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Browning shuns ligament surgery, will skate hurt
Source: |
The Toronto Star |
Date: |
October 14, 1990 |
Author: |
Frank Orr |
Kurt Browning has ligament damage in his right ankle that can be
corrected only by surgery but scalpels are not in the plans of the
world figure skating champion from Caroline, Alta. Browning can endure
the discomfort and normal skating will not make the problem any more
severe. Because compulsory figures vanish from singles skating this
year, an upswing in difficult moves in the long programs is
anticipated and Browning, an extraordinary athlete, will lead the
way. The new long program he will show at Skate Canada in Lethbridge
Oct. 25 to 28 doesn't include a quadruple jump, the Browning
trademark, but has three triple-triple combination jumps plus two
other triples and an assortment of doubles . . . A major change in
Canadian ice dancing sees the top two duos distilled into one. Joanne
Borlase of Toronto, who teamed with Martin Smith of Woodstock to win
the 1990 Canadian championship, retired. Smith's new partner is
Michelle McDonald of Abbotsford, B.C. McDonald and Mark Mitchell of
Halifax were second in Canada. The Smith-McDonald duo must progress
through the regional level to qualify for the Canadian championship
(Saskatoon, Feb. 6 to 10), stepping-stone to the worlds (Munich, March
11 to 17) . . . Christopher Bowman, the loose cannon of U.S. skating,
now is coached by another blade iconoclast, Toller Cranston of
Toronto. Bowman, a hotdog of epic proportions, was coached by Frank
Carroll, who finally had enough of the skater's lack of devotion. In
the '90 worlds at Halifax, Bowman junked his long program and
ad-libbed a new one, throwing Carroll into shock. After a puny Bowman
effort in the Goodwill Games in August, the partnership dissolved
. . . Apparently, the Cranston-Bowman relationship got away to a rocky
start during summer training sessions here. Rumbles are that Cranston
packed Bowman's bags and placed them on the front porch a couple of
times . . . Browning had the definitive assessment of Bowman. "We're
all lucky Chris doesn't know how to train properly because he has the
most natural talent of anyone," the world champ said.
Skate America: While Browning faces ordinary competition in Skate
Canada, Elvis Stojko of Richmond Hill meets a tough field in Skate
America in Buffalo this week (Thursday to Saturday). Stojko pushed
Browning to the limit in the '90 Canadian championship, then was No. 9
in his first worlds with a sixth-place finish in the long
program. Victor Petrenko of the U.S.S.R. and Bowman, silver and bronze
medalists in the '90 worlds, are in the field. "Elvis just turned 18
so we're allowing his career to evolve slowly," said coach Doug Leigh
of the Mariposa club in Barrie. "We looked closely at what the top
five skaters in the division were doing and adjusted Elvis' program to
keep pace." Stojko, who had eight triple jumps in his program last
season, is working on the artistic side of his routines . . . Midori
Ito of Japan and Kristi Yamaguchi of the U.S. head the ladies' field
at the Buffalo competition, which offers a splendid day for skating
enthusiasts on Oct. 20 with the free skates in all four events (men's,
ladies', ice dance and pairs) starting at 12:30 p.m. at Memorial
Auditorium . . . This should bring Saddam Hussein to his knees very
quickly. Iraq will be booted out of Davis Cup tennis competition if
its occupation of Kuwait isn't ended this year. The only worse threat
would be banishment from the book-of-the-month club.
Dash for cash: The eventual rematch of Ben Johnson and Carl Lewis
will become a financial bonanza similar to a major heavyweight title
fight. The buildup of the race, especially in Europe, is gaining
momentum. A major European paper carried a yarn this weekend under the
heading: Ben Johnson Haunts Carl Lewis.
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