter Olympics - or other figure skating stars.
That doesn't mean there won't be a sequel.
Many of the eight skaters who competed in the made-for-TV event said
they liked the concept of international team competition, and with a few
adjustments, would welcome an Ice Wars II.
"We all want to legitimize professional skating," Kristi Yamaguchi
said Saturday night after she and her teammates on the United States
team won the competition 230.7 to 228.1 over the World team.
"This is so much more fun," said Canada's Kurt Browning, who
struggled at the Olympics in 1992 and this year. "It's a whole team
versus a whole team ... All my life I've been doing a certain kind of
competition."
Fashioned after the Ryder Cup of golf and the Davis Cup of tennis,
Ice Wars was held over two days last week. Four of the top skaters from
the United States were pitted against four who comprised a world team.
Team USA, which held a slight edge after the technical program in
New York Wednesday, also won the artistic competition Saturday at the
Providence Civic Center. The winners split $ 400,000.
Even though the skaters appeared relaxed and seemed to lack the
intensity displayed in the Olympics or World Championships, most of them
said they took the two-day event seriously and felt it was a legitimate
competition.
But Baiul, whose performance fell far short of the one that earned
her the gold medal at Lillehammer, Norway, didn't agree. Baiul, who
recently underwent surgery on her left knee, fell once each night. She
was the only skater to fall throughout the entire competition.
"It's less a competition and more of an exhibition," she said. "I
like either one. I like to be in front of the public."
Browning acknowledged that the bottom line was entertaining the
fans.
"I think that's why I was brought here," he said. "Coming in first
instead of second, that would be great, but that's not my job. My job is
entertaining the fans, and I think I fulfilled that."
Browning, like some other skaters, said international team
competition was a good idea, and that Ice Wars was a good way of
embarking on the "New Era" of figure skating.
"I think it's going to evolve," Browning said.
Some of the skaters didn't like the lighting used during the
artistic program, while others had trouble adjusting to the time
constraints of live television.
Brian Boitano, the 1988 Olympic champion who gave one of the better
overall performances at Ice Wars, didn't like the spotlights used
Saturday.
"I felt a little better at the first competition because they didn't
have the spotlights," Boitano said. "With the spotlight, it didn't seem
as serious as the first night ... It bothers me a little. We're
competing out there."
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