Browning and Sato Win Pro Championships
Source: |
AP News |
Date: |
December 10, 1995 |
Author: |
Barry Wilner |
Copyright 1995 the Associated Press. -- All Rights Reserved
Kurt Browning felt the magic and made it
work for him.
Yuka Sato felt she was overlooked, and made that work for her.
Browning and Sato each won their first World Professional Figure
Skating Championships in stunning fashion Saturday night by
upsetting the usually unbeatable.
Browning beat Brian Boitano, a six-time winner of the event,
coming from behind in the free skate. The Canadian who won four
amateur worlds, but was a bust in the 1992 and '94 Olympics, used
''a hunk of funk'' to collect five perfect 10.0s and two 9.9s from
the judges in the free skate, worth 50 percent of the total score.
Skating to ''Brick House'' by the Commodores, Browning's
rubber-legged act wowed the crowd of 18,150. It also so impressed
the judges the top and bottom scores were thrown out that he
received a 49.9 for the routine.
Boitano won the technical program with a powerful performance to
''Appalachian Spring'' from his 1994 Olympic long program, nailing
five triple jumps to edge Browning.
''I didn't really think Landover as my type of competition,''
Browning said. ''I have always seen it as someone else's to win.
When people stood up after my first program, I thought to myself,
'There is some magic here.' And I tried to maintain it for the next
hour and a half.'
Browning had floundered in his first season as a pro, so this
victory was special.
''It means a lot to me, because I had a water-logged year last
year and couldn't get going,'' he said. ''I really kind of saw a
night like this not happening again.''
Viktor Petrenko of Ukraine, the 1992 Olympic champion, was
third, followed by Paul Wylie.
Japan's Sato, who won the 1994 amateur world championship on
what many considered a hometown decision, stamped herself as a
genuine force Saturday.
Sato, at 22 the youngest skater in the singles field, won both
the technical and free skate programs in edging 1992 Olympic gold
medalist Kristi Yamaguchi, a two-time winner of this prestigious
event. She established her superiority in the technical routine
with precise spins and four solid triple jumps, then finished with
superb footwork.
''In the United States, to win as a Japanese ... it is not easy
to do. No one really knows about me,'' Sato said. ''It is really
hard for me to win in this country. I just started getting the
feeling what kind of stuff American audiences like. We have the
totally different cultures. Sometimes I think it will be really
great, but you never know over here.''
Neither Sato nor Yamaguchi did anything outstanding in the free
skate, and Sato held on. Her winning total was 98.8 points from the
seven judges only five marks in each event count, with the
highest and lowest thrown out. Yamaguchi managed 98.3.
''I wasn't very surprised. It was my goal for this year,'' Sato
said. ''I thought this was a good chance. I can't ever say there
isn't any chance for myself. If I do well, you never know, I kept
telling myself.''
Nancy Kerrigan had a disappointing night, looking rusty in what
is planned as her only significant individual competition this
season. She was fourth, behind Denise Biellmann of Switzerland.
The indomitable dance champions, Jayne Torvill and Christopher
Dean, took the gold with smooth, entertaining routines to music by
Paul Simon. They edged a strong field that included 1992 Olympic
champs Marina Klimova and Sergei Ponomarenko and '94 Olympic
runners-up Maia Usova and Alexander Zhulin.
The British couple collected nine 10.0s on the night, winning
its fourth world pro title.
''Always performing before an audience when it counts, you are
being judged, to that degree everybody can see a standard or a
marker,'' Dean said. ''Then obviously it counts.''
Nearly a dozen years after their magnificent Olympic triumph in
Sarajevo, Torvill and Dean remain the people's choice. Their every
move was cheered by the sellout crowd.
Radka Kovarikova and Rene Novotny, the Czech couple who won the
world championships for Olympic-eligible skaters earlier this year,
also took the pro worlds in their debut. They were helped by a rare
opportunity for a re-skate after Kovarikova fell when she became
entangled in part of the decorations around the sideboards. She
also had fallen earlier in the free skate, but the referee stopped
the program after the second mishap and allowed a rerun.
The Czechs wound up with 99.2 points, winning both programs.
Elena Bechke and Denis Petrov of Russia were second, followed by
Canada's Barbara Underhill and Paul Martini.
No American won a gold medal in this event for the first time in
its 16-year history.
A moment of silence was observed prior to the competition to
honor the memory of Sergei Grinkov, the two-time Olympic pairs
champion with wife Ekaterina Gordeeva. Grinkov died of a heart
attack last month. The couple had been scheduled to compete at this
event.
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