Twists that damage a champion's health;
Pressure is on skating's innovator to defy the pain in his quest to land title
Source: |
Daily Mail (London) |
Date: |
February 15, 1992 |
Author: |
Neil Wilson |
OLYMPIC gold medals were never won without athletes putting their
backs into it but for Kurt Browning the phrase has a more chilling
meaning. Putting his into winning the gold tonight could cripple him.
Browning is the great innovator of men's figure skating, a
three-time world champion and, in 1989, the first skater to complete a
quadruple jump in competition.
But the pounding of those gravity-defying twists and turns has
exacted a terrible price on his body. His spine now, say those who
have examined it, would not be out of place in a man 30 years his
senior and working on it has become a full-time occupation for the
Canadian team's chiropractors.
Practising the jumps has left him skating on thin ice. Last year
he was taking holidays between training spells to rehabilitate. When
he arrived here, he was recovering from a slipped disc. Now, after a
fall on a triple jump in the short programme on Thursday, he knows he
can win only with a perfect execution in the free programme of a
routine that will strain his spine to the limit.
Even then he will be dependent on Viktor Petrenko, from the United
Team of the former Soviet republics, finishing no better than third in
the free programme. But with the fabulous rewards of the professional
circuit waiting, the risk must be taken.
'Until a year ago I was injury-free but all these injuries have
made me give serious attention to what I do,' he says. 'I warm up a
lot better now, and I restrict the number of triple-triple
combinations I do in practice.'
Browning's reputation saved him from a more severe dressing-down
by judges in the short programme. His fall should have cost him a
mandatory penalty of six-tenths of a point from each judge but only
one imposed it.
Their sympathy to an injured champion kept him in fourth place but
their generosity did not extend to those whose fame does not go before
them. Briton Steven Cousins was one of the sufferers.
'I've never been so pumped up in my life,' he said, and the French
crowd rose to applaud a routine which contained the first two triple
toe loops he has attempted in competition. Seconds later they were
booing the marks of a set of judges who could not agree on anything
during the evening beyond Petrenko's first place.
Their marks for Cousins' technique ranged from 4.5 to 5.3, and
while one judge, a Finn, placed him as high as sixth and ahead of the
US champion Christopher Bowman, another, a Czech, dumped him into 14th
place. 'I could not understand those marks because they were miles too
low,' his coach Alex McGowan said.
Tonight's free programme is worth two-thirds of the marks and
Petrenko, the Czech Petr Barna and the American Paul Wylie each need
only to win it to take the gold. Browning's back will suffer in his
attempt to defeat them.
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